FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

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ベスト・キッド3/最後の挑戦
ベスト・キッド3/最後の挑戦

ベスト・キッド3/最後の挑戦

19891h 47m★ 5.9アクションファミリードラマアドベンチャー

あらすじ

ダニエルとミヤギに完敗したコブラ会は復讐に燃え、カラテの反逆児マイクを刺客に差し向けた。だが、ミヤギは試合のための極意を教えてくれない。困惑したダニエルの前に一人の男が現われて……。人気シリーズ第3作。

作品考察・見どころ

本作が描くのは、シリーズ中で最も暗く、かつ人間的な「心の隙」への警鐘です。ダニエルが抱く焦燥感を悪役が狡猾に煽る展開は、若者が誘惑に屈していく過程を生々しく映し出します。それに対比されるミヤギの静謐な佇まいと無償の愛が、本作をただの格闘映画ではなく、魂の救済の物語へと昇華させています。 見どころは、肉体の衝突以上に激しく描かれる精神の修練です。ラルフ・マッチオの繊細な葛藤とパット・モリタの慈愛が重なる時、真の勝利とは相手を倒すことではなく、己の心を律することにあるという普遍的なメッセージが響き渡ります。型の中に静寂を見出すクライマックスは、観る者の魂を震わせる最高の瞬間となるでしょう。

興行成績

製作費: $12,500,000 (19億円)

興行収入: $38,956,288 (58億円)

推定収支: $26,456,288 (40億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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キャスト

ラルフ・マッチオ
ラルフ・マッチオ
Daniel LaRusso
Pat Morita
Pat Morita
Mr. Miyagi
Robyn Lively
Robyn Lively
Jessica Andrews
Thomas Ian Griffith
Thomas Ian Griffith
Terry Silver
Martin Kove
Martin Kove
John Kreese
Sean Kanan
Sean Kanan
Mike Barnes
Jonathan Avildsen
Jonathan Avildsen
Snake
William Christopher Ford
William Christopher Ford
Dennis
No Image
Randee Heller
Lucille LaRusso
Pat E. Johnson
Pat E. Johnson
Referee

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: John G. Avildsen

脚本: Robert Mark Kamen

音楽: Bill Conti / Gheorghe Zamfir

制作: Jerry Weintraub / Sheldon Schrager

撮影監督: Steve Yaconelli

制作会社: Columbia Pictures / Weintraub International Group / Jerry Weintraub Productions

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Filipe Manuel Neto
Filipe Manuel Neto
★ 5

**The weakest of them all in the Karate Kid franchise.** After an excellent initial film and a sufficiently honorable sequel, this film comes to us… and there is no way to hide that the quality of the material presented is substantially lower and that the film works badly. The biggest problem with this film is the script, quite weak, poorly written and full of holes in which the lack of logic and credibility are closely associated with a dose of predictability that makes the film tiresome. The characters were also frankly poorly developed, the villains are stereotyped and loaded (the movie does everything it can to not like them) and the material given to the actors wasn't enough to guarantee a good job. Even so, it is necessary to recognize that Pat Morita and Ralph Macchio did everything possible to rise to the challenge, and to live up to what the audience expected from their respective characters. Morita remains a sympathetic presence and Macchio is not as immature and stubborn as in previous films, which shows some maturity in the character (although I don't know if this was intentional). The disappearance of Macchio's character's mother from the scene is justified in the most stupid way possible, and the place that was supposedly leased for the bonsai shop looks more like a warehouse than a commercial space. In the midst of these problems, the film compensates us with regular cinematography, good editing, a pleasant pace and no room for dead moments. Filming locations are satisfying enough. This being an action movie, a fight movie, karate, I expected to have seen some more fights, it has a lot less fights than the previous movies, and the tension is not as palpable, but what was done is quite well done, and the fight choreographies were well rehearsed and carried out.

GenerationofSwine
GenerationofSwine
★ 2

I totally forgot about this one until someone at work made an obscure reference about it... and suddenly I was faced with memories I'd rather forget. Honestly, when you remember The Next Karate kid and not Part III, it should tell you something. Anyway, he was right, it did have Robyn Lively in it and I think this is one of her early roles... and this and Teen Witch are kind of a shame because she can do a good job, a Twin Peaks quality job here and there but otherwise lingers in obscurity and really only surfaces for people like me who see her here and there in television roles and have fond memories of some of her better roles. Anyway, it also has Ralph Macchio doing a job that kind of makes sure to tell the audience that he does not want to be there, he does not think III is a good idea, and otherwise convinces the audience not to like it. And he was right, the script wasn't there. It was nice that he had a platonic interest and not a love interest, it was unique, it fit his character, it worked with the story... but the story otherwise wasn't there. It's kind of a revenge tale that you have seen a thousand times over and this one doesn't say anything more than low budget Canon Pictures quality film.

CinemaSerf
CinemaSerf
★ 6

Was I the only one who simply wasn’t engaged with this series? Building on the success of their very own equivalent of the 1970s “Grasshopper” (David Carradine) doing karate rather than kung fu, the now slightly loved-up “Daniel” (Ralph Macchio) finds himself embroiled in quite a nasty plot by his erstwhile nemesis “Kreese” (Martin Kove) to avenge himself on the lad and his mentor “Miyagi” (Pat Morita) by goading him into a final conflict with his new Cobra Kai star “Mike” (Sean Kanan) which he hopes will repay the injustices he feels were visited upon him in the last film in 1986. The sagely “Miyagi” also has to worry about his charge when their apartment block is demolished and the kindly youngster uses his college fund to buy the old gentleman a venue for his bonsai tree business. This latter enterprise only serves to give “Kreese” and his young enforcer even more leverage over “Daniel” as he starts to look just a little bit out of his depth. With his guru disapprovingly abandoning him to his fate and him unsure as to who is really on his side, the whole underpinning principles of the honour of karate start to become blurred - but not as blurred as his vision, physically and metaphorically, as things come to an head. What is odd about this is the comparative tameness and timidity of the action scenes. I know this isn’t rated for the age group of something like “Enter the Dragon” but there the martial arts look so much more real and so much less choreographed than this rather placid, furniture-trashing, affair. “Miyagi” seems to have modelled his character as a sort of khaki-clad “Yoda”; Macchio could hardly be more of a drip and Kove ought to have stuck to “Cagney and Lacey” - at least there he didn’t have to try to pretend he was menacing. This just doesn’t ever take hold and the lacklustre efforts from just about everyone - except, perhaps, the unjustifiably wounded tiny little sculptured tree - are as flat as the mat. Same old, same old - sorry.

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