He loved reading Dr suess's how the Grinch stole Christmas as a child (It doesn't take a genius to know how much he relates to the Grinch's love of peace and quiet) and apparently, he is Jewish.īiography Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie He is also very insecure, going to ridiculous lengths to destroy the freindship between George and Harold, as they make a fool out of him, and their antics cause damage to Jerome howitz school. He likens himself to a strict, authoritarian principal, yet despite his efforts, he ends up feeling berated and disrespected. He is also extremely petty and melodramatic, and all the power from his job rushes to his head, making him, ironically, even less mature than the children in his charge. Krupp is abrasive, domineering, argumentative, cantankerous, tyrannical, and ironfisted. Krupp wears a short-sleeved white shirt with a brown tie, dark green pants, brown shoes, and a toupee. 3.1 Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie.That, and the real message of the film: ‘Never underestimate the power of underpants.’ Naturally. Behind the briefs is an honest and utterly endearing celebration of the value of true friendship. More surprisingly, the film is also, oddly, really quite charming. To quote Harold, ‘Is it okay that I’m loving this?!’ Watch out particularly for a delirious whoopee cushion rendition of Tchaikovsky’s 1812 overture. That said, the ‘laffs’ come thick and fast and the whole thing is, often, undeniably hilarious. It’s wildly out of control and – for grown-ups at least – almost exhausting to experience. Unsurprisingly, Captain Underpants: The First Epic Adventure is very, very silly. Because all good superheroes (although, Captain Underpants is hardly that) must have a foe, Nick Kroll rounds off the principals as Professor Poopypants, a scientist plotting to rid the world of laughter – a result of the chip on his shoulder formed by his…ahem…somewhat comical name. Krupp and his titular alter ego, whilst Kevin Hart and Thomas Middleditch play George and Harold. This is world in which the trees all look rather like micro-cosmic explosions of the sugar puff cereals from the box in which George and Harold found their hypno-ring.īehind the characters in David Soren’s adaptation, The Hangover trilogy’s Ed Helms voices the Mr. Essentially, it looks exactly as you’d imagine the book’s illustrations would in three dimensions. A touch Peanuts Movie, this animation is of the bright and plastically perky fashion. George and Harold’s adventures begin in their delightfully Dennis the Menace treehouse, with the pair having united as friends in the first grade over a shared appreciation of the comedy value of the planet Uranus.Įqually well adapted is the illustrative style of the book series – there’s even time along the way for a fun nod to the popular flip books included in the books. Stoller does well here to capture Pilkey’s knack for grasping the workings of a child’s imagination. Translating the story from page to screen is Nicholas Stoller, a man no stranger to fun family fare having penned too The Muppets and last year’s Storks. As the front cover of Pilkey’s ‘First Epic Novel’ promises, ahead are: ‘Action’, ‘Thrills’ and ‘Laffs.’ Krupp with a cereal box ‘hypno-ring’ and inadvertently give him the semi-permanent alter-ego of their very own Captain Underpants. With only one option remaining, George and Harold promptly hypnotise Mr. Krupp manages to catch the duo breaking school rules on camera at a Saturday Science Fair, their friendship comes under threat. In Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie, when Mr. Krupp, George and Harold’s Principal, who is hell-bent on breaking the class clowns up. At school is the cantankerous and unfriendly Mr. Given their success – Captain Underpants has been translated into over 20 languages – it’s perhaps surprising that it’s take this long for a film to materialise.įor those unfamiliar with this unlikeliest of superheroes, The Adventures of Captain Underpants revolve around the exploits of George and Harold, best friends who spend their free time pranking teachers and creating comic book stories about the – ‘more powerful than boxer shorts’ – Captain Underpants (George writes, Harold illustrates). The novels have sold more than 70m copies the world over since launching in 1997, with the series concluding at book twelve only two years ago. To young fans of Dav Pilkey’s Captain Underpants book series, that hark of arrival is as familiar and welcome a caw as ‘to the Batmobile’ might be to their parents.
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