Orlando Sentinel

Zabka turned ‘Cobra Kai’ into comedy worth taking seriously

- By Lorraine Ali

The Emmys aren’t until September, but I’m kicking off the Nominate “Cobra Kai” Movement now. Now streaming, the fourth season of Netflix’s martial arts series — and more pointedly its lead William Zabka — should be top contenders in the comedy categories. If I could end this paragraph with a low roundhouse kick and knee strike to drive my point home, I would.

I understand this crusade is an uphill climb. I’m advocating for the aging television academy to vote for a young adult series where teens beat up each other, and the show may as well have dropped from the sky when it debuted in 2018 and ran for two seasons on YouTube Premium. It did land a comedy series nomination last year after moving to Netflix, and its mini-mall brawls and karate championsh­ip showdowns made it stand out among kid-gloved nominees such as “Emily in Paris,” “Ted Lasso” and “The Kominsky Method.” Fans delighted in the ruckus and the humor, but the action may have distracted voters from “Cobra Kai’s” strength as an inventive, cohesive series that over four seasons has refined its comedic rhythm like its characters have perfected their fighting skills.

At the forefront of the charge is series lead and co-executive producer William Zabka. He reprises the role of Johnny Lawrence, the rich-kid bully from the 1980s “The Karate Kid” film franchise who rivaled working-class good guy Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio). Their fortunes are reversed in the TV series, where Lawrence is a divorced, often out-of-work handyman and former sensei of the ruthless dojo Cobra Kai. He’s emotionall­y stunted, lacks basic social skills and has a cultural barometer that’s stuck in 1985.

Johnny’s glacial selfimprov­ement — two good deeds forward, three six-packs back — could have become a mere shtick in another performer’s hands. But Zabka has craftily pushed the stubborn character to grow without forfeiting Johnny’s dudelike essence. Though set in his ways, the All-Valley tournament champ is never the same from season to season, despite his penchant for Judas Priest cranked to 11 and Manwiches seasoned with beef jerky.

He is the heart and soul of the show. This season, he has conceded to work with rival LaRusso, who’s now the owner of a successful car dealership — which makes Johnny both question and double down on his Strike First, No Mercy policy. The story unfolds around him with the returning cast, more original characters from the films (Thomas Griffith as the scheming Terry Silver) and new additions to the teenage crew (such as Dallas Dupree’s Kenny). Cobra Kai, usurped by John Kreese (Martin Kove), is a threat to all that’s good and noble about karate, and the series continues to draw on the themes that made the films resonate: anger versus restraint, the wealthy versus the working class, winning at all costs versus moral responsibi­lity. Though rooted in the history of the films, the story is compelling and fresh thanks to new twists, character turns and the cunning refusal to take the ’80s-era earnestnes­s too far before making fun of it.

The drama plays out in the San Fernando Valley, from the tony hills of Encino where the LaRussos live, including daughter Amanda (Courtney Henggeler), to the flats of Reseda, where Johnny and his mentee Miguel (Xolo Mariduena) live in an unironic, rundown mid-century apartment complex. The teens are destined to repeat the mistakes of their parents if something, or someone, doesn’t change their ways.

And so we’re back at Zabka. As Johnny, he’s still trying to survive financiall­y after the duplicitou­s Kreese stole his dojo, and is struggling to keep up with a world that’s changed drasticall­y over his lifetime. He’s growing ever so slowly with each new sober experience, so forgive him if he stumbles over pronouns and thinks “gender fluid” is a sports drink. Zabka is masterful in setting off tiny light bulbs of promise and progress inside an otherwise hardheaded and seemingly hopeless case. He subtly makes the case that guys who eat 7-Eleven hot dogs for breakfast deserve love and respect too.

Thanks largely to Zabka, “Cobra Kai” is a comedy that needs to be taken seriously.

 ?? JEROD HARRIS/GETTY 2019 ?? Actor William Zabka reprises his role as Johnny Lawrence in the series “Cobra Kai.”
JEROD HARRIS/GETTY 2019 Actor William Zabka reprises his role as Johnny Lawrence in the series “Cobra Kai.”

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