Houston Chronicle

Potty humor fills animated ‘Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.’

- By Peter Hartlaub phartlaub@sfchronicl­e.com

It’s unlikely that anyone going to a movie called “Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie” is anticipati­ng a strong story filled with practical real-life lessons.

And that’s perfectly OK. Sometimes parents just need an 89-minute cinematic baby sitter. Sometimes children, especially at the end of the school year, deserve to wallow in a little potty humor. Not every familyfrie­ndly movie needs to be filled with “Inside Out”-style Trojan horse psychother­apy.

And yet the DreamWorks Animation film still strains to meet its modest expectatio­ns. “Captain Underpants” is a very popular series that doesn’t seamlessly translate to the big screen, and the filmmakers can’t solve this problem. The result is a cinematic wedgie: a little too dark, a little too nihilistic, a little too empty.

Beyond a sadistic principal and a couple of school staffers, “Captain Underpants” is a movie devoid of adults. The better “Peanuts” TV movies handled a similar scenario by tapping into the strong friendship­s and carefree feelings as kids approached a holiday. Never mind if that holiday turns out to be a disaster. Humanity and fellowship wins, even on the most melancholy days.

“Captain Underpants” presents a bleak world, where the friendship between comic book artists George and Harold (voiced by Kevin Hart and Thomas Middleditc­h) is the only light. Their primary joy is the short-term rush of pranking their teachers — including hypnotizin­g militarist­ic Principal Krupp into thinking he’s a superhero.

This is effective in Dav Pilkey’s “Captain Underpants” books, where the artwork suggests the slightly twisted but harmless fantasy world of a child’s mind. The comics are a small blast of subversive­ness; empty calories to be consumed as the real world passes by outside a car window or bedroom door.

Viewed in a movie theater, “Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie” is a much more immersive experience. The central characters are part of the cartoon, not distanced from it. As the school descends into chaos with an evil professor and homicidal toilet robots, the cynicism is inescapabl­e.

“Captain Underpants” seems to be working on a smaller budget compared to DreamWorks standouts such as “Megamind” and the “How to Train Your Dragon” movies. And yet the script from “The Muppets,” “Storks” and “Neighbors” writer Nicholas Stoller has its moments. A whoopie cushion symphony brings Brad Bird-era “The Simpsons” to mind. Reenactmen­ts are animated with sock puppets. As running jokes about the planet Uranas go, the ones written here are strong.

But in the end, it’s impossible to ignore the fact that this feature is devoid of even the simplest positive morals or takeaways. And it’s not quite funny or wry enough to forgive its weaknesses.

What’s left is a pair of XXXL briefs, a lot of toilet humor and the sense that Hollywood could do better.

 ?? DreamWorks Animation ?? From left, Harold (voiced by Thomas Middleditc­h), George (Kevin Hart) and Captain Underpants (Ed Helms) get into some mischief in “Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.”
DreamWorks Animation From left, Harold (voiced by Thomas Middleditc­h), George (Kevin Hart) and Captain Underpants (Ed Helms) get into some mischief in “Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.”

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