Kung Fu Panda Movie Review
Kung Fu Panda Review

"Kung Fu Panda" Overview

Rating: PG
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Mark Osborne,John StevensonProducer : Jonathan Aibel,Glenn Berger,Melissa Cobb
Screenwiter : Jonathan Aibel,Glenn Berger
Starring : Jack Black,Dustin Hoffman,Angelina Jolie,Ian McShane,Jackie Chan,Seth Rogen,Lucy Liu,David Cross,Michael Clarke Duncan,Randall Duk Kim,James Hong,Dan Fogler,Wayne Knight
It's surprising that Hollywood has taken until 2008 to come up with Kung Fu Panda. Taki
ng your factory-issue period-piece martial arts plot -- wherein schlubby protagonist
finds his inner warrior as a means of expressing filial piety and ensuring the harmonious
survival of his village -- and combining it with supercharged computer animation, PG-friend
ly combat, and a flurry of cute animals just makes good business sense. One could
argue about the logic of surrounding Jackie Chan (voicing a monkey who's also a kung
fu master) with a Hollywood stew of A-list talent eager to scoop up some easy voice-actor
money, but when the film's star is an overweight panda voiced by Jack Black, such
kvetching is almost beside the point.
Blazing across the screen with eye-popping, sublime artwork, Kung Fu Panda sets itself
apart from the modern domestic animation trend with its sheer beauty. From an opening
dream sequence whose abstract style seems culled straight from a modern manga, the
film enters instant classic status as some of the most gorgeous animation Hollywood has produced
since the golden age of Disney. Eschewing the cold and severe art of Dreamworks' Shrek films
, the makers of Kung Fu Panda fill the screen with painterly backdrops of mountain vistas
and fluttering leaves that give Zhang Yimou a run for his money. It somehow makes
it all the funnier to have the titular panda, Po (Black), come huffing and wheezing
through the impeccable and non-specific ancient China landscapes like a less-active
relative of Hurley on Lost.
The story is that Po wants to be a kung fu master but is stuck instead working at
the noodle shop run by his father, a tender-hearted goose (James Hong) whose real
relationship to Po is left unexplained (a nicely humorous touch). The village, composed
mostly of large-faced and telegenic animals like rabbits and pigs, is threatened by
the prophesized return of the dreaded snow leopard villain Tai Lung (Ian McShane,
given little to do with an underwritten stock role). Fortunately for Po, there's
a kung fu temple called the Jade Palace high above the village (cue many scenes in
which Po wheezingly hauls his pudgy frame up the vertiginous staircase), where the
aging master Oogway has deemed that Po is in fact not a lard-reared slacker but the
Dragon Warrior of legend who will save the village.
Standing at first between Po and his future as a chubby warrior of destiny, however,
is not Tai Lung but the star pupils at the Jade Palace, a jealous menagerie of kung
fu animal superstars composed of Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Crane (David Cross), Mantis
(Seth Rogen), Viper (Lucy Liu), and Monkey (Chan). Trained by master Shifu, a diminutive
red panda voiced with appropriately embittered edge by Dustin Hoffman, as a lightning-quick
squad of kung-fu-coolness, the five resent the panda-come-lately and don't make things
easy. Wouldn't you know: Po makes them reconsider their assumptions, and learns a
few things about himself, and the true meaning of courage along the way, particularly
after the lightning-quick and merciless Tai Lung shows up.
What helps Kung Fu Panda succeed is not just the classic beauty of the animation but also
another way it avoids the Shrek pitfall by steering clear of that series' flat irony
and tired snark. Po's journey to enlightened martial arts coolness is modeled quite
explicitly on old Chan-style films like Drunken Master (the fighting style that Po eventually
takes on is actually a more PG-friendly variation of that used by Chan), where family
unity and service to the community is prized above all.
Also like Drunken Master, Kung Fu Panda never lets all that wisdom-gathering slow down the pace,
and keeps the fights and jokes coming at a wicked pace. It also allows Black to make
Po just enough of his own creation to make him stand out from a million other animated
heroes. Along the way Black even gets to utter a trademark phrase; after vanquishing
a host of enemies and being asked by some grateful villagers what they can do to
repay him, he says merely, "There is no charge for awesomeness." Indeed.
There is actually a $10 charge for awesomeness, plus popcorn and soda.
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Review by Chris Barsanti
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