Cast: Jack Black, Dustin Hoffman, Ian McShane, Angelina
Jolie, Lucy Liu, Seth Rogen, Jackie Chan, David Cross.
If
you're looking for risk-free fun at the movies this
summer, bet on Kung Fu Panda, a lighthearted animated
adventure built on the comic skills and unbridled
enthusiasms of Jack Black. Already an animated personality,
Black voices Chinese panda Po, who harbors fanatical
dreams of achieving kung fu "awesomeness"
and "bodacity" despite some pretty tall
obstacles: he's fat, he's lazy, and he has no demonstrable
talent or ability. Luckily, his ineptness is matched
by resilience. Under that fur and fat, Po is a hero
waiting to happen.
Thanks to a consistently clever screenplay by Jonathan
Aibel & Glenn Berger, and direction by Mark Osborne
and John Stevenson, DreamWorks Animation's latest
has the right stuff to make audiences laugh but also
care about the film's characters. The film's surest
gambit is to set up serious kung-fu beats with dialogue
and music, then systematically undercut those beats
with surgical jokes. Or do both at the same time,
as accomplished by the opening title: "Legend
tells of a legendary warrior whose kung fu skills
were the stuff of legend." Though the laughs
come in large part due to our history with kung fu
movies, the comic timing and visual touches mean the
jokes won't be lost on kids either.
The
inventor of kung fu-an ancient, doddering turtle named
Oogway (Randall Duk Kim)-has long prophesied the arrival
of one known as the Dragon Warrior. Shockingly, he
identifies Po as the fabled hero who can save the
Valley of Peace by protecting the Dragon Scroll from
escaped baddie Tai Lung (Ian McShane), a nasty snow
leopard itching for a showdown with the Dragon Warrior.
No one can believe it, least of all Po's dad, a goose
(don't ask) and noodle-shop proprietor named Mr. Ping
(James Hong).
The Dragon Warrior will be trained by Master Shifu
(a dryly amusing Dustin Hoffman) alongside local heroes
the Furious Five: Tigress (Angelina Jolie), Viper
(Lucy Liu), Mantis (Seth Rogen), Crane (David Cross)
and Monkey (Jackie Chan)—literalizing the classic
styles into their animal equivalents is a bit of pure-gold
inspiration. The problem: none of these experts remotely
believe in Po. But their master Oogway is insistent
that Po "will bring peace to the valley and also
to" Shifu, who's beside himself at the prospect
of training a butterball (news flash: the way to his
heart is food).
Naturally,
kids will go ape (go panda?) for Po's antics, but
adults will likewise find them hard to resist. Kung
Fu Panda's other secret weapon is expertly choreographed
action, such as a kung fun tournament, Po and Shifu's
instructional fight over a dumpling, and the climactic
showdown (the final blow of which is memorably accompanied
by the Blackian exhortation "Skidoosh!").
The plot is strictly standard-issue, but the dynamic
animation, and performers of the caliber of Black
and Hoffman, take it a long way. The movie's crackpot
message—"To make something special, you
just have to believe it's special"—may
best be proven by the existence of this funny, unpretentious,
more than bear-able crowd-pleaser.