The romantic and exciting events of this film which revolves around the future of California, where the knights of Aragon plan to carry on the evil works and eliminate it from this great destiny, so the hero of united states especially California, Zorro, can stop them and eliminate all their evil, but unluckily he has some own problems with his wife, who takes the promise from him to leave his secret identity and live a natural life, known as Don Alejandro de la Vega, but finally he and his family do their best to caught those knights.
The Legend of Zorro is a campier sequel, occasionally given too much to childish antics. But once the story really kicks in, it transforms into a fine adventure film and a worthy addition to the Zorro film legacy.
Catherine Zeta Jones' eminent allure and Antonio Banderas' leading man charm are reduced to mere furnishings for an ostensibly child-friendly adventure movie filled with tedious stunt sequences, endless sword fights and too many brutal murders.
The passionless string of the hoariest clichés is burnished with the phony luster of an I Can't Believe It's Not Butter commercial, and its plot seems to have been amalgamated by a computer program.