From Spencer Klavan at Rejoice Evermore:
In other words, the confrontation is set up not as a face-off between two ideals of manhood—the good and retiring sweetheart versus the evil alpha male—but between the noble and the corrupted version of one kind of man, the red-blooded American kind. Danny scores higher than Johnny on the good guy scale, but he has to confront the hard truth that Johnny simply has more physical power: he is bigger, stronger, better trained. The movie is about those brute realities of being a man, and how Danny’s going to deal with them.
At first, he cowers. It’s only after a couple beatings that Danny starts to sulk and cringe through the halls of school, desperate to evade the facts of his situation. If there’s a kind of wimp that Danny might become, it’s not the sensitive bookworm but the resentful loner, darkly brooding over the unfairness of life and plotting twisted forms of revenge. Not Bastian Bux from The Neverending Story but Dostoevsky’s seething underground man.
Instead, of course, Danny meets Nariyoshi Miyagi of Okinawa. Predictably, in the braindead race criticism of Current Year America, Mr. Miyagi has gone down as a perverse stereotype of “the perpetual foreigner who exists to serve the whiteness that surrounds him.” Nonsense. Miyagi is a richly layered tragic hero, and the movie’s finest achievement is how patiently, even reverently it approaches the heart of his story. (Read more.)
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