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Graphic novel hero ‘Dog Man’ gets the Hollywood treatment and it’s ruff going

Li’l Petey, voiced by Lucas Hopkins Calderon, left, and Dog Man, voiced by Peter Hastings, appear in a scene from “Dog Man.” DreamWorks Animation via AP

Whether or not you’ll enjoy the “Dog Man” movie is sort of dependent on how much you're a fan of the graphic novels. I was split — like its wordless hero.

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.

The movie version has celebrities — Pete Davidson, Lil Rel Howery, Isla Fisher and Ricky Gervais — less toilet humor, less puns and really no jokes for parents, despite a few references to “Die Hard” and “Apocalypse Now.” Other studios have managed to keep the folks who buy the tickets at least entertained with some sly adult things to snack on.

The guerrilla feel of the books has given way to a blockbuster, explosion-filled, deep message film about fatherhood, optimism and love. What once was created in a school hallway because its creator was disruptive in class is now enjoying a marketing campaign that involves digital billboards, costume character tours and changing the color of the Empire State Building's lights. Miley Cyrus' “Flowers” is on the soundtrack. It’s subversive no more.

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