Both are built around valiant do-gooders with legions of passionate fans. The running time is 1 hour and 29 minutes.īuy a copy of my book, "Straight-Up Blatant: Musings From The Aisle Seat," on sale now at ! Paperback and Kindle editions also available at Amazon.On Friday, Hollywood rolls out two major new superhero movies. Those who aren't may be tempted to pick a few up.Ĭaptain Underpants: The Epic First Movie is rated PG for mild rude humor throughout. Captain Underpants is a charming ode to friendship, creativity, and the value of a good, hearty laugh.Īnyone familiar with Pilkey's books will appreciate the faithful adaptation. That doesn't mean it isn't a worthy family film, though. No one is going to put this movie in the same category as Inside Out or Kubo and the Two Strings. Perhaps obviously, there's not a lot of depth here. Nicholas Stoller's screenplay gives them a lot of funny lines to say, providing just the right wink-at-the-audience quality. Krupp's hard-nosed authoritarian stance and Captain Underpants's dim-witted enthusiasm, while Kroll plays Poopypants with a wonderfully over-the-top villainy. Helms, meanwhile, amusingly veers back and forth between Mr. Hart and Middleditch create convincing best friend chemistry. The voice actors are extremely well-cast. It gets the idea that kids have no filter, no belief that subjects are “beneath” them. Captain Underpants is funny because it makes you get back in touch with the part of yourself that used to delight in that sort of thing. You laugh at farting, butts, making wisecracks about the planet Uranus, and so on. When you're in grade school, you probably haven't been exposed to hardcore satire, political comedy, or anything edgy. While it may seem as though it doesn't take a lot of genius to name a character “Professor Poopypants,” the movie, like the books, acknowledges the fact that such things make kids giggle. The oddball sense of humor is there, too. The computer animation replicates the visual style of Pilkey's work brilliantly. The movie really does feel like one of the books springing to life. Amazingly, Captain Underpants finds ways to transfer all of these qualities to the screen. Pilkey's books are unique, in that they incorporate comic book pages alongside the text, allow the main characters to address the reader, and typically have a “flip” section where you can experience a form of animation by flipping the pages back and forth quickly. That proves to be a good thing when the new science teacher, Professor Poopypants (Nick Kroll), reveals a nefarious plot to take away the ability of children to laugh. Krupp, making him think that's he Captain Underpants, a tighty whitey-wearing superhero they created for their homemade comic books. After he threatens to place them into separate classrooms to discourage their antics, the boys hypnotize Mr. They enjoy pranking the teachers and staff at their school, especially the stern principal, Mr. George (voiced by Kevin Hart) and Harold (Thomas Middleditch) are best friends. Plus, it has a theme song performed by Weird Al, so how can it go wrong? The animated Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie perfectly captures the goofy spirit of its source material. A strong pop culture sensibility pervades Pilkey's work, which makes it a natural for the big-screen treatment. (Toilets are everywhere in the books, including a massive robo-commode.) At the same time, the tales themselves are about how much two good friends rely on one another. The stories are filled with things that crack kids up: pranks, silly names, and literal potty humor. Dav Pilkey's series is a fine example of dumb humor done smartly. If you have school-age children, you're probably very familiar with the Captain Underpants books.
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