MovieChat Forums > Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi (2017) Discussion > Cobra Kai Season 3 successfully does wha...

Cobra Kai Season 3 successfully does what Star Wars tried to do with The Last Jedi


https://observer.com/2021/01/cobra-kai-season-3-rise-of-skywalker/

"The third installment in a revival of an ’80s property brings back beloved characters decades later to mentor a new generation, in a story about confronting the legacy of the original franchise, all while an old villain returns to life to haunt both new and old characters," says Rafael Motamayor. "But enough about The Rise of Skywalker, because the third season of Cobra Kai, which has moved from YouTube to Netflix, feels like it was made to show the latest Star Wars movie how to do a legacy sequel right." Motamayor adds: "When The Force Awakens premiered, we saw the returns of Han, Leia and (briefly) Luke Skywalker. But rather than acting as the grand heroes fans expected them to be after defeating the Empire in Episode VI, they were mostly the same people they were in their 20s. Han was still a smuggler, and Leia was leading a rebellion. As for Luke? Well, he starts out his arc in the sequel trilogy in the same place Daniel LaRusso is at in Season 3 of Cobra Kai — having tried to spread the knowledge his master taught him and failed spectacularly when a student went bad. In Season 2 of Cobra Kai, Daniel revives Miyagi-Do Karate specifically to counter Johnny’s Cobra Kai dojo. In the process, he takes Johnny’s son, Robby, as an apprentice, and tries to 'save' him from his father’s legacy and influence. Except Robby does the opposite. In a moment of jealousy and anger, he knocks Johnny’s student Miguel over a railing, cracking his spine and putting him in a coma at the end of last season. Like Luke Skywalker after Ben Solo murders all his students, Daniel shuts down his dojo and all but goes into hiding. This season finds Daniel confronting his mistakes as a teacher, seeing his best student turn to the dark side — or joining the rival karate dojo. And like Luke, it takes some words of encouragement and a new lesson from his own sensei — or rather, an old rival trained in the same school of karate as he was — to make Daniel realize that he doesn’t have to strictly follow the book. When he travels to Okinawa, Japan, and confronts his former fight-to-the-death nemesis, Chozen, Daniel LaRusso gets his 'we are what they grow beyond' moment that Yoda gives to Luke in The Last Jedi and gets back into the fight."

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So how many deaths did Daniel feel responsible for in cobra kai?

Was it his nephew who did the killing?


Was this a reminder of Daniel's father killing many many children?

And did Daniel ultimately give his own life to save his friends?

You're desperately clutching at shitty straws here.

By the way. Before now, the narrative from the snowflake fans was never "TLJ failed at doing what it tried to do with Luke". It has always been that it should just never have been done at all. We were supposed to get CG return of the jedi Luke doing a two line cameo in a movie that has zero to do with him. Haven't you been paying attention.

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This article hit the nail on the head. Cobra Kai is how you take an 80’s franchise and spin it off into something new while still respecting what came before. It gets deconstructed, new heroes are brought in, old heroes learn new lessons, but it’s done in a way that makes sense.

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In what way does TLJ not make sense?

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I’m pretty sure this has been explained to you before.

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No. Never. All that's been explained is that TLJ makes no sense to some people. Never how. Except in the way that some people can't make sense of it not matching they're preconceived head canon/fan fiction.

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Oh, it was explained to you. You just refuse to listen.

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I'm listening now. But you prefer to throw up smokescreen rather than repeat the supposedly obvious answer. Funny that.

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I have had this conversation with you already and you are a bit thick so I have no interest in doing it again.

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