The film was released in the United States on June 30, 1989. In the Philippines, the film was released on September 6.
Critical reception On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 18% based on 61 reviews and an average rating of 3.9/10. The website's critics consensus reads: "Inspiration is in short supply in this third
Karate Kid film, which recycles the basic narrative from its predecessors but adds scenery-chewing performances and a surprising amount of violence". On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 36 out of 100, based on 12 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B−" on an A+ to F scale.
Roger Ebert, who praised the first two films, did not enjoy
Part III. His colleague,
Gene Siskel, also did not recommend the film, though he commended the performance of Thomas Ian Griffith, which he thought was nearly enough to save it. Critic
Kevin Thomas of the
Los Angeles Times stated that "writer Robert Mark Kamen gave director
Avildsen and his cast too little to work with".
Caryn James of
The New York Times was critical of the lack of character development for the film's protagonist, saying that he "has aged about a year in movie time and hasn't become a day smarter" and criticized the film for having "the rote sense of film makers trying to crank out another moneymaker". A 2008
DVD review of the film from Scott Weinberg of the website
JoBlo said it was the installment of the
series "where the wheels started to come off", remarking that it "approaches the
Karate Kid formula as if it's the world's last home-cooked meatloaf", deriding the "cartoonishness" of the villains, and saying that "it all feels cynical and hollow...which is NOT the vibe we still get from
Part 1". Reviewing a 2001 UK DVD of the film, Almar Haflidason of the
BBC praised the disc's picture and sound quality, but dismissed the film as a "desperate continuation of
The Karate Kid franchise [which] shudders to a pathetic halt" and criticized its loss of "any warmth of the previous two films".
The Karate Kid Part III was nominated for 5 awards at the
1989 Golden Raspberry Awards:
Worst Picture (
Jerry Weintraub);
Worst Screenplay (Kamen);
Worst Director (John G. Avildsen);
Worst Actor (Macchio) and
Worst Supporting Actor (Morita).
Legacy In 2015, director John G. Avildsen called the film "a horrible imitation of the original...hastily written and sloppily rewritten", adding that it "will baffle those who haven't seen the first two (movies) and insult those who have". Ralph Macchio was also disappointed with the film, stating that he "just felt for the LaRusso character; he never seemed to go forward", and that when doing
The Karate Kid Part III it "felt like we were redoing the first movie as a sort of cartoon, without the heart and soul which sold the original. It didn't help that we had characters mysteriously popping up for the sake of dramatic convenience." Griffith, Lively, Kanan, and Ford would reprise their roles in the sequel series
Cobra Kai, across the
fourth through sixth seasons. ==Notes==