Miami Herald

Latest ‘Kung Fu Panda’ lacks punch

- BY KATIE WALSH Tribune News Service

The “Kung Fu Panda” movies have always been a reliable name when it comes to animated franchises. A distinctiv­e style, star-studded voice cast, and the winning Jack

Black voicing Po, the rolypoly, dumpling-appreciati­ng Dragon Warrior, is usually a recipe for success. Or at least it has been. “Kung Fu Panda 2” was even nominated for a best animated feature Oscar in 2012.

It’s been eight years since we last saw our old pal Po, in 2016’s “Kung Fu Panda 3,” and this new installmen­t, “Kung Fu Panda 4,” is co-directed by journeyman animation director Mike Mitchell and Stephanie Ma Stine, making her feature debut. Franchise writers Jonathan

Aibel and Glenn Berger return, with Darren Lemke rounding out the writing team. The film coasts on the elements that have worked before: Black’s vocal charms and the franchise’s signature style, which is inspired by various Chinese arts — from painting to music to film. It’s still a fun, beautiful animated world to experience, but the rushed and harried story, overstuffe­d with plot and characters, gets short shrift thanks to the brisk 94-minute run time.

The film also falls prey to a few well-trodden tropes, so what used to be fresh and singular now feels like every other animated sequel. There are cutesy killer bunnies and a giant monster thrashing around in a climactic battle and Awkwafina voices a sassy supporting character — can casting the Awkwafina

in an animated vocal role be considered a trope now? She’s voiced characters in “Migration,” “The Little Mermaid,” “The Bad Guys,” “Raya and the Last Dragon,” “The Angry Birds Movie 2,” “Storks” and more. All respect to her for staying employed, but it just feels almost too predictabl­e that her gravelly Queens-inflected tones will pop up in an animated feature at this point.

In Awkwafina’s favor, this character, Zhen, is a little bit more grounded and well-developed than usual. She plays a thieving fox whom Po apprehends stealing relics. He tosses her in jail (even the Valley of Peace is a carceral state) but frees her when she promises to help him find a power-hungry mob boss known as The Chameleon (Viola Davis). The pair sets off on a journey to Juniper

City to find The Chameleon, who has been shapeshift­ing into different vanquished warriors and demanding monetary tribute.

Po finally gets to explore beyond the rural beauty of the Valley of Peace, and we get to see some urban landscapes. Except as soon as the pair arrive in Juniper City, they’re chased into the criminal undergroun­d and then spend the rest of the film in The Chameleon’s mountainto­p palace, where she’s using Po’s

Staff of Wisdom to steal kung fu from every powerful warrior he’s sent to the Spirit Realm. Also, Po’s two dads, Li (Bryan Cranston) and Mr. Ping (James Hong), are in hot pursuit of their son, worried that he left their cheerful Valley home.

On top of this Chameleon business, Po has to handle a nagging directive from his master Shifu (Dustin Hoffman), who has instructed him to appoint a Dragon Warrior successor. Though Po is reluctant to do so, the appropriat­e candidate is immediatel­y all too obvious. They’ll just have to go on an unexpected journey together to truly get to know one another before the Staff of Wisdom and the requisite “Skadoosh” can be handed down, while Po retires to a life of writing proverbs.

The story is skeletal and often rushes by in a blur, and it relies on so many overly familiar beats that it’s hard to muster up the energy to care about anyone’s motivation. They could have been used as shortcuts to heart-stringpull­ing, but much like Po, “Kung Fu Panda 4” just wants to vibe out, riding the wave of previous successes. For little kids, it will be a fun diversion, but for anyone expecting the excellence of the previous films, this dumpling is a little too light on the filling.

Where to watch: In selected theaters nationwide Friday. Check local listings for availabili­ty.

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 ?? DREAMWORKS ANIMATION TNS ?? Shifu (Dustin Hoffman), left, and Po (Jack Black) star in DreamWorks Animation’s ‘Kung Fu Panda 4.’
DREAMWORKS ANIMATION TNS Shifu (Dustin Hoffman), left, and Po (Jack Black) star in DreamWorks Animation’s ‘Kung Fu Panda 4.’

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