Opening in the multiplexes this weekend:
Karate Kid: Legends--The 2010 reboot of 1984's The Karate Kid took a new kid from the U.S. to China to be trained in martials arts by Jackie Chan. This new entry reverses the process; our teenaged hero is reluctantly dragged from Beijing to New York.
Played by Ben Wang, Li Fong is the son of a doctor (Ming-Na Wen) with a family tragedy in his past. When we first see him, he's living, and training in Kung Fu, at the school of his Uncle Han (Jackie Chan). Mom doesn't want him fighting, so she pulls him out of school to live in Manhattan.
He promptly meets a friendly girl, Mia (Sadie Stanley), at the local pizza shop; he also meets her bullying jerk of an ex-boyfriend (Aramis Knight), who happens to be a local martial arts champ. Mia's ex-boxer dad Victor (Joshua Jackson) is in debt to a loan shark who runs the jerk boyfriend's school.
The various villains, goals and obstacles thus hurriedly shoved into place, the stage is set for a big showdown between Li and the jerk at a citywide elimination tournament. Before that, of course, comes extended sequences in which he's trained not only in Kung Fu by his Uncle Han, but in "Miyagi Karate" by Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio), the title character from the '84 film, still carrying on Miyagi's legacy in California. (The movie comes up with some belated backstory claiming an ancient link between the Japanese Miyagi and the Chinese Han.)
Directed by Jonathan Entwistle from a script by Rob Lieber, this is pretty basic stuff, dramatically speaking. But the young leads have a sweet rapport, and the fan service of connecting the the old film series with the reboot is warmly received; Macchio's first appearance got a round of applause from the audience with whom I saw the film.
Most importantly, the movie features Jackie Chan, one of the great movie stars of all time, in a relaxed emeritus role. We don't get to see much of him in action here; but he seems to enjoy working in friendly rivalry opposite Macchio. And there's a scene in which Li takes on some thugs in an alley in which young Wang seems to be channeling Chan's desperate, hanging-on-by-a-thread comic style. I had to wonder if Chan had a hand in the choreography.