The Billboard Family Hits of the Week compiles what's new and worth your family's time in music, movies, TV, books, games and more. Forget the mind-numbing scrolling and searching "what to watch for family movie night"
Hastings and team maintain the childlike illustration style of the books, with crayon lines and shading on the somewhat simply designed characters, and the colloquial, slangy writing (the law enforcement officers are “supa cops”; various important buildings are “ova there”).
Peter Hastings directs a sweet, silly animated film about a hybrid creature who patrols the streets and goes after a villainous cat, voiced by Pete Davidson.
Creator Dav Pilkey's quirky, kinetic world has nicely made the visual leap to the big screen, but something is missing. The Hollywoodization — like a ray blasted from a typical Pilkey lumbering robot — has leveled-out the idiosyncrasy and overstuffed the narrative. Newcomers may be stunned — and not in a good way.
Irreverent jokes have little time to land in a graphic novel adaptation centered on a canine policeman protecting his city from his cat arch-nemesis.
Dog Man”—a new animated comedy starring the voices of Lil Rel Howery and Pete Davidson—is new in theaters. How soon will it be available to stream at home?
A police officer and a dog get fused into one crime-fighter in this antic, enjoyable adaptation of Dav Pilkey’s comic series.
Never fear, “Dog Man” is here — to save your families from the doldrums of January moviegoing. The popular children’s books by Dav Pilkey (a spinoff of the “Captain Underpants”
This Arizona man was reunited with his miniature Doberman pinscher after losing him in Oklahoma City 8 years ago.
If you’re not excited for Dog Man coming to streaming, what are you doing? Thankfully, we know where you can catch it at home first.
The 'SNL' alum voices a villainous cat in DreamWorks' animated adaptation of Dav Pilkey's best-selling series of children's graphic novels about a half-human, half-canine police officer.
GREENSBURG, Pa. — A Greensburg man pleaded guilty to neglecting his service dog Thursday. Bryan Thompson, 56, pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges of animal cruelty and neglect of animals for failing to provide veterinary care to his service dog.