IMDb RATING
7.0/10
9.9K
YOUR RATING
Ordered to teach a martial arts class of rambunctious bunny kittens, Po tells stories of each of the Furious Five's pasts.Ordered to teach a martial arts class of rambunctious bunny kittens, Po tells stories of each of the Furious Five's pasts.Ordered to teach a martial arts class of rambunctious bunny kittens, Po tells stories of each of the Furious Five's pasts.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 4 wins & 4 nominations total
Jack Black
- Po
- (voice)
Dustin Hoffman
- Shifu
- (voice)
Will Shadley
- Nerdy Bunny
- (voice)
Grace Rolek
- Shy Bunny
- (voice)
Max Koch
- Young Mantis
- (voice)
Carol Kane
- Sheep
- (voice)
John DiMaggio
- Gorilla
- (voice)
- …
Stephen Kearin
- Crocodile #2
- (voice)
Meredith Scott Lynn
- Viper Mom
- (voice)
Jessica DiCicco
- Young Viper
- (voice)
- (as Jessica Di Cicco)
Stephanie Lemelin
- Mei Ling
- (voice)
David Cross
- Crane
- (voice)
Jim Cummings
- The Instructor
- (voice)
Tara Strong
- Young Tigress
- (voice)
Jaycee Cho-Ming Chan
- Young Monkey
- (voice)
- (as Jaycee Chan)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This short film added to the story as a whole , however , the animation was quite raw , it's good for a short film , but still , it's a big studio .. I expected more .
This is an animation short that ties in with the first Kung Fu Panda films with Po the panda ropes in by Shifu to teach the philosophy of Kung Fu to a group of young bunnies at a martial arts school.
However it is not the crash bang wallop of Kung Fu that Po teaches but the positive traits that each of the Furious Five developed.
So you have flashbacks of the Furious Five and how they developed their skills and the virtues they developed. It avoids preachiness and younger viewers would be highly entertained.
The animation is very good and up to feature film standard and they have attracted an all star cast for the voices.
However it is not the crash bang wallop of Kung Fu that Po teaches but the positive traits that each of the Furious Five developed.
So you have flashbacks of the Furious Five and how they developed their skills and the virtues they developed. It avoids preachiness and younger viewers would be highly entertained.
The animation is very good and up to feature film standard and they have attracted an all star cast for the voices.
First secrets special of the Kung Fu Panda franchise and it gives much needed stories of the Furious Five before they were the Furious Five. The movies are more meant for Po's journey and good to have specials to help show the beginnings of the team. Thus one is more of them by themselves and Secrets of the Scroll is them teaming up for the first time. Good if they had a feature length spin-off film to help explain their absence in Kung Fu Panda 4 and help give them the screen time they deserve. Also, I like the 2D animation of these Secrets specials. It helps it stick out from the 3D animation of today. It seems like 2D animation is dying and it could always be a time for it to make a comeback. Now we have 2.5D animation that blends the two together rather than just fully just 2D. Kung Fu Panda has more scenes that are fully 3D and others are fully 2D but doesn't blend them into one.
Well, lets just say that the producers did not try on making this side feature. It doesn't look like its too much beyond story board. The only tie-in is the whole Kung Fu Panda part.
Anyway, you get to see little bits a pieces of the 5 main characters aside from Jack Black's panda. Yes, to the serious fan of the movie I guess they are OK. But to anybody else, they are a waste of time. And there is nothing more than that.
Overall, not much can be said. It isn't good and its not even in CGI. Lets hope next time they can make a side feature that actually has the same animation skill as the main feature. "F"
Anyway, you get to see little bits a pieces of the 5 main characters aside from Jack Black's panda. Yes, to the serious fan of the movie I guess they are OK. But to anybody else, they are a waste of time. And there is nothing more than that.
Overall, not much can be said. It isn't good and its not even in CGI. Lets hope next time they can make a side feature that actually has the same animation skill as the main feature. "F"
As Dragon Warrior, Po has had to face many challenges but on this day he must face one that would intimidate any great warrior training the newest recruit of bunnies in the way of kung-fu. Left alone to fend for himself by Shifu, Po finds his class are only interested in the fighting part of the art and are keen to get down to kicking one another as soon as possible. In order to educate them in the true ways of the art, Po tells them of the Furious Five and how they became masters by learning life lessons of patience, courage, confidence, self-control and compassion.
As with the animated films from Pixar, Dreamworks included this short film on the Kung-Fu Panda DVD and I decided to give it a try. In a way it is a fitting inclusion to the main film because to my mind both the film and the short are enjoyable for what they are but at the same time are not quite up to the quality of the products produced by Pixar. With this film its main problem is that the plot is just too obvious in the moralising compared to some of the brilliant shorts from Pixar that can deliver the same message but are generally very inventive and clever. I didn't really get this here but, if you ignore this weakness of comparison then the short is still quite entertaining.
It is not really ever hilarious but it does consistently amuse across the twenty minutes and it doesn't really ram the moral down your throat (although it does push it into your mouth). The animation is mixed perhaps for financial reasons but it does work within the context of the short. The bits with Po and his class are of the same quality as in the main film but the stories that make up the majority of the running time are delivered in a more hand-drawn style that looks cheaper (because, by comparison, it is). However don't let this take away from how good it looks because it is still stylish sort of like the animation that opens the main film albeit it not as striking or as well done as that. Each story is relatively straight forward with a moral at the end of each one but they do more or less work.
The voice work is a little distracting though not so much for what they do but more the obvious absences. Black and Hoffman are good, each reprising their voices in the main part of the short film Black in particular puts a lot of energy into it, but the Furious Fives themselves not so much. Cross is good as Crane (probably having as many words as in the main film) but the others are mostly absent. Some of the characters are children in their stories so therefore it would not have been sensible to use adult voices but it is a bit strange why Chan or Rogen couldn't have found a bit of time to record the couple of lines needed for this especially considering how few lines they had in the main film.
Either way the short is solid and entertaining with a solid if obvious moral message for the kids (and bunnies). That said it does feel a bit lacking in inspiration and does give the impression that it was made because it had to be rather than made out of a good idea or passion for the project a cynical view perhaps but it is hard not to feel that at points, not due to something the film does but things that similar films do so much better.
As with the animated films from Pixar, Dreamworks included this short film on the Kung-Fu Panda DVD and I decided to give it a try. In a way it is a fitting inclusion to the main film because to my mind both the film and the short are enjoyable for what they are but at the same time are not quite up to the quality of the products produced by Pixar. With this film its main problem is that the plot is just too obvious in the moralising compared to some of the brilliant shorts from Pixar that can deliver the same message but are generally very inventive and clever. I didn't really get this here but, if you ignore this weakness of comparison then the short is still quite entertaining.
It is not really ever hilarious but it does consistently amuse across the twenty minutes and it doesn't really ram the moral down your throat (although it does push it into your mouth). The animation is mixed perhaps for financial reasons but it does work within the context of the short. The bits with Po and his class are of the same quality as in the main film but the stories that make up the majority of the running time are delivered in a more hand-drawn style that looks cheaper (because, by comparison, it is). However don't let this take away from how good it looks because it is still stylish sort of like the animation that opens the main film albeit it not as striking or as well done as that. Each story is relatively straight forward with a moral at the end of each one but they do more or less work.
The voice work is a little distracting though not so much for what they do but more the obvious absences. Black and Hoffman are good, each reprising their voices in the main part of the short film Black in particular puts a lot of energy into it, but the Furious Fives themselves not so much. Cross is good as Crane (probably having as many words as in the main film) but the others are mostly absent. Some of the characters are children in their stories so therefore it would not have been sensible to use adult voices but it is a bit strange why Chan or Rogen couldn't have found a bit of time to record the couple of lines needed for this especially considering how few lines they had in the main film.
Either way the short is solid and entertaining with a solid if obvious moral message for the kids (and bunnies). That said it does feel a bit lacking in inspiration and does give the impression that it was made because it had to be rather than made out of a good idea or passion for the project a cynical view perhaps but it is hard not to feel that at points, not due to something the film does but things that similar films do so much better.
Did you know
- TriviaJaycee Cho-Ming Chan, who voices the young Monkey, is the son of Jackie Chan, who voiced Master Monkey in Kung Fu Panda (2008); and James Sie, the voice of Viper's father, is best known in the role of Jackie Chan in Jackie Chan (2000).
- GoofsMost of the animals depicted are native to China, however there is also a tribe of gorillas which are native only to Africa.
- Quotes
Young Monkey: You saved me, why?
Oogway: Mmm, Monkey. You have shown me great skills. But I also sense in you great pain.
- ConnectionsEdited into Kung Fu Panda: Awesome Secrets Collection (2012)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Kung Fu Panda: Secrets of the Furious Five
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime25 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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