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The Karate Kid Part II

Summoned by his dying father, Miyagi returns to his homeland of Okinawa, with Daniel, after a 40-year exile. There he must confront Yukie, the love of his youth, and Sato, his former best friend turned vengeful rival. Sato is bent on a fight to the death, even if it means the destruction of their village. Daniel finds his own love in Yukia's niece, Kumiko, and his own enemy in Sato's nephew, the vicious Chozen. Now, far away from the tournaments, cheering crowds and safety of home, Daniel will face his greatest challenge ever when the cost of honor is life itself.

Director(s)

Bruce Malmuth

John G. Avildsen

Clifford C. Coleman

Dennis Maguire

Christine Larson

Marshall Schlom

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Cast & Crew

Clifford C. Coleman

Clifford C. Coleman

-

Pat E. Johnson

Pat E. Johnson

Referee

Chad McQueen

Chad McQueen

Dutch

Eddie Smith

Eddie Smith

Bystander

Raymond Ma

Raymond Ma

Cab Driver in Okinawa

Danny Kamekona

Danny Kamekona

Sato Toguchi

Martin Kove

Martin Kove

John Kreese

Ralph Macchio

Ralph Macchio

Daniel LaRusso

Pat Morita

Pat Morita

Mr. Miyagi

Nobu McCarthy

Nobu McCarthy

Yukie

Yuji Okumoto

Yuji Okumoto

Chozen Toguchi

Tamlyn Tomita

Tamlyn Tomita

Kumiko

Joey Miyashima

Joey Miyashima

Toshio

Arsenio Trinidad

Arsenio Trinidad

Ichiro

Marc Hayashi

Marc Hayashi

Taro

Charlie Tanimoto

Charlie Tanimoto

Miyagi's Father

William Zabka

William Zabka

Johnny Lawrence

Tony O'Dell

Tony O'Dell

Jimmy

Ron Thomas

Ron Thomas

Bobby

Rob Garrison

Rob Garrison

Tommy

Bruce Malmuth

Bruce Malmuth

Announcer

Garth Johnson

Garth Johnson

Autograph Fan

Brett Johnson

Brett Johnson

Autograph Fan

Will Hunt

Will Hunt

Postman

Evan James Malmuth

Evan James Malmuth

Cab Driver

Lee Arnone

Lee Arnone

Stewardess

Sarah Kendall

Sarah Kendall

Stewardess #2

George O'Hanlon, Jr.

George O'Hanlon, Jr.

Soldier

Tsuruko Ohye

Tsuruko Ohye

Village Woman

Robert Fernandez

Robert Fernandez

Watchman

Natalie N. Hashimoto

Natalie N. Hashimoto

Kumiko's Street Friend

Diana Mar

Diana Mar

Girl in Video Store

BD Wong

BD Wong

Boy on Street

Clarence Gilyard Jr.

Clarence Gilyard Jr.

G.I. #1

Michael Morgan

Michael Morgan

G.I. #2

Jack Eiseman

Jack Eiseman

G.I. #3

Jeffrey Rogers

Jeffrey Rogers

G.I. #4

Aaron Seville

Aaron Seville

G.I. #5

Wes Chong

Wes Chong

Sato's Houseman

Traci Toguchi

Traci Toguchi

Girl Bell Ringer

Antonia Franceschi

Antonia Franceschi

The Dancer on the Television Set (uncredited)

Chris Tashima

Chris Tashima

The Rockabilly Club Dancer (uncredited)

Joey Banks

Joey Banks

Okinawa Martial Arts Class Student (uncredited)

Ron Pohnel

Ron Pohnel

Military Student (uncredited)

John G. Avildsen

John G. Avildsen

-

Dennis Maguire

Dennis Maguire

-

Christine Larson

Christine Larson

-

Marshall Schlom

Marshall Schlom

-

Details

GenresAdventure, Drama, Action, Romance, Family
Runtime1h 53 mins
Released on18 Jun 1986
Languageen
Age RatingPG
Produced InUnited States of America

Reviews

Filipe Manuel Neto

7/10

**A worthy continuation.** After the great success of the first film, it was quite predictable that another film would be made that would continue the story. This film picks up right where the first left off, and follows in the footsteps of Daniel and his master, Miyagi, on a journey to southern Japan, the latter's homeland, to see his dying father and settle a score with a man he swore to kill. Him if he ever set foot on Japanese soil again. As in the first film, we again have Ralph Macchio in the role of Daniel and Pat Morita as Master Miyagi. Both were very good and they give us again everything that we appreciated in the first film. The main difference in the work of both actors turns out to be the greater formal protagonism of the character of Morita, who is the great protagonist of this film: all the action, and the whole story, is centered on the figure of Miyagi, in the past and in the its peaceful stance in the face of a situation in which it is forced to fight. Of course, the film tries to give Macchio equal relevance by forcing an enmity between his character and another, created to be one of the film's antagonists, but the situation feels far too forced and contrived to really be an advantage to the story. Incidentally, even the romantic sub-plot between Daniel and Kumiko, a young Japanese woman played by Tamlyn Tomita, doesn't seem credible enough, despite the actress' good work. Danny Kamekona doesn't do a bad job, but he seems a little stereotypical, whereas Yuji Okumoto does nothing but be hateful. Technically, the film is quite correct and seeks to create a convincing Japanese environment, in which the houses, gardens, buildings and other elements really look like a rural area of Japan. Filmed in Hawaii for production convenience, the film really managed to recreate that environment well and give us a flavor of Japanese traditions through clothes, houses, sets and other details such as the tea ceremony and dance. The cinematography is quite pleasant and the soundtrack has some very good songs, one of which even deserved an Oscar nomination that year.

r96sk

5/10

A disappointment. I gained nothing from <em>'The Karate Kid Part II'</em>, it adds very little to the original. Pat Morita (Mr. Miyagi) is the only plus point for me, he especially has one great and emotional scene with his co-star. Otherwise, no-one else stands out - not even (the still solid) Ralph Macchio (Daniel). Up until the ending I was actually nonplussed about it, neither liking or disliking it, but the conclusion is so uninteresting and lame that I just couldn't wait for 'The End' to appear. I will say it isn't an excruciating watch or anything, but I just expected a great deal more from this sequel. It doesn't feel attached to the first film, which is obviously a negative. Other things that didn't help were the shoehorning out of Elisabeth Shue (Ali) & Randee Heller (Lucille) and the repetitive nature of the story; e.g. another love story that features a jock-like character, Daniel still getting battered and bruised for the majority. Hopefully the next two follow-ups are much better.

All Trailers

The Karate Kid Part II (1986) Original Trailer [FHD]

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