I just finished Cobra Kai a couple of days ago, and I have... feelings about it.
I love the Karate Kid. It's garbage in a lot of ways, but I love this bizarre movie where a scrawny teenager catches the attention of and then continues to provoke a gang of would-be murderers (seriously, that scene on the bikes is attempted murder) until a wise old man from the far east teaches him how to kickpunch better than the murderers can and he beats them up one by one, thereby teaching them to respect him. That's the attitude I came to the show with.
The first and second seasons of the show feel almost like different beasts. The first season seems more concerned with the source material than the second, and also more self-aware about its silliness, like the scene where Johnny is trying to get Cobra Kai Dojo reinstated in the tournament and he all but looks at the camera to say, "I never heard of the villain from the third movie!"* The persistent mockery made me feel a little uncomfortable, though. The first season is about two fifty-year-olds who are arrested in nostalgia for their high school days, so the show making fun of them while marketing itself to people whose main draw to watch it would be nostalgia for that same period feels a little mean to me.
That's not to say the season is bad. I like and believe Johnny, Miguel, Robby, Daniel, Amanda, Aisha, and Hawk. There are a lot of very honest moments about failure and humiliation and self-realization that make the show extremely worth watching. It's just that the writing is also pretty ham-fisted at times, going into really tiresome Boomer pandering, complaining about safe spaces and participation awards with a complete lack of self-awareness while painting people who think it's bad for children to punch one another as flighty airheads who can't handle the real world.
I kind of like the second season more, but it's still a mixed bag. The stakes feel more personal and real, being mostly about the relationships between the students of the competing dojos and the adults running or peripherally connected to them. The fight choreography becomes amazing, especially in the final episode, where my jaw literally dropped when I realized how long the camera had gone without a cut during the final brawl. The villains generally become more relatable in their villainy as their motivation becomes clearer and the acting is more capable of portraying the kinds of damage driving them, which the good guys feel less saintly and more human.
My big complaint is the sexual politics.
The second season is all about the shipping. Daniel and Amanda's marriage suffering because he's focusing too much on the past and leaving her alone? That's good stuff! Johnny trying to date and not being able to because he thinks dating apps are for nerds and you're supposed to just alpha dominate a woman? That's... less good, it's pretty over the top but it's also mostly in character, I guess. Miguel, Sam, Robby, and Bad Girl Whose Name I Already Forget having a weird love quadrangle? I don't totally hate it because Miguel's actor sells the hell out of it, but it's not very good, and the camera really likes to perv up Samantha; Samantha, whose age is unclear but who due to the rules of the tournament cannot possibly be older than seventeen. There's this scene where she's kissing her boyfriend and the camera pans slowly down her back to focus on her ass, her child's ass, in a way that still makes me uncomfortable to think about. (It also inspired me to check my suspicions, and yes, the actor playing Daniel's wife Amanda is twenty years younger than Ralph Macchio is, so that's pretty gross too.)
Despite my negative tone, I do like this series. I watched it all the way through, didn't I? I just wish the writing was a little sharper and there were fewer creeps directing the camera.
*As an aside, when the character of Robby first appeared, he had that villain's hairstyle and I was sure the show was going to tie him to Terry Silver's character somehow. It never happened, though, so I'm guessing it was just a visual in-joke.