Kung Fu Panda 4
IMDb Rating
38K+
IMDb Votes
71%
Rotten Tomatoes
$548M
Box Office
Synopsis & Review
Po, having become the Dragon Warrior, learns he must find and train a successor to take over his duties while ascending to become the new spiritual leader of the Valley of Peace. His search is complicated by Zhen, a sly, shapeshifting fox thief who draws him into a chase across China, and the Chameleon — a sorceress capable of magically conjuring any kung fu master from Po's past, including long-defeated villains — who threatens to upend everything he has fought to protect.
After a six-year gap since Kung Fu Panda 3, the fourth entry resets the franchise with a noticeably lighter touch, swapping the previous film's mythological stakes for a breezier buddy-comedy structure built around Po and his unlikely new partner-in-crime, the trickster fox Zhen. Director Mike Mitchell, working from a script that leans hard into comedic banter, gives Jack Black and Awkwafina's chemistry plenty of room to carry the film, and their back-and-forth is genuinely the strongest element of an otherwise formulaic entry. Viola Davis's Chameleon, a shapeshifting sorceress capable of conjuring physical copies of any villain Po has previously defeated, offers a clever excuse to revisit the franchise's rogues' gallery without requiring those actors to return, even if the character herself registers as more functional plot device than memorable villain. The animation remains gorgeous, particularly during a climactic battle staged across shifting, kaleidoscopic dreamscapes, but the film's themes about succession and self-doubt feel thinner than the trilogy's earlier explorations of identity and destiny. It is a pleasant, briskly paced franchise entry that trades ambition for crowd-pleasing comfort, and mostly succeeds on those reduced terms.
Why Watch This Movie?
Jack Black and Awkwafina's Buddy-Comedy Chemistry
The film's central partnership between Po and the trickster fox Zhen provides its most consistently entertaining material, carried almost entirely by the two leads' comic rapport.
Viola Davis's Shapeshifting Villain Brings Back the Rogues' Gallery
The Chameleon's ability to conjure physical copies of past villains gives the film a clever way to revisit the franchise's history without needing every original actor to return.
A Kaleidoscopic Climactic Battle Sequence
The film's final confrontation, staged across shifting dreamscape environments, ranks among DreamWorks Animation's most visually inventive action sequences in years.
A Lighter, More Accessible Entry Point for Newcomers
Unlike the more mythology-heavy third film, Kung Fu Panda 4 resets the stakes to something simpler and more self-contained, making it an easier jumping-on point for younger or new viewers.
Cast & Crew
Director
Mike Mitchell
Co-Director
Stephanie Stine
Studio
DreamWorks Animation
Po
Jack Black
Zhen
Awkwafina
The Chameleon
Viola Davis
Master Shifu
Dustin Hoffman
Original Score
Steve Mazzaro & Hans Zimmer
Official Trailer
© DreamWorks Animation / Universal Pictures. Trailer embedded via YouTube.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to watch the previous Kung Fu Panda films first?
Not necessarily. The film briefly establishes Po's status as the Dragon Warrior and recaps the basic world without requiring deep familiarity with the trilogy's mythology, making it reasonably accessible to newcomers.
Why doesn't Master Shifu appear much in this film?
Master Shifu has a reduced role compared to earlier entries, reflecting the story's focus on Po's transition away from active Dragon Warrior duties and toward finding his own successor, shifting the mentor dynamic onto new characters instead.
Are any of the original Furious Five voice actors in this film?
The Furious Five (Tigress, Crane, Mantis, Viper, Monkey) do not have substantial roles in this entry; the story instead centers on new characters Zhen and the Chameleon, marking a deliberate narrowing of the ensemble compared to prior films.
Is there a Kung Fu Panda 5 planned?
No official fifth installment has been announced as of this writing, though given the franchise's consistent box-office performance across all entries, DreamWorks has not ruled out continuing the series in some form.
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