Captain Underpants: the First Epic Movie (2017) [Blu-ray]
Animation | Action | Comedy | Family

Tagline: 50% Hero. 100% Cotton

Based on the worldwide sensation and bestselling book series, and boasting an A-list cast of comedy superstars headed by Kevin Hart and Ed Helms, DreamWorks Animation brings audiences the long-awaited global movie event, Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie. This raucously subversive comedy for the entire family tells the story of two overly imaginative pranksters named George and Harold, who hypnotize their principal into thinking he's a ridiculously enthusiastic, incredibly dimwitted superhero named Captain Underpants.

Storyline: Two overly imaginative pranksters named George and Harold hypnotize their principal into thinking he's a ridiculously enthusiastic, incredibly dimwitted superhero named Captain Underpants.

Reviewer's Note: Reviewed by Martin Liebman, September 15, 2017 One can only wonder what kind of schooling experience Author Dav Pilkey had in his youth to inspire him to create the Captain Underpants series. Are his stories mostly his musing and fantasies or is the series based in some godawful reality of droning teachers, demeaning principals, and dreary classrooms? The story offers a very bleak look inside a school where humor is not just discouraged, it's practically disallowed, particularly the brand of humor shared by brothers-in-comedy George and Harold, two elementary-aged children and aspiring comic book creators who find the punchline in almost everything. They play pranks, they giggle at academic verbiage that could be construed as toilet humor, they make it their mission in life to bring a little spirit and joy into their lives and their school. For the boys, laughter is the best medicine, the one and only antidote to their principal's warden-like rule over the school where education is boring and creativity is discouraged. Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie is a wonderfully fun, zippy, creative, and uproariously funny adaptation of the book series that turns school and superheroes upside down, strips it all down to the bare tighty-wightey essentials, and has a blast diving headfirst into comic absurdity in one of the most satisfying animated films in years.

George (voiced by Kevin Hart) and Harold (voiced by Thomas Middleditch) are elementary-aged best friends who once bonded over getting the giggles after hearing the word "Uranus" and have since become their school's top pranking tandem and authors of a number of comic books, most of them, including Captain Underpants, made of their own unique brand of off-the-wall humor. But their gags have pushed their principal, Mr. Krupp (voiced by Ed Helms), to the brink. He's a joyless authoritarian who values spartan learning environments and humorless lessons for his pupils. He's also come up with an ingenious plan to put an end to Harold and George's antics for good: put them in different classes. With their lifeblood humor on the line and their friendship on the brink of forced destruction, the duo takes extreme measures by hypnotizing Mr. Krupp and making him believe he's their brainchild superhero, Captain Underpants, a jovial, rotund caped crusader who may not be an elite crime fighter but who is, at least, going to fight to keep George and Harold happy and together. Meanwhile, a new science teacher, Professor Poopypants (voiced by Nick Kroll), sets in motion a scheme to wipe out humor in the school and, ultimately, the world, using the school's most humorless boy and George and Harold's archenemy, Melvin (Kristen Schaal), as the linchpin of his plan.

Captain Underpants is a laugh riot. Whether big, sweeping gags or subtle little cues, the film always finds a way to bring a smile to the face. It somehow makes even mindless toilet humor fun, not because the jokes are all that unique but because the characters, and the voice actors, respond with such infectious enthusiasm for the gags. George and Harold, meaning, really, Kevin Hart and Thomas Middleditch, never miss a beat, never fail to not only find the humor in a line or gag or situation or scenario but rather the essence of why it makes them laugh, and their responses are most certainly contagious. Sure a few plot holes are necessary evils to keep the humor flowing at a breakneck pace, particularly in the third act when the boys and their principal-turned-superhero are forced to battle a nasty villain who ironically uses an oversized potty in an effort to eliminate potty humor, but the rapid-fire jokes, the focus on task, and the complete absurdity of it all mask any structural shortcomings. From plays on words to a whoopee cushion symphony, Captain Underpants goes there, does that, and finds the laughter in anything and everything, from broad stroke gags to small little touches like Harold and George having reserved seating outside Krupp's office and his anti-motivational posters and signs that line his room.

The movie may amount to little more than juvenile humor, and while the gags dominate, the movie does raise an interesting question that it kinda-sorta touches on in spots but mostly leaves up to the audience to consider: is there any value in extremes? The boys certainly dislike their principal. They mean him no harm, but they'd rather he not inject into their lives or get in the way of their creative mojo. He's strict, stern, humorless. They are fun-loving, easygoing, and always able to make joke of any situation. But they're really not all that different. They're both examples of extremes. And so is Poopypants, for that matter, a man who isn't just an authoritarian like Principal Krupp but someone who would see the world fundamentally change to fit his own notion of how it should be. All four characters -- and throw Melvin in there, too -- are radicals in their own way. Is there harmony in a give-and-take? Can they ever meet halfway? What are the underlying, driving forces that make them who they are? The audience will certainly, and rightly, side with the boys, but it's an interesting aside to consider when watching the movie in the way it depicts good and bad but does so on the fringes where there's really no gray area. But, yeah, the movie is mostly just Uranus! Which is a gas giant! And it's so adorable as just that and any more contemplative notions more or less fall by the wayside.

Captain Underpants is a blast. The humor is infectious, the story is silly, the voice actors are wonderful, and stale humor is brought to life thanks to the characters' lovable enthusiasm for it. And this review hasn't even touched on the superhero stuff, the wonderful Superman-inspired origins story the boys create and all of Underpants' comical antics, whether on his own or as the boys must snap him back into hero mode every time he gets wet. The movie just never relents. It's a joy and one of the year's best little surprises. Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie's Blu-ray release features A-grade video and audio. Supplements are many but frivolous. Very highly recommended!

[CSW] -3.2- Now, if you do not like puerile humor and pee and poop and fart jokes, then this movie may not be for you. This movie is quite conscious of its puerile nature and uses that to its self-deprecatory advantage. There were certain core values portrayed such as kids and friendships and just how deep those friendships forged in early years can be. Some pranks were designed to buck up their fellow students showing that the boys felt empathy for their fellow students and yet still they maintained a sense of responsibility after their actions. All of these are probably why the book was successful even though the overall comedic structure in the book and the movie was completely insane.
[V5.0-A5.0] MPEG-4 AVC - No D-Box


º º