This week turned out a whole lot different than I
expected. The ideal situation was that I
would have seen Fifty Shades of Black
close to the beginning of the week, written about it, and had the post already
done. Alas, things don’t always work out
in the perfect way. I still haven’t seen
Fifty Shades of Black while I’m
writing this and I don’t know when I’m going to see it. The movie of the week had to be changed
mid-week to accommodate the difficulties I was having. When all was said and done, I had watched the
41 minute animated flick, Chop Kick Panda.
Chop Kick Panda is
a direct-to-video animated film from 2011.
It runs only 41 minutes long and was meant as a way to make a quick buck
off of Kung Fu Panda. You never would have guessed that, would
you? Zibo (Danny Katiana) is a panda who
works as a janitor at Grand Master Hanh’s (Phil Lollar) dojo. His main job is to mop the floor because that
place probably gets super sweaty. When
Hanh’s evil brother Slade (also Danny Katiana) wants to take an amulet away,
Zibo is the only person who can stop the evil deed. Oh, and Zibo’s son Ming (Michael Van Citters)
is visiting the dojo with his classmates.
Normally, especially lately, I would have an idea that I
would base this post around. This week,
I don’t have that. It could be because
of the fact that I saw the movie late, compared to when I usually watch
it. It could be because any idea I have
has been covered. Or it could be that I
want to compare it to Kung Fu Panda
but I haven’t seen that in years.
Whatever the reasoning, I don’t have a strong enough concept to build
this week’s post around. That means that
I’m going to revert to an idea that I can depend upon when I am in need. No, not a full out review. Let’s talk about some of the stranger moments
of Chop Kick Panda. Five?
Yeah. I’m going to list five of
the standout parts of Chop Kick Panda
and write about why they stand out.
The Monkey
My favourite part of Chop
Kick Panda was undoubtedly the monkey character. One of the classmates that Ming brings along
to the dojo is a monkey. Every character
is some type of animal. I don’t remember
the monkey’s name so I’m going to just call him the monkey. He’s a silent character who gets used for the
most comedic bits of the entire movie.
He also lends a hand in saving the day, and is indirectly the Robin to
Zibo’s Batman. If Zibo was to be the
caped crusader.
His hero moment is foreshadowed early in the movie when Zibo
is challenging the monkey to take rocks from his hand. The monkey manages to do that with super
speed, regardless of how many rocks Zibo puts in his hand. One rock, the monkey gets it. Two rocks, the monkey gets it. A pile of rocks, the monkey gets it. He does it with such speed that it doesn’t
look like he moves at all. Near the end
of the movie, Slade has the medallion.
He overhears the kids talking about distracting him and stealing the
medallion back. Then the monkey manages
to actually do it without moving. He’s
either magic or super quick. Either way,
he was fun to watch. He also led to my
next point, the most outlandish joke in the entire movie.
The Joke
Chop Kick Panda is
a comedy for children. It is filled to
the brim with juvenile jokes meant to have kids laughing for a long time. I smiled through most of the movie, enjoying
the dumb humour throughout. But there
was one joke that topped all of the other jokes. This single moment of pure, absurd jocularity
made be break out in a laughing fit. My
brother was sitting in the room with me, staring at me like I was insane. I couldn’t help it. It was such a ludicrous joke that I broke.
Here it is. So you
have the four children in the dojo. They
are staying the night, so they’ve all gotten into their sleeping bags. As they are falling asleep, Ming turns to
Shiva (Alicyn Packard), the girl he has a crush on. Remember they’re animals though, not actual
people. He talks to her for a bit and
blushes. It is meant to be a
relationship building moment. All of a
sudden there is the sound of a loud, wet fart.
The “camera” pans down to the monkey poking his head out of his sleeping
bag while wearing a gas mask. Thick,
green fumes are wafting out. He waves
his hand and directs them over to Rex (Alicyn Packard again), waking him up in
a cloud of stink. I don’t know what it
is about that, but I was laughing hysterically.
Star Wars
Yes. I’m going to
talk a little bit about the story from long ago in a galaxy far, far away. We all know about the Star Wars movies. If you’re
reading this, there is a 99.99% chance you’ve seen them. Because why would you be spending your time
on this instead of watching them for that first time? Well, there are Star Wars references in Chop
Kick Panda. The franchise exists in
their world. I don’t know if it’s the
same version that we know or a version acted by bipedal animals. All I know is that it exists in their
universe.
They reference Star
Wars twice in Chop Kick Panda. The first reference comes when Grand Master
Hanh and Slade are fighting. Hanh says
an Obi-Wan Kenobi line that Slade mistakenly attributes to Yoda. Slade then says he doesn’t care if it was
Jar-Jar Pickles that said it. After
another correction, he says he doesn’t care about Jar-Jar, to which Hanh says
Jar-Jar wasn’t his favourite character either.
The second reference is when Zibo says he’ll try to do his best. Hanh responds with the famous Yoda quote “Do
or do not, there is no try.” Why? I have no idea. These references don’t make a whole lot of
sense to me from a world building point of view.
The Animation
You will surely see an image at the end of this post that
showcases the animation of Chop Kick
Panda. It will probably have as many
of the characters as possible in the single shot since I always try to do
that. In there will be the monkey
character that I love so much. But the
thing you will notice is that the animation resembles something that you would
see from Nickelodeon. Perhaps it’s not
exactly the same as that. It does feel
like it would fit in among the late 90s, early 00s Nickelodeon and Cartoon
Network boom though.
The Ending
Yes, I am going to discuss the ending to Chop Kick Panda right now. If you don’t want to be spoiled on Chop Kick Panda, look away because this
is going to be about the resolution and the final few minutes of the 41 minute
film. Don’t say I didn’t warn you. This is your warning.
In the end, good triumphs over evil. That’s what happens in movies, especially in
children’s movies like Chop Kick Panda. Zibo found out that the ability to master
martial arts was in him the entire time.
Hanh even says that Zibo could be a Grand Master someday. It’s the kind of ending that ties everything
up in a nice, little bow. But then some
weird stuff happens. All of a sudden,
Zibo is a Grand Master. Then the
narration changes from a strong, adult voice to what I think was Ming’s
voice. Cut to credits. I don’t quite understand the change in voice
that happened. It doesn’t make a whole
lot of sense and it is what we are left to think back on. Children probably don’t care when they’re
watching the movie about who is doing the narration. I do, however, and I can’t grasp what was
going on with it. Can Ming put on an
adult voice, or was it future Ming transitioning into present Ming? If it was the latter, that makes no
sense. Why not just have the whole thing
be child Ming’s narration? If it was the
former… That’s just weird. Either way, I
am baffled by how Chop Kick Panda
ends.
Chop Kick Panda
ended up being one of the better animated rip-offs I’ve seen. Having previously seen A Car’s Life, An Ant’s Life,
and Tappy Toes for the Sunday “Bad”
Movies, I’d put this one in the upper half.
Two of those movies are definitely a lot worse than this one. It has a solid story, decent voice acting,
and the animation isn’t bad in any way.
If any of the things I have mentioned in this post got you interested in
any way, you might want to seek it out.
I got it for a dollar on DVD and don’t regret that purchase at all. 41 minutes that made me laugh is well worth
the dollar. Would you buy that for a
dollar?
Now for some notes:
- I mentioned three other animated rip-offs near the end of this post. Here are their posts. A Car’s Life. Tappy Toes. An Ant’s Life.
- I also mentioned Star Wars in this post, so I’m going to link you guys to my post for Starcrash, a Star Wars rip-off.
- Director Darrell Van Citters also directed Tappy Toes.
- Chop Kick Panda featured two voice actors from Tappy Toes: Danny Katiana and Phil Lollar.
- Have you seen Chop Kick Panda? What did you think about it? You can discuss the movie in the comments section below.
- Are there any movies that you can think of that I should watch for the Sunday “Bad” Movies? You can tell me on Twitter or in the comments section. I’m always open to suggestions.
- Next week’s movie is Valentine’s Day in honour of Valentine’s Day since the post will drop on Valentine’s Day. It’ll be an interesting one, I think. Once again, it’s a movie I haven’t seen before. But I did watch its spiritual sequel New Year’s Eve a couple years ago. It has a big cast of recognizable people, many of whom have already been featured in the Sunday “Bad” Movies. Come back next week to find out who, and to read my thoughts on the movie or a topic related to it.
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