Box office The film topped the box office in its opening weekend, grossing $60.2 million for a $14,642 average from 4,114 theaters, and performing much better than analysts had been expecting. It was also the highest-grossing opening for a non-sequel DreamWorks Animation film at the time. It closed October 9, 2008, after 125 days of release, grossing $215 million in the United States and Canada, and $416 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $632 million.
Kung Fu Panda was the highest-grossing non-
Shrek film from DreamWorks Animation in the United States and Canada before it was surpassed by
How to Train Your Dragon in 2010.
Critical response Rotten Tomatoes reports that 87% of 191 reviewers gave the film a positive review; the average rating is . The website's consensus reads: "
Kung Fu Panda has a familiar message, but the pleasing mix of humor, swift martial arts action, and colorful animation makes for winning summer entertainment." At
Metacritic, the film has an average score of 74 out of 100, based on 36 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on a scale of A+ to F.
Richard Corliss of
Time magazine gave
Kung Fu Panda a positive review, stating the picture "provides a master course in cunning visual art and ultra-satisfying entertainment".
The New York Times said, "At once fuzzy-wuzzy and industrial strength, the tacky-sounding
Kung Fu Panda is high concept with a heart," and the review called the film "consistently diverting" and "visually arresting".
Michael Phillips of the
Chicago Tribune called the film "one of the few comedies of 2008 in any style or genre that knows what it's doing". However, Tom Charity of
CNN criticized the action for tending "to blur into a whirlwind of slapstick chaos", and considered the character of Po too similar to others played by Black. Peter Howell of
The Toronto Star awarded the film two and a half stars, considering it to have a "lack of story" that "frequently manages to amuse, if not entirely to delight".
Kung Fu Panda was also well received in China. It made nearly 110 million
yuan by July 2, 2008, becoming the first animated film to earn more than 100 million yuan in China. The Chinese director
Lu Chuan commented, "From a production standpoint, the movie is nearly perfect. Its American creators showed a very sincere attitude about Chinese culture." The film's critical and commercial success in China led to some local introspection about why no film to similar standards had been produced domestically, with commentators attributing the problem variously to lower film budgets in China, too much government oversight, a dearth of national imagination, and an overly reverent attitude to China's history and cultural icons.
Accolades Kung Fu Panda was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Animated Feature and the
Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film. By contrast,
Kung Fu Panda won ten
Annie Awards (including Best Animated Feature) out of sixteen nominations, which sparked
controversy, with some accusing DreamWorks head
Jeffrey Katzenberg of rigging the vote by buying
ASIFA-Hollywood memberships (with voting power) for everyone at DreamWorks Animation. == Soundtrack ==