"Kung Fu Panda" gets early raves from analysts
By Paul Bond
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - The Beijing Olympics have thus far been a PR nightmare for China. Leave it to the country's emblematic panda bear to come to the rescue, with a welcome assist from DreamWorks Animation.
A bit cuddlier than the real thing, "Kung Fu Panda" is set for release June 6, two months before audiences might be inclined to stay home and watch Olympics coverage rather than venture into a movie theater.
It's also a safe distance between Lucasfilm/Paramount's "Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull" on May 22 and rival studio Pixar's "WALL-E" on June 27.
The advantageous timing is one reason Goldman Sachs analyst Ingrid Chung recently raised her six-month target on DWA shares to $32 from $30. The stock closed Friday at $26.37, off more than two percent in line with the broader market slump.
Another reason is that Chung and her associates liked the portions of the movie they have seen so much that she is proclaiming it the next DWA franchise, predicting a sequel in 2011.
She upped her domestic boxoffice estimate to $220 million, which would make it the ninth-biggest CGI film in history, sandwiched between the Pixar duo of "Cars" and "Ratatouille."
After viewing some of "Panda," the analyst said the character development was good, the scenes were amusing and the concept will appeal to a broad audience.
Her enthusiasm is shared by others who have seen portions of the film, like Pali Research analyst Richard Greenfield who last month raised his worldwide box office estimate to $563 million from $534 million. Continued...





