Kung Fu Panda
Starring: (voices of) Jack
Black, Angelina Jolie, Dustin Hoffman
Directed by: Mark Osborne (TV’s “SpongeBob
Squarepants”) and John Stevenson (TV’s “Father of the
Pride”)
Written by: Jonathan Aibel (TV’s “King of the
Hill”) and Glenn Berger (TV’s “King of the Hill”)
By Kiko
Martinez
Let’s
not kid ourselves when it comes to recognizing the
leader in animated feature films. Although Japanese
anime like “Spirited Away,” has been a strong contender
for the last few years, very few others can hold their
own against Pixar Animation (DreamWorks Animation with
their “Shrek” trilogy would beg to differ).
Since the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences created a
category to honor animated features in 2002, Pixar has
won three out of the seven years and been nominated a
total of five times (“Monster Inc.” and “Cars” failed to
win during their respected years against “Shrek” and
“Happy Feet”).
Leave it up
to DreamWorks to revisit the fat, loveable
character-driven underdog story to return them to grace
after not so great showings with “Bee Movie” and “Shrek
the Third.” In “Kung Fu Panda,” the animation company
proves that Pixar doesn’t have a monopoly on the
industry (even though deep down they are all really
scared about how groundbreaking “WALL-E” might be later
this year).
“Kung Fu
Panda” tells the story of a lazy panda bear named Po
(Jack Black) who would rather learn the secrets of his
favorite kung fu masters than sell noodles with his
loosey-goosey father.
Po gets his
chance when Oogway (Randall Duk Kim), a wise, old
tortoise choose him to fulfill an ancient prophecy over
a group of real animal warriors known as the Furious
Five – Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Monkey (Jackie Chan),
Mantis (Seth Rogan), Viper (Lucy Liu), and Crane (David
Cross). This happens much to the chagrin of their kung
fu master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman) who doesn't understand
why Oogway has chosen Po to protect them.
With the
evil snow leopard Tai Lung (Ian McShane) looking for
revenge against the village, there is no time to waste
training a fat, uncoordinated panda bear to fight a
vengeful kung fu expert. Or is there?
The
great work with “Kung Fu Panda” starts where it should
with perfectly cast voice work by Black, Hoffman, and
Kim. The humor ranges from flavorful jokes for adults
and silly slapstick humor that doesn’t go overboard for
kids. To top it off, animators pay special attention to
the action and fighting sequences, which are high on
energy and detail (the slow-motion animation is
especially brilliant). "Kung Fu Panda" is a smart and
funny homage to martial arts classics of the past and is
the best animated feature so far this year and Po is
definitely a character you can cheer for.
Grade: B+