Kung Fu Panda
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I saw Kung Fu Panda last night, at the ASIFA-Hollywood screening. It is fantastic! Much better than the trailers might lead one to believe.
First and foremost, this is a 'kung fu' movie .. while it is a comedy, it never lapses into 'parody'. It also has none of the elements Dreamworks' animated films are noted (and, sometimes, scorned) for: there are no 'winking' pop-culture references, and no fart/poop jokes of any kind. There is one pop song, over the (beginning of the) end credits .. but it is not accompanied by the cast of characters having a dance-party set to that music. There's not even a gratuitous 'comic-relief sidekick' character, nor even an inane 'hero gets the girl' subplot (despite there being two strong female characters on the kung-fu team).
Instead, there is only .. awesomeness.
Exhilarating fight scenes, a fantastic prison escape, gorgeous designs for both the characters and environments, and wonderful acting on the part of both the animators and the voice talent (including plenty of nice subtle expressiveness in the film's 'quieter' moments). It's quite obvious that the key creative personnel on this movie have enormous respect for the martial-arts genre, and even for asian art and film-making in general; there are more than a few key moments in the movie that are an undeniable 'nod' to the likes of Miyazaki, Kurosawa, or Ang Lee. And yet, there is still plenty of Tex Avery-styled 'western' cartoon humor to be found, as well.
And, perhaps best of all .. Kung Fu Panda features an incredibly fun, traditionally-animated opening scene, along with a gorgeous 2D 'collage'-styled end title sequence.
All this, and an action-packed score by John Powell & Hans Zimmer, to boot (I went out and bought the CD first thing this morning)!
This is, by far, the strongest and tightest film ever to be made at Dreamworks .. and should, by rights, be their biggest 'crowd-pleaser' (yes, IMO, moreso even than the Shrek trilogy). I'm definitely gonna see it again, this weekend ..
First and foremost, this is a 'kung fu' movie .. while it is a comedy, it never lapses into 'parody'. It also has none of the elements Dreamworks' animated films are noted (and, sometimes, scorned) for: there are no 'winking' pop-culture references, and no fart/poop jokes of any kind. There is one pop song, over the (beginning of the) end credits .. but it is not accompanied by the cast of characters having a dance-party set to that music. There's not even a gratuitous 'comic-relief sidekick' character, nor even an inane 'hero gets the girl' subplot (despite there being two strong female characters on the kung-fu team).
Instead, there is only .. awesomeness.
Exhilarating fight scenes, a fantastic prison escape, gorgeous designs for both the characters and environments, and wonderful acting on the part of both the animators and the voice talent (including plenty of nice subtle expressiveness in the film's 'quieter' moments). It's quite obvious that the key creative personnel on this movie have enormous respect for the martial-arts genre, and even for asian art and film-making in general; there are more than a few key moments in the movie that are an undeniable 'nod' to the likes of Miyazaki, Kurosawa, or Ang Lee. And yet, there is still plenty of Tex Avery-styled 'western' cartoon humor to be found, as well.
And, perhaps best of all .. Kung Fu Panda features an incredibly fun, traditionally-animated opening scene, along with a gorgeous 2D 'collage'-styled end title sequence.
All this, and an action-packed score by John Powell & Hans Zimmer, to boot (I went out and bought the CD first thing this morning)!
This is, by far, the strongest and tightest film ever to be made at Dreamworks .. and should, by rights, be their biggest 'crowd-pleaser' (yes, IMO, moreso even than the Shrek trilogy). I'm definitely gonna see it again, this weekend ..
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Panda Genma in Ranma ½ doesn't practice kung fu; his fighting style is derived from Musabetsu Kakutō Ryū ("school of indiscriminate grappling"). It's totally different.
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Actually, (much) earlier in this thread, I'd mentioned the 1980's comic-book series Panda Khan .. and YCougar brought up the similar book Usagi Yojimbo.
I found many aspects of Kung Fu Panda's 'world' to be similar to that of Usagi Yojimbo.
Which, IMO, is a Very Good Thing.
(there's also a 'dash' of Disney's Robin Hood in there!)
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Actually, (much) earlier in this thread, I'd mentioned the 1980's comic-book series Panda Khan .. and YCougar brought up the similar book Usagi Yojimbo.
I found many aspects of Kung Fu Panda's 'world' to be similar to that of Usagi Yojimbo.
Which, IMO, is a Very Good Thing.
(there's also a 'dash' of Disney's Robin Hood in there!)
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Saw Panda earlier today and thoroughly enjoyed it! I can't really add more to what Droo said, but I really, really, loved it it. Much better than Bee Movie totallly. And yes, I'm actually a little shocked there weren't the typical pop culture references. It felt... nice. I only hope DW continues this trend.
The fight scenes were just au inspiring; I mean, wow. Big difference from watching it on plain ole television. The score was also genuine a knockout. I'm very tempted into picking up the CD.
All in all, this is now my favorite of DW's animation offerings.
Btw, I got Master Shifu and Tai Lun at McDonald's before going to the movie. Cute toys!
The fight scenes were just au inspiring; I mean, wow. Big difference from watching it on plain ole television. The score was also genuine a knockout. I'm very tempted into picking up the CD.
All in all, this is now my favorite of DW's animation offerings.
Btw, I got Master Shifu and Tai Lun at McDonald's before going to the movie. Cute toys!
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