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Tag: the super mario bros. movie

  • The Best Mario Games, According To You

    The Best Mario Games, According To You

    Nintendo / LongplayArchive

    “Definitely Mario Galaxy, and not just because it’s the picture. It felt like such a huge improvement over Sunshine (which I liked well enough when it came out but really does not hold up). The orchestral music, new characters, motion controls, a genuine story, and levels that all felt very different. (64 and Sunshine involve repeating levels over and over and over again to get all the stars/shines; Galaxy gives you a different path almost every time through the world.)” – sxp151

    Galaxy 1 just hit a sweet spot for me. Like all the things you listed – the music is phenomenal (one of my favorite video game soundtracks), some of the best use of Wii motion controls, the gravity physics were mindblowing, it had an incredible reward/progression system, and overall it was just fun and addictive in a way few others have matched for me (even other Marios). One of the only games that I’ve gone out of my way to do everything, pitting myself up against its toughest challenges.

    Plus, the story is surprisingly melancholy, which just gives a great mood to the whole experience. One of my all-time favorites.” – AmaltheaElanor

    Galaxy 2. Some might argue that it ‘doesn’t have enough moves,’ as if a deep moveset is what put Mario on the map. Some might argue it’s ‘too slow’ as if going speed is the ultimate benchmark of quality by which games are to be judged.

    No, what made Mario Mario is neither of those things. What made him is straightforward, crisp movement in impeccably designed levels. Sure, he can’t do a divekick or midair kick or whatever it might be, but crispness of movement is about elegance and the balance between freedom & commitment, not just filling space with new ways to change trajectory for no reason than to fill space. What’s more, he’s doing all of this elegant movement in the hands-down best level design the medium of video games has ever seen. Developed enough to build upon ideas, yet still with enough awareness to know when to move on, these spaces are creativity incarnate. They stretch the bounds of what is possible, take only the best ideas from that thinking, and pares it down to platformer par excellence. It’s hard to not keep comparing it more favorably to other games in the series, so “best level design in the business” will have to do the heavy lifting for now. And with the best level design, you have the best Mario game. Full stop.” – Jakisthe

    Kenneth Shepard

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  • New Super Mario Bros. Movie Release Date Announced

    New Super Mario Bros. Movie Release Date Announced

    A new film set in The Super Mario Bros. Movie universe has been announced. Described as “a new animated film based on the world of Super Mario Bros.,” it is unclear if it will be a direct sequel or a spin-off of the highly successful 2023 movie starring Chris Pratt and Jack Black. However, we do know it will be released on April 3, 2026, and that Illumination is once again the studio behind the animation. The end credits of the 2023 film teased Yoshi, so that could be the direction it is going.

    “We are now creating a new animated film based on the world of Super Mario Bros. This film is planned for release in theaters on April 3rd, 2026, in the US and many other markets, and throughout the month of April in other territories,” said Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto on Twitter. “We’ll let you know the details once we’re ready to share more. This time too, the staff at Illumination and Nintendo are working together. We’re thinking about broadening Mario’s world further, and it’ll have a bright and fun story. We hope you’ll look forward to it”

    The first film featured the voices of its all-star cast, including Chris Pratt as Mario, Anya Taylor-Joy as Princess Peach, Charlie Day as Luigi, Jack Black as Bowser, Keegan-Michael Key as Toad, Seth Rogen as Donkey Kong, Fred Armisen as Cranky Kong, Kevin Michael Richardson as Kamek, and Sebastian Maniscalco as Spike.

    Despite receiving mixed reception from critics, the adaptation still became one of the year’s biggest movie releases. It was one of the top releases of 2023, with a worldwide gross of over $1.3 billion at the box office.

    “While working underground to fix a water main, Brooklyn plumbers Mario and brother Luigi are transported down a mysterious pipe and wander into a magical new world,” reads the first film’s synopsis. “But when the brothers are separated, Mario embarks on an epic quest to find Luigi. With the assistance of a Mushroom Kingdom resident Toad and some training from the strong-willed ruler of the Mushroom Kingdom, Princess Peach, Mario taps into his own power.”

    Tyler Treese

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  • Lego’s Super Mario and Mario Kart Sets Will Have You Dashing to Stores

    Lego’s Super Mario and Mario Kart Sets Will Have You Dashing to Stores

    Image: Nintendo

    If you’ve been thinking to yourself, “I need some new Legos to put on my shelf,” the company’s got you covered. Along with its newly revealed set for Batman: The Animated Series, a new array of sets for its Super Mario line are in the works.

    As part of its Mar10 Day celebration (seen below), Nintendo announced it was partnering with Lego again for three new sets. The Bowser Express Train set, inspired by the characterr’s locomotive in the games, comes with two carriages and a car in the back, plus a pair of train stations individually representing Bowser’s Castle and the Mushroom Kingdom. Like in the games, Lego Mario gets onboard the train by being blasted out of a cannon and onto a handcart.

    Celebrating MARIO DAY with LEGO Super Mario

    King Boo’s Haunted Mansion sees Lego Luigi fight enemies in the estate and unlock a treasure chest (or sit down on a chouch that floats). Last but not least, the Battle with Roy set has Lego Peach defend her castle from the Koopaling and his Chain Chomp Chariot with Lego Mario and Lego Toad at her side.

    At the very end of the video, Lego revealed it was working on Mario Kart sets aiming to drop sometime in 2025. There’s no real glimpse of what it looks like, sadly, but it’s nice to hear that one of the character’s biggest spinoff franchises is getting some bricky love in the near future. Next year is also supposed to see the release of the next Nintendo consoleMario Kart games tend to release early into a system’s lifecycle, so it’s easy to imagine the next mainline entry will come sometime not long after that new console drops.

    Update: Lego’s store lists the three Super Mario sets as launching in retailers on August 1. King Boo’s Mansion will run $75, Bowser Express at $120, and Battle with Roy at $65.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

    Justin Carter

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  • Jack Black Reflects on ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’s Poor Performance With Critics

    Jack Black Reflects on ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’s Poor Performance With Critics


    It’s been almost a year since The Super Mario Bros. Movie first Goomba-stomped its way into theaters, meaning it’s been almost a year since we learned that Illumination didn’t quite solve the video game movie curse with this one.

    While it wasn’t without its merits (namely the animation and the voice performances from Jack Black and Anya Taylor-Joy as Bowser and Princess Peach, respectively), the film largely fell flat on its face from a critical perspective thanks to its plot being nothing more than some thinly-connected set pieces, each one more saturated with fan service than the last.

    This apparently came as a surprise for Black, who recently revealed in an interview with Total Film that he was dumbfounded at the underwhelming critical reception for The Super Mario Bros. Movie (it’s been hovering around its current 59 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes ever since the embargo lifted), and also thankful that it didn’t seem to impede its billion-dollar box office performance.

    “They screened it for me a month before it hit theaters. I was like, ‘We’ve got a hit on our hands.’ I’m laughing and smiling the whole way through this movie. And then it came out and it got horrible reviews. I was like, ‘What movie did they see?’ Luckily, the world didn’t listen to Rotten Tomatoes, and it was one of the biggest hits of all time.”

    I’m glad Black had a blast with it, but The Super Mario Bros. Movie absolutely deserved the critical response that it received. It may be a completely harmless, sugar-coated children’s film, but in no way does that mean it’s beyond critique; in fact, to suggest otherwise would be an insult to children’s media as a whole.

    Did Mario have to be a good movie? No, it didn’t; young kids would have lapped up the bright colors and cutesy enemies regardless of the film’s execution of storytelling fundamentals. But, Toy Story didn’t need to be a good movie either; neither did How to Train Your Dragon, The Lego Movie, or The Mitchells vs. the Machines, but all of those family-centric films were good anyway, and—at the risk of sounding reductive—were far better for it. Furthermore, given that an IP like Mario effortlessly resonates through countless generations, what’s the logic behind limiting yourself to young children as your target audience?

    So no, Mario didn’t need to be good. But there’s no rule that says any movie has to be good; movies should want to be good, and sadly, The Super Mario Bros. Movie‘s self-interest began and ended with its potential for empty-calorie fan service.

    (via Total Film, featured image: Illumination)

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    Charlotte Simmons

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  • Anime and ‘Godzilla Minus One’ Push Japan’s Box Office Higher in 2023

    Anime and ‘Godzilla Minus One’ Push Japan’s Box Office Higher in 2023


    Japan’s box office climbed 4 percent to a post-pandemic high of $1.5 billion (221.5 billion yen) in 2023, driven again by a strong slate of anime and a steady return to theaters. Hollywood films maintained the same market share of around 31 percent as the previous year, though a very weak yen reduced earnings in dollar terms.  

    The Japanese currency falling toward the 150-mark against the greenback means that when converted, the annual box office fell from last year’s $1.64 billion even though takings in yen climbed from 213 billion yen. Imported fare (676 films) took a total of $452 million, versus $995 million for 555 domestic productions.   

    The figures were announced in Tokyo on Tuesday by the Motion Picture Producers Association of Japan, locally referred to as Eiren.  

    Topping the 2023 box office rankings was The First Slam Dunk, an anime from Toei based on a hit basketball manga with $107 million, followed by The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($95 million), and the latest anime in the Detective Conan series ($94 million). Those three titles were the only ones to surpass the locally significant 10 billion yen ($68 million) domestic blockbuster benchmark in 2023, though overall takings were second only to the all-time high of $1.77 billion (261 billion yen) in 2019.

    Hayao Miyazaki’s The Boy and the Heron was in fourth spot, taking $58 million. Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One with $37 million was the only other Hollywood movie to make the top 10.

    Total admissions were up 2 percent to 155.5 million, with the number of screens up slightly to 3,653.

    The unexpected success of Godzilla Minus One in the American market was a hot topic at the announcement event, sparking multiple questions from the local media.

    Hiroyasu Matsuoka, CEO of Toho, the studio behind Japan’s most famous monster, said the film had helped group theatrical earnings top 100 billion yen ($680 million) for the first time. Toho also distributes Studio Ghibli films and the Conan series.  

    Godzilla Minus One has taken more than $55 million in the United States. It recently became third highest-grossing non-English language film in the US market, overtaking Oscar-winner Parasite and setting multiple records such as the biggest opening weekend for a foreign film,” said Matsuoka. “This has given us great confidence in the potential for our films and IP.”

    Asked about the reasons for its success, he added, “We really didn’t think it would be such a big hit, to be honest. As well the high levels of recognition for the Godzilla name, it benefited from less competition on release due to the strike in Hollywood.”

    “And the rise of streaming platforms has helped make global audiences more receptive to reading subtitles and watching non-English content,” suggested Matsuoka.

    Fumio Yoshimura, CEO of TOEI, also spoke about the strength of anime and his company’s plans to target further expansion in the global market leveraging IP such as its Power Rangers and samurai films.



    Gavin Blair

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  • 2023 Box Office: Domestic Revenue Clears $9B in Post-Pandemic First (Thanks, Barbenheimer)

    2023 Box Office: Domestic Revenue Clears $9B in Post-Pandemic First (Thanks, Barbenheimer)

    Whew.

    Domestic box office revenue was able to clear $9 billion after all, despite a dismal fall season at the multiplex, according to Comscore. That’s the best showing of the post-pandemic era, with revenue in U.S. and Canada up 20 percent over 2022’s $7.5 billion.

    But movie ticket sales are still down sharply from pre-pandemic times, when domestic revenue crossed $10 billion every year beginning in 2009 and $11 billion every year beginning in 2015 and ending in 2019, the last year before COVID-19 struck. Comscore believes 2023 domestic revenue will come in at $9.03 billion-$9.05 billion for 2023, a drop of roughly 21 percent from 2019’s $11.4 billion.

    In terms of box office trends, 2023 will be remembered as a year of enormous change as audiences spurned tried-and-true staples, such as superhero fare — The Marvels was the biggest stumble in the history of Marvel Studios — and instead embraced originality or genres that had previously struggled.

    The marquee example of the new world order was the Barbenheimer phenomenon. The one-two-punch of filmmaker Greta Gerwig‘s Barbie and Universal‘s Oppenheimer, directed by Christopher Nolan, saw box office revenue for July and August reach pre-pandemic levels.

    “Another box office target was set and hit in 2023 as the domestic year surpassed the $9 billion threshold, owing much to a notable Barbenheimer-powered $4 billion summer movie season and a unique year in which alternative content, specialized film and international cinema made their mark in an unprecedented show of strength adding to the bottom line,” says Comscore’s Paul Dergarabedian.

    He’s referring to such films as Angel Studios’ hit indie pic Sound of Freedom, which drew much of its strength from faith-based and conservative audiences. The pic came out of nowhere to earn $184.1 million domestically, putting it at No. 10 on the list of top-grossing 2023 movies.

    Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour was another unicorn. The superstar pop singer decided to bypass the Hollywood studio system and bring her concert pic directly to cinemas via a deal with AMC Theatres. In an unimaginable feat, Eras Tour earned $179.6 million domestically to land at No. 11 on the top 20 list, ahead of Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny ($174.5 million) and Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part 1 ($172.1 million).

    Barbie, from Warner Bros., was far-and-away the year’s biggest earner and the only film to cross the $600 million threshold domestically on its way to topping out at $636.2 million. It was also the No. 1 pic globally after strutting to $1.44 billion.

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie, released in the spring, was the year’s first major surprise. It earned $574.9 million domestically and $1.36 billion globally to become the top-grossing video game adaptation of all time in a huge win for Universal.

    There was more good news in store for Universal, culminating with the studio ending Disney‘s long-running winning streak and narrowly winning the domestic marketshare race with an estimated $1.94 billion in ticket sales between Jan. 1-Dec. 21, 2023, according to unofficial estimates. (Universal may also be first in global marketshare after Disney had ranked No. 1 for seven consecutive years).

    Disney’s 2023 domestic revenue was an estimated $1.9 billion, although final numbers for all of the studios won’t be revealed until Tuesday or Wednesday.

    Among other 2023 Universal titles, Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer — an adult-skewing biographical drama running just over three hours — earned an eye-popping $326 million domestically and $952 million globally, while Fast X grossed $704.9 million worldwide (it was soft in North America but did well internationally).

    Back on the chart of top-grossing films domestically, Sony’s Spider-Man: Across the Universe placed No. 3 ($381.3 million), followed by Disney and Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 ($359 million). Disney also took spots No. 6 and No. 7. with The Little Mermaid ($298.1 million) and Avatar: The Way of Water, which, while released at the end of 2022, raked in $283.1 million in 2023.

    Lionsgate’s John Wick: Chapter 4 ranked No. 9 on the top 10 list domestically with $187.1 million in ticket sales.

    If Hollywood execs aren’t exactly setting off fireworks over 2023, it’s because they’re bracing for a tumultuous ride at the 2024 domestic box office after a slew of high-profile tentpoles were pushed to 2025 because of the lengthy writers and actors strikes.

    In a major blow to the post-pandemic recovery effort, domestic box office revenue in 2024 could come in behind that of 2023. If projections are right, domestic box office in 2024 could top out at $7.5 billion to $8 billion, say multiple studio executives who spoke with The Hollywood Reporter (a few are more bullish in thinking $8 billion to $8.5 billion is possible).

    Pamela McClintock

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  • Miyamoto Was Like ‘That’s Not How Elephants Work’

    Miyamoto Was Like ‘That’s Not How Elephants Work’

    The next mainline 2D Mario game, Super Mario Bros. Wonder, looks fantastic, shaking up the franchise’s formula with new powers, worlds, and enemies. In particular, one new power that turns Mario into an elephant became quite popular online. However, at first Mario’s creator Shigeru Miyamoto, wasn’t a fan of the odd transformation.

    Super Mario Bros. Wonder, out later this October on Nintendo Switch, looks well…wonderful! The game features a new, revamped art style that looks 10x better than the New Super Mario Bros. games’, and is filled with new ideas and gameplay mechanics, including Elden Ring-like multiplayer features and a huge roster of playable heroes: Mario, Luigi, Peach, Daisy, Blue Toad, Yellow Toad, Toadette, and Nabbit. But perhaps the most talked-about new additions to the Mario formula are the new power-ups, including one that turns Nintendo’s plumber into a large pachyderm. Apparently Miyamoto had some…thoughts about Elephant Mario during development.

    In an August 31 interview with IGN, Super Mario Bros. Wonder director Shiro Mouri and producer Takashi Tezuka explained that during production of the game, Miyamoto did provide feedback and notes, but he wasn’t in their “hip pocket” all the time “whispering” in their ears.

    “Sometimes he would come by where we are working and look at things and give some opinions,” said Tezuka. “He would generally observe things and make comments here and there.”

    Miyamoto had some notes on Elephant Mario

    However, according to Mouri, Miyamoto did have a problem with Elephant Mario, at first.

    “It was a phase where we still had tentative visuals for Elephant Mario, and we had plans to adjust the visuals already,” said Mouri. “But he had come and taken a look before that and he gave us the sharp comment that ‘This doesn’t look like a Mario character.’”

    Nintendo

    According to Mouri, Mario’s dad also took issue with how Elephant Mario sprays water from his trunk, saying that “if an elephant was actually spraying water, it wouldn’t move that way.”

    I like to imagine that Miyamoto comes home and spends hours watching elephants in the wild via documentaries and old videos on the internet, closely studying their moves. And finally, all that hard work paid off. Good for him.

    Where did the idea for Elephant Mario come from?

    In a separate Thursday interview with Wired, Mouri and Tezuka explained that the idea for Elephant Mario came from the desire to create a power-up for the famous plumber that would make him big and able to shoot water. Elephant was the natural choice.

    However, when they wanted to let Mario dig underground, they didn’t go with a “mole Mario,” as they wanted him to be able to also take out enemies above him. So naturally they did what anyone else would in that scenario, and slapped a working drill on Mario’s head. I can only assume what Miyamoto thought about that.

    Tezuka also pushed back on the idea that Mario games can’t change or evolve, telling Wired he asks his team to come up with wild ideas and not to worry about rules or limits.

    “I do think people have ideas that Mario [games have] to be a certain way. There are certain limitations that people have in their own brains,” Tezuka said. “If you think it looks cool, it’s going to be fun. Do it.”

    Super Mario Bros. Wonder—and all of its wild power-ups—launches on October 20 on Nintendo Switch.

    .

    Zack Zwiezen

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  • Final Fantasy XVI Star Shares His Mario Voice And It’s Perfect

    Final Fantasy XVI Star Shares His Mario Voice And It’s Perfect

    Image: Square Enix / Nintendo / Kotaku

    Ever since Nintendo announced Charles Martinet will be stepping back from his long-time role as the in-game voice of Mario, fans have been wondering who might be taking over the reigns in the future. Enter Ben Starr, the man behind Final Fantasy XVI’s superb performance for hero Clive Rosfield…and a glutton for internet gags.

    The British television actor recently tweeted an unsolicited audition video for the mustachioed plumber. It’s as bone-chillingly epic as you’d expect. Imagine a battle-hardened Clive walking through modern-day Brooklyn committing verbal hate crimes against Italians and you’ve got the gist.

    Take a look:

    Starr takes on Mario’s most iconic phrase, “It’s a-mia, Mario,” and repeats it like he’s about to break your kneecaps, with plenty of F-bombs sprinkled in for good measure. Chris Pratt could never. Just for this Clive deserves to make it into the next Super Smash Bros. 

    In reality, Nintendo’s already tapped someone else to start doing the voice of Mario. The Switch maker confirmed this new, mysterious performer will be in the credits for Super Mario Bros. Wonder when that new platformer launches in October, but won’t confirm the person’s identity ahead of time. And who knows if they will continue in the role for future sequels and party game spin-offs, or if Wario et al will be voiced by the same person—as Martinet did for decades—or get dedicated voice actors.

    In the meantime, Martinet has been receiving online tributes for his years of “Wahoos” and “Yippies,” though it’s still not entirely clear if he voluntarily retired or ran into contract negotiation or similar troubles with Nintendo. While Martinet wasn’t the main voice of Mario in The Super Mario Bros. Movie either, he did have an excellent cameo. Hopefully he’ll get to come back for the next one.

    Ethan Gach

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  • ‘The Super Mario Brothers Movie’ Tops $1.3 Billion At The Box Office To Become 2nd-Biggest Animated Film Ever

    ‘The Super Mario Brothers Movie’ Tops $1.3 Billion At The Box Office To Become 2nd-Biggest Animated Film Ever

    By Brent Furdyk.

    The box office for “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” just keeps on growing, and the film has just hit another major milestone.

    Following The Hollywood Reporter‘s report that the film hit the $1 billion mark in late April, Variety is now reporting that worldwide ticket sales have now exceeded $1.3 billion.

    This, notes the outlet, officially makes “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” the second-highest grossing animated film in Hollywood history, surpassing “Frozen” (which raked in $1.28 billion at the box office).

    “Frozen 2” remains the biggest animated film, with worldwide revenues of $1.45 billion.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Sets Box-Office Record With $377M Opening Weekend

    The animated film, which debuted on April 5, has been setting box-office records since its debut weekend, and continues to dominate in its fourth weekend of release.

    “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” is one of just 10 animated films to hit $1 billion, and the first film of 2023 to do so.

    Meanwhile, “Super Mario” easily takes the crown as the most successful movie to be based on a video game, more than doubling the box office takes of “Warcraft” and “Pokémon: Detective Pikachu”, which raked in $439 million and $449 million, respectively.

    Brent Furdyk

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  • ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Breaks $1 Billion at the Box Office

    ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Breaks $1 Billion at the Box Office

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie has officially earned more than $1 billion dollars globally. Not only does that make it the highest-grossing video game movie ever released, it’s also the first movie of 2023 to make more than $1 billion. It also holds a distinguished spot among four others that have managed to make that much post-Covid. Those movies were Spider-Man: No Way Home, Top Gun: Maverick, Jurassic World Dominion, and Avatar: The Way of Water.

    Luckily, the modern appearance of the Mario Brothers fared much better than the trainwreck that was 1993’s Super Mario Bros. The 2023 film follows what one would expect out of a Mario movie. It’s the tale of two plumbers who become trapped in the Mushroom Kingdom. For Mario to rescue Luigi and escape that other world, he’ll have to defeat King Bowser.

    THE SUPER MARIO BROS. MOVIE
    Nintendo

    READ MORE: All the Old School Nintendo Easter Eggs in The Super Mario Bros. Movie 

    The 1993 film was a mess all over. The production was notoriously plagued by personnel changes, and tonally, nobody had any clue what they were doing. Nintendo also gave the production complete creative license to do whatever they wanted. One of the producers, Roland Joffe, decided that the Mario concept was so well established that they could experiment with the movie to no end. It ended up being a cyberpunk nightmare with very little in common with the source material at all.

    The 2023 film didn’t get the most stellar critical reception ever, but it did well enough for itself critically. It managed to appeal to people of all ages, and was a genuinely fun family movie. It also stuck very closely to the source material. That, it seems, is exactly what its target audience wanted.

    All the Old School Nintendo Easter Eggs in The Super Mario Bros. Movie

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie is loaded with callbacks to Nintendo history. How many of them did you spot?

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • ‘The Super Mario Brothers Movie’ Projected To Top $1 Billion At The Box Office

    ‘The Super Mario Brothers Movie’ Projected To Top $1 Billion At The Box Office

    By Brent Furdyk.

    The box office for “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” just keeps on growing, and projections indicate topping $1 billion at the box office by the end of the weekend.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, at some point on Sunday, April 30, the film will hit the 10-figure mark in worldwide ticket sales.


    READ MORE:
    ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Sets Box-Office Record With $377M Opening Weekend

    The animated film, which debuted on April 5, has been setting box-office records since its debut weekend, and continues to dominate in its fourth weekend of release.

    When that milestone is reached, “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” will have become one of just 10 animated films to hit $1 billion, and the first film of 2023 to do so.

    Meanwhile, “Super Mario” easily takes the crown as the most successful movie to be based on a video game, more than doubling the box office takes of “Warcraft” and “Pokémon: Detective Pikachu”, which raked in $439 million and $449 million, respectively.

    Brent Furdyk

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  • The Super Mario Bros. Movie: Why Is This Damaging Italian Stereotype Still “Okay” in 2023?

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie: Why Is This Damaging Italian Stereotype Still “Okay” in 2023?

    Despite the phenomenon of so-called woke culture coming for everything under the sun with regard to accusations of being offensive, the one glaring ethnicity that remains a free-for-all in terms of still somehow remaining up for grabs for mockery in the mainstream is Italians. Nothing has made that more apparent in 2023 than not only the release of The Super Mario Bros. Movie, but its raging success at the box office (and at a time when box office success is decidedly few and far between). Because, it’s true, no one seems to view Italians as worthy of adequate representation, least of all in the U.S., where the long-standing tropes pertaining to Italian culture have typically stemmed from bastardized Italian-American culture. Tropes that, of course, persist because they are so easily commodifiable. This is why entities like the Olive Garden and the Mob Museum—both of which are grotesque in their representations of Italians—exist and are able to thrive without anyone apparently getting offended enough to say, “This is a shameful reduction of my culture.”

    Arriving into the American lexicon after the mob stereotype was proliferated by The Godfather trilogy in the 70s and after the advent of the Olive Garden in 1982 (started in, where else, Florida), Super Mario Bros. was released in 1985 as a platform game for the Nintendo Entertainment System. But, of course, from the start, Super Mario Bros. was never concerned about “accuracy” or “cultural sensitivity” or “fair representation.” And all because Mario’s creator, Shigeru Miyamoto, “arbitrarily” saw fit to make him “Italian” because of the pipes that were going to be involved in the landscape, therefore “plumbing” seemed like a natural fit to be incorporated into the video game. Per Miyamoto, “…with Mario Bros. we had a setting of course that was underground, so I just decided Mario is a plumber. Let’s put him in New York and he can be Italian. There was really no other deep thought other than that.” And so, thanks to Miyamoto’s so-called lack of “deep thought,” Italians as a culture have continued to pay the price for decades, with a reductive stereotype that just won’t fucking die. Worse still, the “It’s-a me, Mario!” delivered in that garish, false Italian accent is being disseminated anew to a subsequent generation of children who will now think that this is a perfectly acceptable “rendering” of Italians and those with Italian heritage as they parrot the phrase freely.

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie, written by Matthew Fogel and directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic, wastes no time in getting right to the offensive meat of it all, with Mario (Chris Pratt) and Luigi (Charlie Day) appearing in a commercial for their new plumbing business and laying on thick the caricaturized version of an Italian accent. We’re talking as thick as nasty, American-sanctioned “ragù” (think: the Prego brand). The van shown in the commercial reads “Super Mario Bros. Plomería.” Emphasis on plomería, which is a fucking Spanish word. If they wanted to be “Italian” about it, they could have at least used the correct word, piombatura (and don’t try to say Spanish was used for the sake of the Dominicans or the Puerto Ricans living in Brooklyn). Alas, mélanging Spanish words with Italian ones is among the most minimal offenses delivered like so many blows to the head throughout the movie.

    After seeing the commercial on TV together at the Punch-Out Pizzeria, Mario asks his brother in a “normal” voice, “What are the accents? Is it too much?” the original Jumpman version of Mario appears next to them while playing a Donkey Kong-esque arcade game to insist, “Too much? It’s a-perfect!” The voice of this man, Giuseppe, is portrayed by none other than Charles Martinet, the long-time voice of Mario. And, in case one needed the obvious confirmation, Martinet is far from Italian, born in California with French descent. Of course, it’s no secret that the French are among the many who relish mocking Italians with a parodied accent and overzealous love of pizza (see: the highly offensive coronavirus-era sketch on Groland), so maybe that’s part of Martinet’s inherent animosity toward the character. For why else would he not only suggest doing the voice in that pitch (apart from claiming children would be too scared of a “deep-voiced” “Italian”) and false cliché, but also chime in that Mario should dream of pasta whenever a player leaves him alone (Sims-style). In Super Mario 64, this would translate into Mario murmuring between snores, “Ahhh spaghetti, ahhh ravioli, ahhh mamma mia.” Because, again, all Italians appear to be to Americans are jolly, lobotomized pizza and pasta fiends. So what else would he possibly have to say in one of his first opportunities for video game dialogue?

    Another person who weighs in on the brothers’ caricaturized commercial is their former boss, Spike (Sebastian Maniscalco), who happens to be sitting in the pizzeria as well, and takes the chance to mimic them by saying, “Yeah, it’s a-me!” when they confront him. Wearing a trucker hat that says “Wrecking Crew” (a nod to the 1985 video game of the same name, in which Foreman Spike is Mario and Luigi’s opponent) on it, Spike proceeds to make fun of them with as much delight as any person getting off on perpetuating an Italian stereotype. Spike ends their interaction with the assurance, “You’re a joke, and you always will be.” Well, he has that right…when taking into account that Mario continuing to be a “viable” representation of an Italian-American will ostensibly persevere. Because this franchise money is just too good to be bothered with or by any “moral objections” to such increasingly antiquated, out-of-touch, belittling portrayals. We’re talking Blackface-level shit. A “controversial” comparison for many, to be sure, however, one fails to see the difference between slapping Italians with a dumb plumber stereotype, “bequeathing” them with stocky, hirsute bodies and huge noses and hideous accents versus, say, making a Black person into “the help” speaking with a “yes massa” voice in either sambo or mammy stereotype form. The fact that companies like Aunt Jemima, Uncle Ben’s and Mrs. Butterworth’s all replaced their racist “mascots” in the wake of the BLM movement that flared up after George Floyd was murdered is yet another testament to how caricatures of races that were invented in the past are no longer allowed to endure in the present. Except, of course, in the case of Mario and Luigi.

    In terms of “Oppression Olympics” (to borrow a term from Ginny and Georgia), no one would argue that Black and Asian people haven’t had it the worst of any race. And yet, Italians, white or not (but still not the “right” kind of white), are not without their own history of oppression and being viewed as “lesser than” by the “pure” white race. From the 1891 New Orleans lynchings to the Sacco and Vanzetti case to “all” Italian-Americans being branded as “labor agitators” amid certain anarchist and socialist movements in the U.S., there is a long history of anti-Italian sentiment. One that seems, ultimately, to extend to reducing a culture so rich to something as derogatory as Mario and Luigi. And though Italians, better than most, can take a “joke,” there’s a difference between “poking fun” “in good taste” and being an outright asshole about perpetuating damaging stereotypes (as one Italian put it on The Gamer, “This vague pseudo-Italian identity is something I’m not happy about, because if it’s just a joke then it’s time to rein it in”). While Italians themselves tend to take teasing in stride (perhaps so that they, in turn, can keep dishing it out), there should be a limit, at this point, to how much “It’s-a me” bullshit someone can take. Even if that person is “merely” a descendant of the Italy-born.

    Perhaps as a way to protect from the accusation of “racism,” both The Super Mario Bros. Movie and 1993’s live-action Super Mario Bros. play up the element of Mario and Luigi being “Brooklyn Italians”—an entirely different animal from Italian Italians. In the latest version, Beastie Boys’ “No Sleep Till Brooklyn” is cued as the duo rushes to make it to their first official plumbing job. The constant mention and backdrop of Brooklyn is, however, one-upped by Super Mario Bros, wherein mobster types like Anthony Scapelli (Gianni Russo, a quintessential New York Italian exploiting his heritage for pay) are part of the “natural milieu” of being a Brooklyn Italian for Mario and Luigi (inexplicably played by Bob Hoskins and John Leguizamo). This includes eating spaghetti with meatballs (with the sauce not even mixed in atop the white pasta) as accordion music plays in the background. A scene that goes on during Luigi’s date with Daisy (Samantha Mathis), a double with Mario and his own girl, Daniella (Dana Kaminski). But at least Super Mario Bros. doesn’t try to show any scenes of Mario and Luigi with an affronting Italian stereotype of a family as well. Unlike The Super Mario Bros. Movie, which grafts the core plotline (re: an interdimensional glitch) of the 1993 version, written by Parker Bennett, Terry Runté and Ed Solomonm, and co-directed by husband-and-wife team Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel. Just as it is in Super Mario Bros., The Super Mario Bros. Movie also finds Mario and Luigi transported to an alternate realm (the Mushroom Kingdom for Mario and the Dark Lands for Luigi) via a sewer system beneath Brooklyn. In the original, this happens just before Daisy (the Princess Peach stand-in) is warned by Scapelli, “I know a lotta girls who been goin’ missin’ in Brooklyn lately.” In other words, a mafioso threat that indicates she can be “erased,” just as anyone else has who’s dared to get in the way of his construction plans. Because, yes, of course Scapelli is “in construction.” A long-standing “career front” for mafiosi of the Eastern Seaboard.

    When Luigi and Mario follow her into the alternate realm that’s been brewing ever since a meteorite hit Brooklyn sixty-five million years ago and wiped out the dinosaurs, Luigi is sure to tell Mario, in Dorothy fashion, “I gotta feelin’ we’re not in Brooklyn no more.” And, whilst watching The Super Mario Bros. Movie, one might say, “We’re not in 2023 no more.” Surely we can’t be, if woke culture had gone the whole nine yards and spared Italians of any further denigration from a video game that wields characters called goombas (among the weakest enemies in any Mario fight). A direct reference to the pejorative word “goombah” that Americans would use to refer to Italian immigrants and their supposed inherent association with organized crime. And yet, one should note that, per American Minority Relations, “the rate of criminal convictions among Italian immigrants was less than that among American-born whites” in the mid-twentieth century—this being the height of mafia fear. Nonetheless, the stereotype prevailed, and became profitable to many people. Particularly increasingly diluted generations of bona fide Italians who had transformed into something entirely different: a New York Italian (or, worse still, a New Jersey one). And the name of that game was: capitalize, capitalize, capitalize. No matter how self-exploiting it was. This being why Little Italy is some Disneyfied presentation of “Italian culture” complete with red-and-white checked tablecloths, Chianti bottle décor and nothing but plates of pasta doused in the grossest, saltiest sauces imaginable. Surely, no self-respecting person can truly believe this is “authentic,” and yet, they go for “the ambience” regardless.

    In contrast to this breed of Italian (i.e., the Italian-American that has further perpetuated the false, negative stereotypes of actual Italians), those who hail from the boot take pride in their culture, one that is rich with so many other things beyond what Americans in particular cling to as the “complete” (read: two-dimensional) formation of their national identity. Included in that is Super Mario Bros., which the Japanese can be thanked for (and defenders of Mario’s existence constantly like to throw out that he’s “technically Japanese,” so it’s fine). But if it weren’t for the Americans glomming onto this brother duo so enthusiastically, Super Mario Bros. might never have been successful enough to become such a pervasive reminder that this is the Italian version of a sambo. To emphasize that analogy, imagine if you will a “superhero” Black person portrayed as a housekeeper who eats nothing but watermelon and fried chicken and speaks with a drawl. How is this divergent from depicting an Italian as a “superhero” plumber who relishes eating only pizza and pasta and wielding an accent with an “a” said between every word? It’s fucking foul and should no longer be tolerated. In fact, not since House of Gucci has there been such a pop cultural affront to Italians. To this end, it has to be said that the group doing the most damage to “the brand” is, ironically, Italian-Americans (which Lady Gaga is certain to remind she is whenever possible). But it’s the American part that gets the better of them every time, wanting to be “enterprising” about the culture rather than portray it with something like grace and realism.

    Time and time again, it might be asked, who is the stereotype “really” hurting if Italians “of all stripes” can keep cashing in on it by pandering to the caricature people apparently want to see? Some could say there’s no harm in Super Mario Bros. if the Italians themselves don’t complain and that “fellow Europeans” make fun of each other all the time. But it’s simply not true. For one thing, Italians are parodied more than most “sects” of Europeans and, for another, Italians likely don’t complain because Super Mario, to them, is viewed as a strictly American piece of ephemera (despite being Japanese-created). What’s more, such content as this is usually viewed in a dubbed format, which means Italians often don’t get to hear the full effect of how bad they’re being made to sound. A “sound,” as it were, that keeps contributing to how Mario and Luigi remain a “benchmark” to Americans for how all Italians ought to be “categorized.” No matter how “woke” Americans think they’ve gotten.  

    Genna Rivieccio

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  • ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ trailer: Get your 1st look at Princess Peach – National | Globalnews.ca

    ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’ trailer: Get your 1st look at Princess Peach – National | Globalnews.ca

    Another Super Mario Bros. Movie trailer, another chance to be weirded out by Chris Pratt’s Italian accent.

    It’s only been a few weeks since we were privy to the first official trailer for the long-awaited The Super Mario Bros. animated movie, but we now have a second trailer that takes a deeper dive into the battle for supremacy in the Mario universe.

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    The trailer begins with Mario — voiced by Pratt — muttering a breathy “lets-a-go” while entering a massive coliseum of chanting fans. Last month, movie fans pointed out that Pratt’s Mario was missing the character’s classic, exaggerated Italian flair.

    We then see the titular character face-off against Donkey Kong, voiced by Seth Rogen, who gives him an utter and complete smackdown.

    Read more:

    ‘That ’90s Show’ trailer: Watch Red and Kitty Forman reopen their basement

    Perhaps most exciting, however, is our first look at Princess Peach. She’s tall and brave and ready to fight. Voiced by Ana Taylor-Joy, Princess Peach will lead an army of reluctant Toads into war against Jack Black’s Bowser.

    Fans of the franchise video games will be stoked to see some of the props and characters that have been with us since the first iterations of the Super Mario and Donkey Kong series. Koopa Troopas, Cheep Cheeps and an island full of Yoshis can be spotted as the trailer goes on.

    There are also brief clips of Mario in a Tanooki power-up suit, a cameo from Cranky Kong and a race along Mario Kart’s Rainbow Road.

    Nintendo Direct also released a second form of the trailer that features a pre-recorded clip of the film’s actors talking about the movie. During the presentation, Donkey Kong creator Shigeru Miyamoto teases fans, saying “It’s almost finished … and I’m not supposed to say anything else about it.”

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    With any luck, we’ll get to see much more of the vast Mario universe and the characters we’ve grown to love over the years.

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie will hit theatres April 7, 2023.

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Michelle Butterfield

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  • Twitter Weighs In On Chris Pratt In New Trailer For ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’

    Twitter Weighs In On Chris Pratt In New Trailer For ‘The Super Mario Bros. Movie’

    By Brent Furdyk.

    Get ready to dive into the video-game world of Nintendo’s most famous plumbers with a new trailer for “The Super Mario Bros. Movie”.

    Chris Pratt voices the titular Mario, a casting decision that has caused controversy due to the fact that he’s decidedly not Italian.

    As the trailer demonstrates, however, Pratt isn’t brandishing the kind of over-the-top Italian accent that had been feared, instead using his own voice.


    READ MORE:
    The ‘Super Mario Bros. Movie’ Trailer Sees Chris Pratt Debut His Mario Voice

    In addition to the “Guardians of the Galaxy” star, the voice cast also includes Charlie Day as Mario’s brother, Luigi, Anya Taylor-Joy as Princess Peach, Jack Black as Bowser, Seth Rogen as Donkey Kong, and Keegan-Michael Key as Toad.

    Storywise, Mario and Luigi journey to another dimension to rescue Princess Peach from evil King Koopa and foil his plans of taking over the world.

    Judging by some of the Twitter reaction, not every “Super Mario Bros.” fan who saw the new trailer was completely onboard with Pratt as Mario.

    “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” hits theatres on April 7, 2023.

    Brent Furdyk

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  • Reactions To Chris Pratt’s ‘Mario’ Voice Have Been A Little Harsh

    Reactions To Chris Pratt’s ‘Mario’ Voice Have Been A Little Harsh

    Let’s go! The Super Mario Bros. Movie trailer is finally here, and people have some opinions. First of all, the animation looks perfect and the casting of Charlie Day as Luigi couldn’t be more fitting.

    That being said, people are kind of upset at Chris Pratt‘s voice, as expected. Rather than donning the trademark high-pitched Mario voice, Pratt opts for using his regular voice. To be fair, it seems like he’s making a really lazy attempt at a New York accent.

    When the movie was first announced, people were upset that Mario’s voice actor was Chris Pratt. Especially when Charles Marinet, Mario’s voice actor since 1990, was completely available. A lot of people have pointed this problem out, though. Rather than just using readily available voice actors for existing characters, Hollywood almost always opts for bringing major stars in instead. If you look at the cast of the film, you’ll quickly notice how star-studded it is.

    Let’s pop over to Twitter to get a read on how people are feeling.

    People are also picking on Chris Pratt for struggling to remember the name of Mario’s main enemies:

    The Super Mario Bros. Movie is scheduled for release on April 7, 2023. While as of now that’s the only major Mario movie we know of, there are potential spin-offs and sequels on the horizon. There have been rumors of a Donkey Kong spin-off, as well as a Luigi’s Mansion adaptation after Charlie Day expressed interest.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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