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词条 Mr. Miyagi
释义

  1. Fictional biography

     Early life  World War II military service  Awards and decorations 

  2. Appearances

     The Karate Kid (1984)  The Karate Kid Part II (1986)  The Karate Kid Part III (1989)  The Next Karate Kid (1994)  Cobra Kai (2018–) 

  3. Cultural influence

     Karate style  Appearance in Reality Fighters  Awards 

  4. References

{{More citations needed|date=August 2017}}{{In-universe|date=August 2017}}{{Infobox character
| name = Mr. Miyagi
| series = The Karate Kid
| image = Pat-Morita (Karate Kid).jpg
| image_size = 250px
| caption = Mr. Miyagi in The Karate Kid
| first = The Karate Kid
| last = The Next Karate Kid
| creator = Robert Mark Kamen
| portrayer = Pat Morita (films)[1]
Fumio Demura (fight scenes in films)
Robert Ito (animated series)
| nickname = Miyagi-san
Miyagi-sensei
| title = Staff Sergeant (US Army)
| religion = Shinto
| nationality = Japanese American
}}Mr. Miyagi is a fictional karate master played by Japanese American actor Pat Morita[2] in The Karate Kid (franchise). Mr. Miyagi mentors the characters Daniel LaRusso and Julie Pierce in the films. Morita earned an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor nomination for his performance in The Karate Kid.[3]

As written in Japanese characters in The Karate Kid Part II, his name is 宮城成義,[4] which is translated as Nariyoshi Miyagi in the Cobra Kai television series. However, he is called Keisuke Miyagi at the start of The Next Karate Kid,[5] and Miyagi Yakuga in the 1989 animated television series. The Karate Kid screenwriter Robert Mark Kamen stated that Mr. Miyagi was named after Chōjun Miyagi, the founder of the Goju-ryu karate style,[6]{{nonspecific|date=August 2017}} which is also the style of karate featured in the films.

Fictional biography

Early life

Born June 9, 1925 in Okinawa, Japan.

Miyagi learned karate from his father, a fisherman. He worked for the richest man in the village, whose son Sato was Miyagi's best friend. In a departure from the local tradition of fathers only teaching karate to their own sons, and at Miyagi's request, Miyagi's father also taught Sato. Miyagi fell in love with Yukie, who was arranged to marry Sato. Dishonored by their love, Sato challenged Miyagi to a fight to the death. Therefore, Miyagi chose to emigrate to the United States without Yukie to avoid fighting Sato.

World War II military service

After first arriving in Los Angeles, he attended the University of California, Santa Barbara, married, and was later interned in the Manzanar Japanese internment camp at the onset of World War II. During this time, Miyagi joined the U.S. Army and received the Medal of Honor (he was a member of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, historically one of the most highly decorated regiments in the history of the United States Armed Forces, including 21 Medal of Honor recipients). While in the Army, he taught his commanding officer, Lieutenant Jack Pierce, the art of karate. During his service, Mrs. Miyagi and their newborn son died in the Manzanar camp due to complications during childbirth, a loss that haunted him for decades.[7] What Miyagi did during the time between the war and the first Karate Kid film is not fully known. After the war, he took a job as an apartment janitor in South Seas apartment. He also joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Awards and decorations

Listed below are the medals and service awards displayed on Staff Sergeant Miyagi's uniform in The Karate Kid.

Personal decorations
number=0|type=oak|name=Medal of Honor ribbon|width=60}}Medal of Honor
number=0|type=oak|name=Silver Star ribbon|width=60}}Silver Star
number=0|type=oak|ribbon=Bronze Star ribbon.svg|width=60}}Bronze Star Medal
number=0|type=oak|name=Army Commendation Medal ribbon|width=60}}Army Commendation Medal
number=1|type=oak|ribbon=Purple Heart ribbon.svg|width=60}}Purple Heart, w/1 bronze oak leaf cluster
Unit awards
number=0|type=oak|name=Presidential Unit Citation ribbon|width=60}}Presidential Unit Citation
Service Awards
number=0|type=oak|name=Army Good Conduct ribbon|width=60}}Army Good Conduct Medal
Campaign and service medals
number=0|type=service-star|ribbon=American Campaign Medal ribbon.svg|width=60}}American Campaign Medal
number=4|type=service-star|ribbon=European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign ribbon.svg|width=60}}European-African-Middle Eastern Campaign Medal, w/4 service stars
number=0|type=oak|ribbon=World War II Victory Medal ribbon.svg|width=60}}World War II Victory Medal
Other accoutrements
Combat Infantryman Badge
442nd Regimental Combat Team Combat Service Identification Badge

Appearances

The Karate Kid (1984)

In The Karate Kid, Miyagi works as a maintenance man at the South Seas apartment complex, where Daniel LaRusso and his mother have recently moved into. Later, Miyagi salvages a damaged bicycle that Daniel threw in a dumpster earlier, repairs it, and takes it back to him. Daniel is chased by bullies during a Halloween party, where Miyagi proceeds to teach the attackers lessons left and right. Daniel asks Miyagi to teach him karate after Miyagi saves him. At first, Miyagi refuses, but, after meeting the rambunctious and merciless John Kreese, a former Special Forces veteran running the Cobra Kai dojo, Miyagi agrees to teach Daniel karate. The two soon learn that there will be a tournament, where the Cobra Kai students, some of whom bully Daniel at school, will be competing. At the start of Daniel's karate training, Miyagi assigns him to do several non-karate-related house chores. On Daniel's first day of training, he waxes a number of cars. On the second day of training, Daniel sands the wooden floors of Miyagi's house. On the third day, Daniel paints the fences. On the fourth day, Daniel paints Miyagi's house. At this point, Daniel gets upset and threatens to leave. Miyagi then shows him how the chores were in fact training Daniel to do karate blocks. After the chores, Miyagi continues to train Daniel, and their bond develops. Miyagi soon confesses to Daniel about the dual loss of his wife and newborn son due to complications arising from childbirth at Manzanar internment camp while he was serving with the 442nd Infantry Regiment during World War II in Europe, where he received the Medal of Honor. Miyagi teaches Daniel important life lessons such as the importance of personal balance, reflected in the principle that martial arts training is as much about training the spirit as the body. Miyagi accompanies Daniel at the tournament, where Daniel wins the finals.

The Karate Kid Part II (1986)

In The Karate Kid Part II, Daniel has recently won the tournament. Miyagi humiliates John Kreese in the parking lot, causing him to suffer wounds on both hands after punching the glass windows on the cars. Six months later, Miyagi receives a letter, explaining that his father is dying due to his very old age. Miyagi explains that he once fell in love with a woman named Yukie, who was arranged to marry his best friend, Sato, son of the richest man in the village and fellow karate student of his father. Upon Miyagi announcing his intentions to marry Yukie, Sato challenged him to a fight to the death. Rather than fight, however, Miyagi left Japan as a show of self-imposed exile. Miyagi and Daniel travel to Okinawa, where they are greeted by Chozen Toguchi, who drives Miyagi and Daniel to one of Sato's warehouses, and reveals himself to be Sato's nephew. Sato tries to goad Miyagi into a fight to restore his honor, but Miyagi turns it down. Once at the village, Miyagi and Daniel are welcomed by Yukie and her niece, Kumiko. The two reveal that Sato owns the village's land title and are forced to rent property from him. Yukie reveals that she never married Sato because of her love for Miyagi. After Miyagi's father dies, Sato gives him three days to mourn out of respect before their fight. Miyagi then shows Daniel the secret to his family's karate – a handheld drum that twists back and forth illustrating the "drum technique", a block-and-defense karate move that Daniel begins to practice. Miyagi's family property is vandalized by Chozen and his crew, who are fended off when Miyagi intervenes. Miyagi and Daniel intend to return to California before the situation worsens. However, Sato shows up with bulldozers, threatening to destroy the village if Miyagi refuses to fight. Forced to comply, Miyagi gives in on the condition that Sato signs the village's land title over to the villagers, regardless of the fight's outcome. Sato initially balks, but agrees after Miyagi describes the condition as a "small price" to pay for honor. On the day of their fight, a typhoon strikes the village, where Sato is trapped under the ruins of a dojo that was destroyed by the storm. Miyagi and Daniel rescue him and take him to a nearby shelter, where other innocent bystanders witness a child stuck on top of a bell tower; the child is soon rescued by Daniel. The next morning, the bulldozers help rebuild the village, while Sato hands over the village's land title and asks forgiveness from Miyagi, who accepts. Miyagi and others attend an O-bon festival at the castle of the village, where a vengeful Chozen takes Kumiko hostage and challenges Daniel to a fight to the death. Miyagi uses a handheld drum, along with all the others in the festival, to distract Chozen, giving Daniel a chance to subdue him. Kumiko is freed afterward, while Miyagi looks on. Mr Miyagi is also proud of Daniel and respects him more.

The Karate Kid Part III (1989)

In The Karate Kid Part III, Miyagi and Daniel return to California and discover that the South Seas apartment complex has been closed, leaving Daniel homeless and Miyagi unemployed. Miyagi offers Daniel the choice to stay at his house. Daniel uses his college funding to help Miyagi open up a nursery shop for bonsai trees. Miyagi thanks Daniel and makes him a partner for the new business. While their newfound business is in progress, they are unaware that John Kreese is attempting to resurrect Cobra Kai, and his longtime comrade, Terry Silver, has been gathering information out of the two who are running the business, and they plot to goad Daniel into participating in the next upcoming tournament, but Daniel announces that he will not be attending to defend his title. Miyagi continues to train Daniel with new techniques, until Silver approaches the two with a fake story, requesting for forgiveness for Kreese's previous behavior. Mike Barnes, a top prospect for the tournament, enters the fray, causing a ruckus with Daniel, until Miyagi intervenes, fending him and his neighbors off. The two then witness that the bonsai trees have disappeared from the shop, with an application for the tournament replacing the lost trees, causing Daniel's concern to grow even more uneasy. It is revealed that Miyagi had a valuable bonsai tree he had brought from Okinawa; Daniel and his newly befriended neighbor, Jessica Andrews, had decided to plant the tree halfway down a slope in hopes of selling it. However, the bullies return while Daniel and Jessica ascend uphill, leading to Barnes breaking the tree and forcing Daniel to compete in the tournament. Daniel takes the broken bonsai tree to Miyagi, who then confesses that he sold his truck in order to obtain a new stock of trees and explains that he now cannot train Daniel. Daniel goes through a series of unfortunate events, training under Silver's wing and attacking a man at a nightclub, but apologizes to Miyagi and Jessica soon afterward. Still refusing to compete in the tournament, Daniel is tricked by Silver's true agenda, with Barnes and Kreese coming in, while Miyagi intervenes, and agrees to train Daniel once again. The two replant the now-healed bonsai tree. At the tournament, Daniel defeats Barnes as Miyagi looks on, while Silver and Kreese are not pleased, speculating that Cobra Kai is finished forever.

The Next Karate Kid (1994)

In The Next Karate Kid, Miyagi travels to Boston, Massachusetts to attend a commendation for Japanese-American soldiers, who fought in the 442nd Regimental Combat Team during World War II. He meets Louisa Pierce, the widow of his commanding officer, Lt. Jack Pierce, and they explain about their past war stories. Miyagi meets Julie, the teenage granddaughter of Jack and Louisa who is plagued with anger issues, who also reveals that her parents died in an automobile accident. One day, Miyagi invites Louisa to his house in Los Angeles to have a moment of silence, while Miyagi stays behind at Boston to act as Julie's caretaker. Julie has a series of friction during her school days, and is nearly struck by a car when jumping into a tiger position. Julie reveals to Miyagi that she learned karate from her father, Jack's son, who was in turn taught from what Jack learned from Miyagi during the war. After Julie getting arrested as well as a two-week suspension from the school, Miyagi uses this time to take Julie to a Buddhist monastery to teach her the true ways of karate and how to handle her anger issues. Miyagi teaches Julie lessons about balance, co-ordination, awareness and respect for all life. As Julie is preparing for her high school prom, Miyagi teaches her how to dance and purchases her a dress. Julie attends the prom, while Miyagi goes bowling with the Buddhist monks. Still, things go haywire as Julie, along with her friend, Eric McGowen, are under siege by Colonel Dugan and the Alpha Elite. After Eric's car is set on fire, Eric is saved by Julie and Miyagi. The fiasco continues as Miyagi challenges Colonel Dugan to a fight, and easily defeats him.

Cobra Kai (2018–)

In Cobra Kai, Miyagi is revealed to have died on November 15, 2011 at the age of 86. Among other details, his gravestone lists him as a member of the 442nd Regiment along with their Combat Service Identification Badge, and a Medal of Honor recipient. Alongside the marker is a bonsai tree. Daniel takes the time to regularly visit the grave and trim the bonsai; he considers "a few months" to be a long time between visits. The memory of Miyagi still continues to play a role in Daniel's life, as he seeks to regain balance by practicing karate once again and becoming a mentor to Robby Keene, trying to turn his protege's life around as Miyagi had done for him. Following the conclusion of the All Valley Karate Tournament, Daniel is concerned with the resurgence of Cobra Kai Dojo and decides to start his own dojo in response, locating it at the former residence of Miyagi, which Daniel currently owns.

Cultural influence

{{In popular culture|section|date=August 2017}}

Karate style

Mr. Miyagi has a deep philosophical knowledge of life and has extraordinary martial arts skill.[8] In the second film, Mr. Miyagi explains that he is descended from Shimpo Miyagi, who was very fond of both fishing and sake. One day in 1625 while fishing and very drunk, he passed out on his fishing boat off the coast of Okinawa and ended up on the coast of China. Ten years later, Shimpo returned to Okinawa with his Chinese wife, his two kids, and the secret of Miyagi family karate. This, along with Miyagi's claim from the first film that his ancestor derived karate from Chinese te, implies that Shimpo Miyagi, like many Okinawan karate masters, was trained in Chinese martial arts during his stay in China. The secret of the Miyagi family karate appears to be a Den-den daiko, on which the drum technique is based. Other aspects of the style involve the crane technique, breathing technique, techniques from the kata Tensho (wax on wax off) and the kata Seiunchin (third movie).

Appearance in Reality Fighters

Mr. Miyagi trains the player and is a hidden unlockable fighter in the game Reality Fighters for PS Vita. He wears his trademark outfit, uses a fishing pole as a weapon, repeatedly mentions his bonsai-growing, and makes subtle references to Karate Kid, including the fly-and-chopsticks exercise.

Awards

Mr. Miyagi was inducted into the Fictitious Athlete Hall of Fame in 2015 in the Contributor Category.[9]

References

{{Portal|Film|United States|Fictional characters}}
1. ^{{cite news|url= https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/11/25/AR2005112500990.html|title= Noriyuki 'Pat' Morita, 73; Played 'Karate Kid' Teacher|accessdate=2010-05-21 |work= Washington Post |publisher= |date= 2005-11-26| first=Patricia | last=Sullivan}}
2. ^{{cite web|last=Cowan |first=Jared |url=http://www.laweekly.com/arts/how-a-movie-shot-in-the-san-fernando-valley-made-us-all-the-karate-kid-4790700 |title=How a Movie Shot in the San Fernando Valley Made Us All The Karate Kid |publisher=L.A. Weekly |date=2014-06-17 |accessdate=2015-07-09}}
3. ^{{cite web|url= http://espn.go.com/page2/movies/s/simmons/020830.html|title= Holy trilogy of the 'Karate Kid'|accessdate=2010-05-21 |work= ESPN |publisher= |date= }}
4. ^{{cite web |author= |title=The name "宮城成義 Miyagi" on a pickup name board, held by Chozen Toguchi, in "The Karate Kid Part II" at 25:50 |url=https://www.facebook.com/forimageposting/photos/a.396595550735291.1073741827.396579390736907/421651538229692/ |publisher=Image posting (Facebook) |date=2017-08-31 }}
5. ^{{cite web |author= |title=Sergeant Keisuke Miyagi attending a special unit citation for WWII Japanese-American soldiers, in "The Next Karate Kid" at 3:10 |url=https://www.facebook.com/forimageposting/photos/a.396595550735291.1073741827.396579390736907/421736254887887/ |publisher=Image posting (Facebook) |date=2017-08-31 }}
6. ^The Karate Kid Blu-Ray
7. ^{{cite news|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1984/06/22/movies/screen-karate-kid-bane-of-bullies.html|title= SCREEN 'KARATE KID,' BANE OF BULLIES|accessdate=2010-05-21 |work= The New York Times |publisher=|date= 1984-06-22| first=Janet | last=Maslin}}
8. ^{{cite web|url=https://uarel371.wordpress.com/2015/02/23/colonizer-colonized-and-the-karate-kid/|title=Colonizer, Colonized, and the Karate Kid|date=23 February 2015|publisher=|accessdate=30 June 2018}}
9. ^{{cite web|title=Fictitious Athlete Hall of Fame - Mr. Miyagi|url=http://www.notinhalloffame.com/fahof-current-inductees/2015-fahof-inductees/the-2015-fictitious-contributor-inductees/3063-mr-miyagi|website=Fictitious Athlete Hall of Fame}}
{{The Karate Kid}}

15 : Fictional American people of Japanese descent|Fictional characters introduced in 1984|Fictional characters from Kyushu and Ryukyu|Fictional Ryukyuan people|Fictional Gōjū-ryū practitioners|Fictional alcohol abusers|Fictional Medal of Honor recipients|Fictional Silver Star recipients|Fictional immigrants to the United States|Fictional staff sergeants|Fictional United States Army personnel|Fictional World War II veterans|Drama film characters|The Karate Kid|Sony Pictures characters

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