
How 'Karate Kid: Legends' is Connected to 'Cobra Kai'—Which to Watch First
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors
The sixth movie in the Karate Kid franchise, "Karate Kid: Legends," has officially hit theaters. And even though critics don't seem to be too fond of the film, fans of the series and general audiences seem to be loving it.
"Karate Kid: Legends" brings back to beloved characters to the cinema: Jackie Chan as Mr. Han and Ralph Macchio as Daniel LaRusso. Additionally, the film stars Ben Wang as Li Fong, their new student.
While Chan hasn't been seen in the series since the last film was in theaters back in 2010, Macchio has been a regular fixture of the wildly popular "Cobra Kai" series on Netflix, which just released its sixth and final season.
More Entertainment: 'Karate Kid: Legends' - Everything We Know So Far
Naturally, this has fans of the television show wondering if anything from "Cobra Kai" will make it into the film. That being said, these same fans may be disappointed.
Warning: This article contains spoilers for both "Karate Kid: Legends" and "Cobra Kai" Season 6.
Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio in 'Karate Kid: Legends.'
Jackie Chan and Ralph Macchio in 'Karate Kid: Legends.'
Sony Pictures
How is 'Cobra Kai' Connected to 'Karate Kid: Legends'?
"Karate Kid: Legends" is focused on continuing the story and legacy from the previous Karate Kid films. Unfortunately, that doesn't seem to fully include "Cobra Kai."
"There are many, many seasons of 'Cobra Kai.' This is not a 'Cobra Kai' movie. It's within the Karate Kid universe," director Jonathan Entwistle said, per Jake Hodges and Perri Nemiroff of Collider. "It's another chapter in the story. It's another graphic novel in the sequence."
This doesn't mean that "Cobra Kai" fans have been cut out completely. In a post-credits sequence, William Zabka as Johnny Lawrence shows up to hang out with Daniel after he receives a heartwarming letter from Li. However, that's all fans of the Netflix series will be getting.
Do You Need to Watch 'Cobra Kai' Before 'Karate Kid: Legends'?
Based on this information, it doesn't feel like watching "Cobra Kai" is at all necessary to enjoy "Karate Kid: Legends." Instead, fans of the franchise should turn their heads to the original movies starring Macchio and Pat Morita, as well as "The Karate Kid" from 2010 starring Chan and Jaden Smith.
More Entertainment: Jackie Chan, 71, Injured During Filming
Still, it is absolutely worth watching all six seasons of "Cobra Kai" just because it is wildly entertaining television with exciting martial arts action and plenty of drama.
Additionally, if you want to see everything in the Karate Kid universe, "The Next Karate Kid" is also a fun watch with Morita reprising his role as Mr. Miyagi and a young Hilary Swank playing Julie Pierce, his new student.
More Entertainment: Stephen King 'Carrie' Remake Officially Reveals Main Cast
The Real-Life Tech Bros that Inspired HBO Max's 'Mountainhead'
New on Prime Video: Full List of Movies, Shows Hitting the Streaming Platform in June 2025
For more movie, television, and entertainment news, head on over to Newsweek Entertainment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Newsweek
an hour ago
- Newsweek
Tom Brady Calls LeBron James 'The Greatest Ever' in Bold Praise
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. The NBA has seen some of the best players to ever grace the basketball court. Many range from the likes of Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Kobe Bryant, and one who many consider the greatest of all time: Michael Jordan. The NBA has seen the most prominent stars ever to walk the face of the earth; however, none may be as big and bright as Los Angeles Lakers superstar LeBron James. James' resume speaks for itself, and while he's self-appointed himself as the G.O.A.T., many others share the same sentiment, including NFL legend and future Hall of Famer Tom Brady. At the Fanatics Fest event in New York City, Brady took the stage alongside James, discussing a range of topics. In the process, Brady has the utmost praise for James, calling him 'the greatest ever.' LeBron James, Maverick Carter and Tom Brady speak onstage during Fanatics Fest NYC 2025 at Javits Center on June 21, 2025 in New York City. LeBron James, Maverick Carter and Tom Brady speak onstage during Fanatics Fest NYC 2025 at Javits Center on June 21, 2025 in New York City. Photo by"With the intensity that's been on him, the Olympics, the different teams that he's been on, he's always done things the right way," Brady said. "He's always risen above all the noise and B.S. and continued to deliver." "So you're witnessing the greatest ever and I hope you guys all appreciate that." Tom Brady on LeBron James: 'You're witnessing the greatest ever and I hope you all appreciate that.' (h/t @MaskedInLA, @FanaticsFest) — Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) June 21, 2025 Brady is undoubtedly the greatest of all time in his sport, and it is clear that he sees that in James as well. James' resume is second to none. Throughout his 22-year career, James is a 21-time All-Star, a four-time NBA champion, a four-time Finals MVP, a four-time NBA MVP, a 21-time All-NBA selection, a six-time All-Defensive team member, and a member of the 75th Anniversary team. The 40-year-old superstar is still at the top of his game, much like Brady when he played in the NFL. Brady didn't retire until the ripe age of 45, and if James wanted to, it seems okay he could play for that long. However, many expect that this upcoming season will be James' final in the NBA. The expectation for James is that he will opt into his $52.6 million contract with the Lakers and ride off into the sunset with what he hopes is a team that can contend for an NBA title next season. Regardless of what's next for James, one thing remains undeniable — at the very least, he stands as one of the top three players ever to play the game. More NBA news: Blockbuster Trade Proposal Sends Lakers' Austin Reaves to East Contender NBA Hall of Famer Tracy McGrady Opens Up About Never Getting Title Opportunity For more on LeBron James, Tom Brady and general NBA news, head on over to Newsweek Sports.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
The Creator of Scream Has a New Netflix Hit. It's Salty, Soapy, and Fully Adult.
The Waterfront If things continue at their current pace, all of television is in danger of turning into a genre that I like to call 'Yellowstone, but … ' Of course, we have the Taylor Sheridan show's many prequel spinoffs, but their success also seems to have inspired waves of Westerns and dramas about locally powerful families who have fallen on hard times. The latest 'Yellowstone, but … ' show is The Waterfront, now streaming on Netflix, where it has immediately shot to No. 1 on the charts. This is a story set in a seaside town, following the locally powerful Buckley family, owners of a fishery, a restaurant, some beautiful houses, and undeveloped tracts of coastline, who have—you guessed it—fallen on hard times. Like the Duttons trying to hold on to their Yellowstone Ranch, the Buckleys need to arrest their downward mobility; their attempts to do so without betraying their beliefs, or one another, will be the meat of the story. The Waterfront is a Kevin Williamson show, set (like his Dawson's Creek) in coastal North Carolina, so it's full of salty, beautiful people who do soapy things. But unlike Dawson's Creek and Williamson's latter-day hit The Vampire Diaries, this is a full-on adult show, with no teenage romance, and with moments of hyperviolence that startled me into audible exclamations of 'Oh!' Adventuresome Netflix viewers looking for 'Outer Banks without the treasure hunt' will likely find themselves confused, and hopefully minimally traumatized, by this one. The Waterfront stars Holt McCallany, the granite-faced father-figure standout from Mindhunter and The Iron Claw, as the patriarch Harlan Buckley, whose own father was involved in the drug trade, but who has been running 'clean' businesses for a couple of decades, ever since his father's illegal activities ended in his death. Maria Bello plays Harlan's wife, Belle, who tolerates her husband's drinking and affairs, for reasons that are somewhat hard to parse. Jake Weary is his golden-boy son, Cane, a former football player and reluctant participant in all this crime who becomes the heart of the show, and Melissa Benoist is his daughter Bree, an addict in recovery who, we find out, has good reason to hate her family. Will the Buckleys, having trouble keeping their businesses in the black, get back into running drugs? You bet they will! And for the sake of the show, it's a good thing they do, because that's what brings Grady, a drug dealer played by Topher Grace, into the mix, significantly livening up the action. Grace has gotten really good at being in on the trick that his face plays on you. You see those features and think 'preppy; professional-managerial; Connecticut.' But there's something creepy about a guy that clean-cut; a Topher Grace villain knows it. Here, as Grady, Grace creates a really weird—maybe not always successful, but always interesting—villain. Topher Grace and Holt McCallany are the most recognizable actors on the show, and The Waterfront has placed them in opposition to one another, playing contrasting versions of powerful manhood. After the Buckleys eliminate the middleman they've been working with, they find Grady, who has a big drug operation set up in a farmhouse heavily populated by hired badasses, and try to do business with him. Grady at first looks like a vest-wearing tech bro, but we find out he has—as Harlan says—'no code.' We first see how disturbing he is when Grady orders his men to turn a minigun mounted on a truck on a henchman who's displeased him and is running away across a field. Grady jokes about how loud the gun is, and mocks how the guy's body jumps around as it's riddled with bullets, while Harlan stares, shocked. Grady is there to show us that some people shouldn't have power, to draw a contrast between his infatuation with it and our heroes' supposed reluctance to use it. But he's also kind of funny, which is good, because the dominant feeling you get from spending time in the world of the Buckleys is one of hungover, self-serious misery. (In that way, this show is, indeed, 'Yellowstone, but … ') Out of some sociopathic impulse of friendliness, or maybe in order to control the situation, Grady cozies up to the Buckleys, showing up at their restaurant, convincing their teenage grandson Diller (Brady Hepner) to go on a hunting trip, and directly asking Harlan if they can become like family. When Harlan, Grady, and Diller walk in a field, hunting quail, the series best gets at the contrast it's trying to draw between these two men. Grady is a guy who loves violence but doesn't really know how to use a gun. Harlan tries to teach Grady how to aim, how to be disciplined with his hunting rifle; Diller, taught by Harlan, already knows. McCallany's calm, paternal intensity, heightened by being thrown into this situation with an unpredictable and dangerous person, ramps up by the moment, until he gives off a wave of gravitas that makes you believe that indeed, Harlan is the kind of father who can be so-so, but who has (as Bree puts it) 'moments of spectacular.' But just as often, when McCallany and Grace face off, the manic energy rolling off Grady crashes into the stone-faced Harlan in a way that's less effective, giving McCallany less to do. In one scene, as the two debate the terms of their relationship, Grady describes Harlan as having 'resting stress face'; Grace pulls down the sides of his mouth, making a perfect simulacrum of McCallany's. That's funny! But it also makes Harlan into more of a caricature—something the show needs to break down, rather than build up, since it's picked such a perfect Big Daddy actor for its Big Daddy character. This first season of The Waterfront sets more tables than the waitresses at the Buckleys' seaside restaurant. We see Cane's moral dilemmas, Bree's tragic history. But the best seeds it sows are in the relationship between Harlan and Belle. Belle is the kind of wife who accepts the appearance of Harlan's out-of-wedlock son with barely a blink, but also one who tries, behind Harlan's back, to sell a piece of land in a development deal that goes against Harlan's principles but that would have gotten the family out of the drug business for good. This scheme aside, in this season, the parents are mostly on the same page. But by the end, we see that we may get a lot of McCallany vs. Bello next time around. That's a good idea. Yellowstone always suffered because John Dutton had no plausible opposition inside his family. (Jamie does not count.) If The Waterfront is about a family managing its own decline, it only makes sense that in such a family, Mom and Dad would, quite often, find themselves fighting.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
The 8 Best Harlan Coben Books, Ranked
Sometimes, thriller books are much more psychologically haunting than films or TV shows. There's no eerie lighting, suspenseful background music, or even jump scares to rely on. Instead, writers only have words and secrets to play with, weaving in plotlines and foreshadowing twists that still leave us gasping when we turn the page. One of the most prolific authors in this genre is Harlan Coben, who has published dozens of mysteries and thrillers that continue to captivate readers around the world. Plus, he's even had various novels adapted for the small screen after signing a multi-year deal with Netflix. So, if you're searching for a new thriller author to fall in love with, Harlan Coben is a safe bet. Ahead, we've ranked his top eight books to dive into. Published in 2013, Six Years follows Jake Fisher, a man forced to watch the love of his life, Natalie, tie the knot with another guy named Todd. In the six years that followed, he tried to focus on his work and stay away from Natalie, all the while having nightmares about her and Todd's life. But then, Jake sees Todd's obituary, realizes Natalie's husband has died, and attends the funeral. And there, he realizes that late Todd's wife isn't Natalie, but actually another woman who'd supposedly been married to Todd for nearly 20 years. "With that fact, everything Jake thought he knew about the best time of his life–a time he has never gotten over–is turned completely inside out," per the synopsis. Soon, Jake realizes that he and Natalie's previous mutual friends either don't remember him or are nowhere to be found. Natalie is gone, too, and his quest for the truth starts to unravel his life. In this 2015 thriller, Adam Price has a cushy life with a solid job, a large home, a beautiful wife named Corinne, and two sons. However, a stranger approaches him out of the blue one day and claims Corinne had lied about her first pregnancy, as well as the miscarriage that he believed ended it. "And the mirage of perfection disappears as if it never existed at all. Soon, Adam finds himself tangled in something far darker than even Corinne's deception and realizes that if he doesn't make exactly the right moves, the conspiracy he's stumbled into will not only ruin lives–it will end them," the book's synopsis reads. The Stranger was nominated for Readers' Favorite Mystery & Thriller in 2015 on Goodreads. In Tell No One, character David Beck lost his wife, Elizabeth, after she was murdered by a man who called himself KillRoy. Yet, eight years later, while the killer is serving out a life sentence, two more dead bodies are found, and David gets a message on his computer with a phrase that could only come from his late wife. "Suddenly, Beck is taunted with the impossible–that somewhere, somehow, Elizabeth is alive," per the synopsis. He's told not to share the message with anyone, and he abides. Moreover, David starts searching for the mysterious messenger. Maya Burkett is a widow grappling with the death of her husband in Central Park, and following the tragedy, she's also concerned about the safety of her 2-year-old daughter. That's why she sets up nanny cams in her home. While she's at work one day, Maya realizes the nanny cam captured something unbelievable: her supposedly dead husband, Joe, playing with their daughter in their home. And when Maya confronts her nanny, the nanny claims she didn't see anything before stealing the camera's memory card and disappearing. "The provocative question at the heart of the mystery: Can you believe everything you see with your own eyes, even when you desperately want to? To find the answer, Maya must finally come to terms with deep secrets and deceit in her own past before she can face the unbelievable truth about her husband—and herself," the book's synopsis reads. Caught chronicles the mysterious disappearance of Haley McWaid, a 17-year-old "good girl." She's the captain of the lacrosse team at her New Jersey school and plans to attend college following graduation. Nonetheless, after Haley doesn't return home one night, no one hears from her for three long months. Meanwhile, journalist Wendy Tynes is working to take down sexual predators with the help of sting operations when she comes across a social worker with a reputation for being friendly with teenagers, including Haley. "Working with local police on her news program, Caught in the Act, Wendy and her team have publicly shamed dozens of men by the time she encounters her latest target. Dan Mercer is a social worker known as a friend to troubled teens, but his story soon becomes more complicated than Wendy could have imagined," per the synopsis. Deal Breaker is considered one of Harlan Coben's most iconic works. It centers on a sports agent named Myron Bolitar and his prized client, Christian Steel, who's a rookie quarterback. They're on the brink of scoring a massive contract when Christian's former girlfriend, who everyone believed was dead, gives him a call and threatens the deal. "Trying to unravel the truth about a family's tragedy, a woman's secret, and a man's lies, Myron is up against the dark side of his business where image and talent make you rich, but the truth can get you killed," the synopsis reads. Deal Breaker is the first novel in Harlan Coben's Myron Bolitar series. In , the couple David and Cheryl Burroughs had it all. They got married, had a beautiful home in the suburbs, and were the parents of a 3-year-old named Matthew. That's until David wakes up covered in his son's blood and winds up behind bars, even though he knows he didn't commit murder. After spending five years in prison with no memory of the evening that landed him there, David's former sister-in-law, Rachel, visits him and brings a shocking photo to the jail. In the image, taken by a friend on vacation at a theme park, there's a boy who David believes is Matthew, still alive. "David plans a harrowing escape from prison, determined to do what seems impossible–save his son, clear his own name, and discover the real story of what happened that devastating night," per the synopsis. Read this before the and -lead show comes to Netflix! Will Klein always looked up to his older brother, Ken, throughout his childhood. But that all changes after a young woman whom Will once loved is found murdered in her family's basement, and Ken is the main suspect. The evidence was so overwhelming that it even pushed Ken to disappear, leaving cracks in the Klein family and the overall community. Over a decade later, though, Will uncovers proof that Ken is actually alive. "And this is just the first in a series of stunning revelations as Will is forced to confront startling truths about his brother—and himself. As a violent mystery unwinds around him, Will knows he must press his search all the way to the end. Because the most powerful surprises are yet to come," the synopsis reads. Looking for more & news? Follow us on so you never miss a thing! Brit + Co may at times use affiliate links to promote products sold by others, but always offers genuine editorial recommendations.