Superman, James Gunn
Digest more
Director James Gunn’s real-life dog, Ozu, served as the inspiration and the 3-D model for Krypto, the flying dog that the ti
Man’s best (super)friend has prime placement in the new “Superman” movie, and the pooch’s path to the cinematic spotlight may be worth a movie itself.
The Groguification of franchises is as strong as ever, if all the merch for Superman's canine companion is anything to go by.
The very good boy dates back many decades, and his inclusion in the new Superman movie adds more than just a dose of cuteness.
Director James Gunn talks about adopting a rescue dog named Ozu, who later inspired Superman's Krypto in the upcoming film.
That’s what Krypto has always represented — a vision of Rockwellian Americana where a good man has a good dog and an embrace of the outlandish science fiction inherent in watching a canine in a little cape display superpowers.
Besides a very good dog named Krypto, James Gunn’s “Superman” gives us a five-star Lois Lane thanks to Rachel Brosnahan.
It's an age-old moviegoing question: does the dog die? We provide an answer to whether Krypto makes it through "Superman" in one piece