FOT Forum
FOT Community => General Discussion => Topic started by: A.M. Thomas on June 09, 2008, 11:16:16 PM
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was really good.
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I'll never know.
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Nothing to see here. Just a grown man watching feature length animated films by himself. Move along.
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One for Kung Fu Panda, please.
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Did you see it in the IMAX? Because that's the only way I'll go see it.
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i enjoyed it. my kids fell asleep.
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i enjoyed it.
and i was happy to hear david cross. im glad they didnt have him making kung fu fighting noises.
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Say you were asked to write an article about Kung Fu Panda to coincide with its opening. A contextual article, in the same way you would write about comic books adaptations to coincide with the opening of Iron Man or The Incredible Hulk.
What would that article be about? Underdogs? Odd martial artists? "Other panda-themed kung fu movies"?
(Not entirely hypothetical, as I'm sure you understand.)
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A response to the "War On Obesity." The message: Use your obesity as a gift.
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Say you were asked to write an article about Kung Fu Panda to coincide with its opening. A contextual article, in the same way you would write about comic books adaptations to coincide with the opening of Iron Man or The Incredible Hulk.
What would that article be about? Underdogs? Odd martial artists? "Other panda-themed kung fu movies"?
(Not entirely hypothetical, as I'm sure you understand.)
How about 'toons with attitude (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Itchy_&_Scratchy_&_Poochie_Show)?
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Sorry. I misunderstood the request.
As you mention, I saw a lot of underdog sports films in it. Rocky. Bad News Bears. I think it even had the "getting in shape" montage.
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My editor is suggesting something broad about kung fu, martial arts, Bruce Lee and the journey from obscure subgenre to something that influences lots of genres (Kung Fu Panda being a good example). Etc etc. We'll see. Looks like I some time to write it, it doesn't open here until July 18.
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Google around for Frank Dux's phone number. If there is any one authority on Kung Fu, it's The Duke.
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As someone who regularly choogles with people who make up pop culture-related bullshit for a living, but has not actually seen the movie, I would suggest the following:
A piece about the surging dominance of East Asia in world markets and culture, combined with the idea that kids' entertainment provides a window into the future - the stuff that little kids are watching now will shape their eventual worldviews, etc. etc. Watching Kung Fu Panda in 2008 will prepare today's young to inherit and run a world dominated by China, India, Russia, Japan, and a reunited Korea in 2028. If you need more of a cinema angle, you can integrate this with the discussion of Asian cinema being fully co-opted by Hollywood (which, IMO, happened long before this).
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My editor is suggesting something broad about kung fu, martial arts, Bruce Lee and the journey from obscure subgenre to something that influences lots of genres (Kung Fu Panda being a good example). Etc etc. We'll see. Looks like I some time to write it, it doesn't open here until July 18.
Maybe you could reference the persistent theme in Kung Fu cinema of embracing one's ostensible handicap. In Kung Fu Panda, Po is able to become the "Dragon Warrior" precisely because of his laziness and poor eating habits.
I'm sure there are many examples of this, but another film that immediately comes to mind is called (from what I remember) The One Armed-Swordsman Versus the Master of the Flying Guillotine. The Master of the Flying Guillotine has deadly accuracy only because he is blind. His disability heightens his other senses and provides him with near superpowers. Although both films recognize that their characters have handicaps, the success of the characters is contingent on their ability to embrace their flaws.
This idea, of course, originates with Taoism, but I think it's very relevant to the history of Kung Fu films and, especially, Kung Fu Panda.