O Masterpiece
O Excellent
X Good
O OK
O Mediocrity
O Avoid
Review by Jason Pyles / June 18, 2008
When I was young, I probably had more than 50 stuffed animals. I called them âpoor things.â One of my favorite poor things was a panda bear that I cleverly named âPandy.â Pandy was a lethal martial artist whose kung fu skills were unbeatable. I donât know how they did it, but Iâm convinced the writers of âKung Fu Pandaâ ripped off my childhood idea. Somebodyâs gotta pay for this.
I promise Iâm not displacing when I write that I thought âKung Fu Pandaâ would be much funnier. Itâs a good animated action flick where eccentric animals are kung fu masters, but itâs not hilarious â" no, not nearly as much as you might have hoped.
Po (Jack Black) is a plump panda who feels obligated to work in his so-called fatherâs noodle restaurant, but his heart is in becoming a kung fu expert. (He is much like Jason from âThe Forbidden Kingdom,â an untrained but passionate wannabe.) Poâs heroes are âThe Furious Five,â a team of kung fu masters that includes Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Monkey (Jackie Chan), Mantis (Seth Rogen), Viper (Lucy Liu), and Crane (David Cross). These flashy fighters were trained by Master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman), who was trained by the mystical Master Oogway (Randall Duk Kim), a turtle thatâs the kung-fu equivalent of Yoda.
It just so happens that 1,000 years have passed, and the whole village has awaited the selection of the Dragon Warrior, a previously unnamed kung fu master whose privilege it is to open the sacred Dragon Scroll and learn its secret(s). The time has come for Master Oogway to identify the Dragon Warrior. Guess who that might be? Yes, the most unlikely candidate: Po.
Naturally, Shifu and his five fabulous students are truly furious by the pandaâs appointment. But theyâre the least of Poâs problems: Supposedly, the Dragon Warrior is the only one who can defeat the ferocious, deadly Tai Lung (Ian McShane), a kung fu beast that even made me nervous (and I took karate for 10 years). Thatâs the gist of âKung Fu Panda.â
There is something particularly noteworthy about this movie that might make it go down in history: Remember how âSeinfeldâ was credited with introducing the phrase âyada, yada, yada,â into the language of our pop culture? Well, I predict that âKung Fu Pandaâ will coin a new word that will stick, too. Here it is: âska-doosh.â I admit, the movieâs usage of this word is quite humorous.
The movie is colorful and well made. Its voice-over characters are also great. And if you have kids, âKung Fu Pandaâ is an instant babysitter, anytime, guaranteed. Your kids (especially boy kids) will absolutely love it. But if you were hoping for another side-splitting Jack Black performance, this movie is only the equivalent of a white belt in the humor department; whereas, my bear, Pandy, was a black belt. Iâm just sayinââ¦
Directed by Mark Osborne and John Stevenson
Jack Black / Dustin Hoffman / Angelina Jolie
Animation / Action 92 min.
MPAA: PG (for sequences of martial arts action)
U.S. Release Date: June 6, 2008
Copyright 2008: 298
O Excellent
X Good
O OK
O Mediocrity
O Avoid
Review by Jason Pyles / June 18, 2008
When I was young, I probably had more than 50 stuffed animals. I called them âpoor things.â One of my favorite poor things was a panda bear that I cleverly named âPandy.â Pandy was a lethal martial artist whose kung fu skills were unbeatable. I donât know how they did it, but Iâm convinced the writers of âKung Fu Pandaâ ripped off my childhood idea. Somebodyâs gotta pay for this.
I promise Iâm not displacing when I write that I thought âKung Fu Pandaâ would be much funnier. Itâs a good animated action flick where eccentric animals are kung fu masters, but itâs not hilarious â" no, not nearly as much as you might have hoped.
Po (Jack Black) is a plump panda who feels obligated to work in his so-called fatherâs noodle restaurant, but his heart is in becoming a kung fu expert. (He is much like Jason from âThe Forbidden Kingdom,â an untrained but passionate wannabe.) Poâs heroes are âThe Furious Five,â a team of kung fu masters that includes Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Monkey (Jackie Chan), Mantis (Seth Rogen), Viper (Lucy Liu), and Crane (David Cross). These flashy fighters were trained by Master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman), who was trained by the mystical Master Oogway (Randall Duk Kim), a turtle thatâs the kung-fu equivalent of Yoda.
It just so happens that 1,000 years have passed, and the whole village has awaited the selection of the Dragon Warrior, a previously unnamed kung fu master whose privilege it is to open the sacred Dragon Scroll and learn its secret(s). The time has come for Master Oogway to identify the Dragon Warrior. Guess who that might be? Yes, the most unlikely candidate: Po.
Naturally, Shifu and his five fabulous students are truly furious by the pandaâs appointment. But theyâre the least of Poâs problems: Supposedly, the Dragon Warrior is the only one who can defeat the ferocious, deadly Tai Lung (Ian McShane), a kung fu beast that even made me nervous (and I took karate for 10 years). Thatâs the gist of âKung Fu Panda.â
There is something particularly noteworthy about this movie that might make it go down in history: Remember how âSeinfeldâ was credited with introducing the phrase âyada, yada, yada,â into the language of our pop culture? Well, I predict that âKung Fu Pandaâ will coin a new word that will stick, too. Here it is: âska-doosh.â I admit, the movieâs usage of this word is quite humorous.
The movie is colorful and well made. Its voice-over characters are also great. And if you have kids, âKung Fu Pandaâ is an instant babysitter, anytime, guaranteed. Your kids (especially boy kids) will absolutely love it. But if you were hoping for another side-splitting Jack Black performance, this movie is only the equivalent of a white belt in the humor department; whereas, my bear, Pandy, was a black belt. Iâm just sayinââ¦
Directed by Mark Osborne and John Stevenson
Jack Black / Dustin Hoffman / Angelina Jolie
Animation / Action 92 min.
MPAA: PG (for sequences of martial arts action)
U.S. Release Date: June 6, 2008
Copyright 2008: 298

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