6.5 | / 10 |
| Users | 0.0 | |
| Reviewer | 3.5 | |
| Overall | 3.5 |
After kung fu prodigy Li Fong relocates to New York City, he attracts unwanted attention from a local karate champion and embarks on a journey to enter the ultimate karate competition with the help of Mr. Han and Daniel LaRusso.
Starring: Jackie Chan, Ralph Macchio, Ming-Na Wen, Joshua Jackson, Sadie Stanley| Martial arts | Uncertain |
| Action | Uncertain |
| Drama | Uncertain |
| Family | Uncertain |
Video codec: MPEG-4 AVC
Video resolution: 1080p
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Original aspect ratio: 1.85:1
English: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
French: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
Thai: Dolby Digital 5.1
English, English SDH, French, Spanish, Korean, Mandarin (Simplified), Mandarin (Traditional), Thai
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
Digital copy
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (locked)
| Movie | 3.0 | |
| Video | 4.0 | |
| Audio | 4.0 | |
| Extras | 3.0 | |
| Overall | 3.5 |
I hold 1984's The Karate Kid in extremely high regard. It's a terrific film, a benchmark of 80s cinema, and a timeless tale of triumph over adversity born not of brute strength (quite unlike many of its 80s counterparts) but of soulful determination engendered through a heartfelt bond of unlikely friendship and providence. Its two sequels are fine but underwhelming in comparison, as was the quasi spinoff The Next Karate Kid. Not content to let the franchise slip away for a new generation, Sony returned to the well for 2010's excellent re-imagining and the well-received TV show Cobra Kai, reuniting protagonist and antagonist from the original film series. Now, Karate Kid: Legends blends the legacies of the 1984 original and the 2010 re-imagining (with some Cobra Kai in there as well) in a well-meaning but ultimately stale series entry meant to...I'm not sure what it means to do other than pair Ralph Macchio and Jackie Chan on the same screen. It's a decent movie but it's terribly underdeveloped and underwhelming as a result.


Sony's 1080p Blu-ray release of Karate Kid: Legends may not reach "legendary" status, but it's a relatively healthy image. The picture is sharp, and aggressively so, in every shot. But definition is generally high end, especially all of the city environments on display throughout. Storefronts, rooftops, pizza shops, and apartment interiors are all handsomely rich in texture and lifelike in authenticity. Skin and clothing likewise impress for clarity and visual vigor. Colors are bright and bold, never lacking in vividness and accuracy, spanning a whole range of clothes, natural greens, and urban grays. Skin tones appear spot-on, white balance is solid, and black levels are generally fine, if not at times veering slightly to paleness. Aside from the aggressively sharp façade, I noted no egregious source or encode faults.

Sony brings Karate Kid: Legends to Blu-ray with a DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1 lossless soundtrack (as usual, the day-and-date UHD earns a Dolby Atmos mix). I found the track to be perfectly adequate but never supercharged or sonically unique. Everything is in good working order for a new 5.1 mix in 2025, delivering healthy musical definition and seamless stage spacing alongside a hearty but never overpowering low end support. The track springs to life with rich city ambience filling each of the five channels, always, of course, giving way to primary dialogue, music, and effects. Heavy punches and kicks land with the appropriate thud, and as necessary martial arts moves sweep and swoop through the back channels. Dialogue is healthy, clear, intelligible, and well prioritized for the duration.

This Blu-ray release of The Karate Kid: Legends contains a few featurettes, a gag reel, and some deleted scenes. A digital copy code and a
slipcover are included with purchase.

Karate Kid: Legends is a technically healthy (save for the unconvincing green screen rooftop sequence at film's end) but narratively unnecessary venture. It's generally entertaining and polished but lacks bite, intensity, and heart. It's fun to see Macchio and Chan share the screen, and I really enjoyed Ben Wang in the lead, but the movie could have benefited from some serious script tweaking, learning the finer points of filmmaking from the original rather than simply finding broad inspiration from it. Sony's Blu-ray does deliver solid video and audio presentations. Some nice extras round out the package. Worth a look.

2025

Collector's Edition
2025

w/ Skateboard
2025
(Still not reliable for this title)

Special Edition
1991

2011

2018-2019

2015

Choice Collection
1989

2019

2017

Special Edition
1983

Yellow Faced Tiger | Huang mian lao hu | 黄面老虎 | Original Mandarin Cut + Alternate English Cut
1974

1993

Special Edition
1982

Special Edition
1981

1995

2015

Rebirth
2011

2K Restoration
1980

Bamboo Trap
1975

2003

Special Edition
1985

1985