‘Dog Man’ review: A pawsome adventure for young kids and grown-up kids

Apr 11, 2025 - 10:00
‘Dog Man’ review: A pawsome adventure for young kids and grown-up kids

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The spin-off film from Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie – both based on Dav Pilkey’s bestselling children’s novels – is a riot of colour and activity. Dog Man dials up the frenetic nature of Pilkey’s mischief-packed graphic novels aimed at anybody who is over five years old or wishes to return to their childhood.

Peter Hastings’s animated film follows the human-canine hybrid created after brave-but-dumb police officer Knight and his loyal-and-intelligent pooch Greg die in a bomb explosion. A nurse has the bright idea of stitching the right parts together and voila! The result is Dog Man, whose vocabulary consists of “ruff ruff”, “ooooooo” and other such non-verbal sounds.

Fond of leaping all over irascible but well-meaning police chief simply named Chief (voiced by Lil Rel Howery), Dog Man is also sharp enough to sense trouble, which comes in the form of Petey. The “world’s most evilest cat”, Petey (voiced by Pete Davidson) is an ace inventor always looking for ways to defeat Dog Man. Petey clones himself in the hope of expanding his army, but the result – the kitten Lil Petey (voiced by Lucas Hopkins Calderon) – isn’t quite what he expected.

Dog Man happily snuggles in the corner that says ‘Attention-deficit kids accompanied by parents looking to...

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