The plot intensifies as Daniel discovers that the rural village has been completely squeezed by Sato’s commercial fishing monopoly, forcing the local farmers into deep poverty.
While Miyagi tries to navigate the peaceful traditions of his ancestors and care for his dying father, Daniel finds a new romance with Kumiko (Tamlyn Tomita), a beautiful local villager who dreams of becoming a professional dancer.
This budding relationship sparks the violent, jealous rage of Sato’s hot-tempered, sadistic nephew and top karate student, Chozen Toguchi (Yuji Okumoto).
Chozen launches an aggressive, relentless campaign of harassment against Daniel, repeatedly trying to provoke him into a fight to the death.
The narrative builds to a tense, dramatic peak when a massive, destructive typhoon sweeps through Okinawa, forcing a deeply shaken Sato to realize the futility of his lifelong hatred after Miyagi risks his life to save him.
However, a humiliated, unhinged Chozen refuses to drop the grudge, crashing a local festival and taking Kumiko hostage, which forces Daniel to engage in a brutal, life-or-death duel using the ancient secret of the Miyagi family drum technique to defend the woman he loves and restore ultimate honor.
Director John G. Avildsen returns to guide this expansive sequel with exceptional emotional maturity, beautifully expanding the universe’s intimate lore by shifting the setting from suburban California to a vivid, culturally rich Japanese landscape.
Macchio brings a wonderful, familiar charm to Daniel’s coming-of-age journey, while Morita delivers an incredibly profound, moving performance that deepens the tragic history of his iconic character.
Okumoto is brilliant, instilling Chozen with a menacing, razor-sharp intensity that creates a genuinely terrifying threat.
The Karate Kid Part II followed The Karate Kid (1984) and was followed by The Karate Kid Part III (1989) and The Next Karate Kid (1994).
Cobra Kai (2018–2025) picked up the storyline with Johnny Lawrence and Daniel LaRusso as adults in the sequel television series that aired on Netflix.

Ralph Macchio and Pat Morita in The Karate Kid Part II (Photo/Columbia Pictures)
Reception for The Karate Kid Part II
The Karate Kid Part II grossed $12.7 million on its opening weekend, finishing No. 1 at the box office.
The film remained in the top spot for its first four weekends and inside the top 10 for its initial 17 weekends en route to grossing $130 worldwide.
Legacy
The legacy of The Karate Kid Part II rests on its enduring reputation as a massive box office triumph that successfully proved the long-term storytelling viability of the franchise, out-earning its legendary predecessor worldwide.
The film’s soundtrack was led by Peter Cetera’s chart-topping theme song “Glory of Love,” which earned an Academy Award nomination and remains an absolute staple of eighties cinema nostalgia.
By completely shifting the focus from a sports tournament setting to a much darker, stakes-driven exploration of ancestral honor, cultural identity, and forgiveness, the movie significantly deepened the mythology of the series.
The Karate Kid Part II‘s rich narrative arcs and unforgettable characters have found a massive resurgence, directly serving as the foundational creative fuel for the critically acclaimed modern television continuation Cobra Kai.














