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Cobra Kai Season 4 Starts Filming This Month When Does It Premiere On Netflix

January 1 saw the premiere on Netflix of all 10 half-hour chapters of season 3 of the series based on the Karate Kid film trilogy. And he announced that part 4 of one of the most viewed series in 2020 is coming

Netflix started the year with good news: on Friday, January 1, it premiered season 3 of Cobra Kai, the series that is a sequel to the Karate Kid, the ’80s movie trilogy that became a real success around the world.

With a mix of eighties nostalgia and well-choreographed combat and martial arts scenes, the series became a success since

Cobra Kai debuted in 2018 as the star content of YouTube Premium. In 2019 the video platform presented season 2 but then decided to leave it unfinished. Quick reflexes, in August of last year Netflix added the first two seasons of the series to its catalog and that’s where the real boom took place.

Powered by the brand of the world leader in streaming, Cobra Kai was discovered by millions of people and became a paradox: it ranked as one of the most popular series of the year without having presented a new episode in 2020.

The 10 half-hour episodes of season 3 that premiered on the first day of 2021 were filmed in co-production with Netflix, which confirmed the contract renewal for season 4.

Although there is still no confirmed date, according to information shared by John Hurwitz himself, Executive producer of the series, the script is finished and filming would begin in January 2021.

Cobra Kai And The Return Of The Karate Kid

Created by Josh Heald, Jon Hurwitz, and Hayden Schlossberg, Cobra Kai follows the story, more than 30 years later, of Daniel LaRusso and Johnny Lawrence, again played by Ralph Macchio and William Zabka as in The Karate Kid.

In the original film, directed by Oscar-winner John G. Avildsen (‘Rocky’), Daniel was a new kid at a suburban Californian school who was quickly bullied by blond Johnny and his karate friends.

With no father figure, his building’s janitor a Japanese native from Okinawa and a war veteran – the iconic Lord Miyagi (Pat Morita), took him under his wing and taught him not only karate punches but the philosophy of life of that ancient martial art.

Daniel-san and Johnny met in a final battle in the city tournament, which the former won, ‘Crane Kick’ through. That combat would end up being defined in their lives.

Cobra Kai shows them, already gentlemen of 50: Daniel has become a prosperous businessman in the local reputation for his sporting conquests, while Johnny is a drunkard and absent father of a teenager.

In the story, there is no longer Mr. Miyagi (the actor Morita died in 2005), but a whole generation of karate millennials does appear through whom the eternal rivalry of the protagonists seems destined to repeat itself.

Is that when Johnny decides to refound the Cobra Kai dojo, where he learned everything he knows, Daniel decides to imitate him. And the confrontation between the two former apprentices, now sensei themselves, takes on a new life.

The success of the series is based on being an aggiornated version of the archetypes that led the Karate Kid trilogy to the status of a pop culture classic in the 80s: the teacher-student relationship, bullying, the concept of honor, the first teenage romances.

Precisely, the third season begins with all the protagonists, of the old and the new guard, recovering from the violent confrontation between the dojos, which left Miguel Díaz (Xolo Maridueña), the star student of Cobra Kai, in a delicate state in the hospital.

Johnny’s son Robby (Tanner Buchanan) is on the lam and Samantha LaRusso (Mary Mouser), Daniel’s daughter, was psychologically affected by the violent events.

Johnny will try to redeem himself and will accentuate the distancing of the teachings of his old teacher John Kreese (Martin Kove), the true baddie of history (an incorrigible bad), and the best example of the damage that a bad teacher can cause in the youngest boys.

As leaked, in the new season 4 the parade of characters from the trilogy of the 80s will continue, in a nod to the generation that grew up with the repetitions of the saga on Saturday afternoons on open television.

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