faie1 faie2 faie3 faie4 faie5 faie6 faie7 faie8 faie9 faie10 faie11 faie12 faie13 faie14 faie15 faie16 faie17 faie18 faie19 faie20 faie21 faie22 faie23 faie24 faie25 faie26 faie27 faie28 faie29 faie30 faie31 faie32 faie33 faie34 faie35 faie36 faie37 faie38 faie39 faie40 faie41 faie42 faie43 faie44 faie45 faie46 faie47 faie48 faie49 faie50 faie51 faie52 faie53 faie54 faie55 faie56 faie57 faie58 faie59 faie60 faie61 faie62 faie63 faie64 faie65 faie66 faie67 faie68 faie69 faie70 faie71 faie72 faie73 faie74 faie75 faie76 faie77 faie78 faie79 faie80 faie81 faie82 faie83 faie84 faie85 faie86 faie87 faie88 faie89 faie90 faie91 faie92 faie93 faie94 faie95 faie96 faie97 faie98 faie99 faie100 jdfi1 jdfi2 jdfi3 jdfi4 jdfi5 jdfi6 jdfi7 jdfi8 jdfi9 jdfi10 jdfi11 jdfi12 jdfi13 jdfi14 jdfi15 jdfi16 jdfi17 jdfi18 jdfi19 jdfi20 jdfi21 jdfi22 jdfi23 jdfi24 jdfi25 jdfi26 jdfi27 jdfi28 jdfi29 jdfi30 jdfi31 jdfi32 jdfi33 jdfi34 jdfi35 jdfi36 jdfi37 jdfi38 jdfi39 jdfi40 jdfi41 jdfi42 jdfi43 jdfi44 jdfi45 jdfi46 jdfi47 jdfi48 jdfi49 jdfi50 jdfi51 jdfi52 jdfi53 jdfi54 jdfi55 jdfi56 jdfi57 jdfi58 jdfi59 jdfi60 jdfi61 jdfi62 jdfi63 jdfi64 jdfi65 jdfi66 jdfi67 jdfi68 jdfi69 jdfi70 jdfi71 jdfi72 jdfi73 jdfi74 jdfi75 jdfi76 jdfi77 jdfi78 jdfi79 jdfi80 jdfi81 jdfi82 jdfi83 jdfi84 jdfi85 jdfi86 jdfi87 jdfi88 jdfi89 jdfi90 jdfi91 jdfi92 jdfi93 jdfi94 jdfi95 jdfi96 jdfi97 jdfi98 jdfi99 jdfi100 acik1 acik2 acik3 acik4 acik5 acik6 acik7 acik8 acik9 acik10 acik11 acik12 acik13 acik14 acik15 acik16 acik17 acik18 acik19 acik20 acik21 acik22 acik23 acik24 acik25 acik26 acik27 acik28 acik29 acik30 acik31 acik32 acik33 acik34 acik35 acik36 acik37 acik38 acik39 acik40 acik41 acik42 acik43 acik44 acik45 acik46 acik47 acik48 acik49 acik50 acik51 acik52 acik53 acik54 acik55 acik56 acik57 acik58 acik59 acik60 acik61 acik62 acik63 acik64 acik65 acik66 acik67 acik68 acik69 acik70 acik71 acik72 acik73 acik74 acik75 acik76 acik77 acik78 acik79 acik80 acik81 acik82 acik83 acik84 acik85 acik86 acik87 acik88 acik89 acik90 acik91 acik92 acik93 acik94 acik95 acik96 acik97 acik98 acik99 acik100  ‘Cobra Kai’ recap, season 6, episode 8: Snakes on a plane – Enjoy Motel
close
close
quic3f

‘Cobra Kai’ recap, season 6, episode 8: Snakes on a plane

Cobra Kai

Snakes in an airplane

Season 6

Episode 8

Editorial review

4 stars

Photo: COURTESY OF NETFLIX

Something kept me from really loving the first two episodes of this series of five; Barcelona should be a nice change of setting, and it is, but there was something workmanlike about these opening events in the Sekai Taikai and this return to old character patterns. The show felt a little less joyful than at its best.

That changed for me with “Snakes on a Plane,” the exact centerpiece of this 15-episode sixth season. That’s quite a surprise for the least Barcelona-focused episode of the bunch, and for an episode with a prominent Anthony LaRusso subplot. But I felt a lot of genuine joy watching this one – both that big appearance at the end And the things that precede it.

That’s an impressive feat considering the relative lack of karate and the brief bleak turn with Carmen’s health. When Johnny calls Amanda from the plane, she reports that Carmen is still unconscious and that they are monitoring her bleeding. Otherwise we don’t know what’s going on or if she’s okay. I thought she would make it, just because killing off Carmen so deep into the show would really put a damper on the remaining episodes. But the story works because while We know she’s probably fine, and We Knowing that it is safe to enjoy the plane due to possible comedic possibilities, Johnny and Miguel have no such guarantees.

Pretty much any time Miguel feels hurt or neglected by Johnny, and the two get back together, it’s guaranteed to rub off on me. They are the core, the show’s original sensei-student relationship, the new Mr. Miyagi and Daniel, and in some ways they are an even more important couple than Johnny and Daniel. Often the distance between them only grows as they are all busy with their own things – as Johnny explains to Miguel later in the episode, Robby needs more support than he does at the moment, as he feels directionless without any particular academic prospects. But as he movingly tells Miguel, “You are my son too.” He admits that he worries about losing Carmen, that he knows it’s a false comfort to pretend he knows everything will be okay.

The rich jerk in first grade is a pretty cartoonish villain for the episode, but it’s nice to see Miguel being the one to punch him out instead of Johnny. And that’s the first of several W’s for these two, the biggest of which is the news that Carmen and the baby are doing well! (That bloody bedspread was equally horrifying, but I thought it was a misdirection.) She needed an emergency cerclage, but now she’s back on bed rest for a few weeks, so there’s no other option. She even encourages them to fly back to Spain and win the Sekai Taikai.

I think I would believe it I I could win a world karate tournament if Carmen told me I could, but her encouragement might get in the way of the wishes of the new fighter called up to compete for Miyagi-Do: Kenny. Johnny asked Amanda to get Kenny on a plane to Spain to replace Miguel, not knowing they would be going back the same day. It’s pretty smart to bring Kenny back in at this point, and I’m relieved that it doesn’t mean Miguel will actually be absent. There’s an interesting potential for conflict in the next few episodes: with a limited number of slots, who actually shall compete?

Getting Kenny to agree is no easy task. He’s still convinced Anthony was the one who drugged him with laxatives and led to the memeification of “Shit Butt,” a nickname that doesn’t roll off the tongue very well. (On the other hand, Kenny called Anthony “LaPusso.”) Amanda has Anthony apologize to Kenny for bullying him, but he is overly defensive about the laxative accusations, and the two inevitably get into a fight. (Amanda: “Damn karate.”) Amanda, ever the peacekeeper, shuts them up by sharing the news about Carmen, a powerful reminder that their problems are small potatoes. It is their duty to move past this so that Kenny can feel safe with Miyagi-Do and continue for his friends in Barcelona.

That doesn’t stop the war immediately. But Anthony’s more sincere apology does, along with his over-the-top gesture of voluntarily evening the score when it comes to pants-pooping. Devon’s guilty phone call admitting the whole thing seals the deal. Kenny and Anthony may not be the best of friends, but there is no bad blood anymore.

But now that a feud is over, teen drama in Barcelona is reaching a fever pitch. At Chozen’s encouragement (and against Daniel’s), the kids go ‘hard into town’ tonight to relax, including a tapas bar where Robby, Tory, Kwon and Zara become embroiled in a four-way mind game. Robby isn’t normally a drinker, but the breakup and his recent karate performances have left him in a dark spot. He ordered a double rum-and-coke as he jealously watched Kwon’s obnoxious flirting and reflected on how little the breakup has affected Tory — even personally. or in karate, which usually has a direct correlation.

Robby spends the night with Zara, who seems intent on screwing Tory personally, either out of a Kreese-esque attempt to get under her enemy’s skin or out of a pathological need to be the prettiest and most popular girl in the room . The next morning, Tory sees the two briefly kissing outside Zara’s door, which should further raise the stakes for the next event.

Everyone gets cozy with people they shouldn’t be with that night, including Demetri, who accepts a dance with a girl who is. not his girlfriend Yasmine. Eli’s FaceTime with his own girlfriend Moon certainly seems designed to betray Demetri, even though he didn’t know Yasmine was in the room with her at the time, but it puts the two friends on even worse ground than before.

And Sam spends some time with Axel and mentions that she saw Sensei Wolf hurt him. He is firmly focused on fighting and seems timid about everything else, although he tries to give her a kiss after an aborted fight with Kwon and some of his usual henchmen. I can’t quite tell where this story is going; Is Sam starting to realize that she might want something different than the life she dreamed of for herself and Miguel?

All of this is solid and sets up some intriguing wrinkles for the rest of the season. But I have to say my absolute favorite part of the episode is Chozen and Kim Da-Eun’s subplot where they keep running into each other while looking for their students. They meet again in the beach district and eventually follow the children to the tapas bar where they were last seen. Both expected the kids to fight and leave a destroyed bar behind in their wake – there is historical precedent, after all. But it turns out they were worried for nothing, as far as they know.

Kim Da-Eun has always been a solid secondary antagonist, but I also never found her to be as complex in the same way as Kreese or Silver. But it’s refreshing to see her separated from Kreese, who disapproves of his tactics off the battlefield. The episode makes us think that Kreese kidnapped Daniel without her knowledge, but following Dennis to a hotel leads to the “fuck yeah”-worthy reveal: it was Terry Silver who was behind the kidnapping all along, presumably in collaboration with Sensei Wolf to take down Miyagi-Do and lift the Iron Dragons to victory.

It’s a great moment, especially because it comes so early that it’s actually surprising (as opposed to an episode ten cliffhanger, which is what I expected). And yet, Chozen and Kim Da-Eun’s makeout session (and subsequent off-screen sex on the beach) has to be my favorite moment. There’s real energy in their sparring throughout the episode; in a show like this you would expect at least a few fighting moments that culminate in making out, but i think this must be the first actual instance, maybe because male characters rarely fight female characters (and there are no queer characters next to them) .

Besides the satisfaction of seeing Chozen get his groove back after Towel Man ruined his mojo, I’m excited to see Kim Da-Eun in this new mode. Alicia Hannah-Kim never got the chance to do comedy on this show, so it’s wonderful to see her flexing her muscles here. (The moment she shakes sand from her sleeves and hair the next morning is a highlight.) It will be difficult for the character to redeem herself at this point, given the ways she has hurt her students, but her growing gap with the other baddies is another variable to keep an eye on. I didn’t expect a full series of enemies-to-lovers to emerge Cobra Kaibut if that’s where this season is going, I’m here for it.

• “Why is the plane doing this twisty thing?” “You mean you follow the curvature of the Earth?”

• “I have to go inside. Looking for teenagers.” “I’ve heard that one before.”

Related Articles

Back to top button