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Customer Review

140 of 151 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars A completely misunderstood movie. Here's why it is good., June 11, 2004
This review is from: Super Mario Bros. (DVD)
Most people tend to hate this film. I think, though, that they hate it because they're looking at it the wrong way. It's one of those movies that has a point, and if you miss that, you don't get any of it.
Their mistake is to watch this expecting a Mario movie. I know, it sounds like the right thing to expect, but hear me out. Fans of the game know what Mario is all about - powerups, angry mushrooms, winged turtles and flying blocks. If you watch this movie expecting that, you'll be disappointed, as you'll find NONE of it. But that's not to say it isn't worth watching.
Picture the scene: a couple of directors are asked to make a Mario movie by Nintendo, and they want it to be live action. That was the flavour at the time - take cartoon characters and make them real. Now, these directors know about Mario. They say "No way can that be done. Mario is all about being a cartoon. Jumping on little angry animals, everyone's a mushroom... It's a great game, and it'd make a good cartoon, but a live action version would just be moronic." "Oh, don't worry about that," says Nintendo, "just so long as you get the main elements in, do it how you want."
The directors go away, rubbing their chins, trying to think of a way to do that but still do justice to the games. And then they have a fascinating idea.
What if they don't do a Mario film, exactly. What if they do a sci-fi film, but fill it to the brim with Mario references, for the keen-eyed game fans?
That's what this movie is. If you watch it with that in mind, you will enjoy it. I've tested this theory out already on a friend who thought the film was a bit stupid when he saw it as a kid, but watched it yesterday with my little thesis in mind and he loved it.
What you get here is a quite serious (despite the light-hearted script) sci-fi flick about the nightmarish world ours may soon become: crowded, filthy, choked with pollution and overrun with a hate-filled populace who will fight you, yell at you, even try to shoot you if you pass too close. Run by a demonic well-dressed dictator politician (played to amazing effect by Dennis Hopper) who has let this world become the dark horror it is through neglect: there is no water any more, only sludge, and a slimy infestation of fungus has grown over everything, draped in great loops like one gigantic, chaotic spider web. Into this world come Mario and Luigi, similar to their game counterparts but more human, a pair of plumber brothers from Brooklyn who grew up together as orphans. They are trying to save a girl, who has been kidnapped and dragged here, and along the way they get wrapped up in something really horrifying: the president and his people are human, but human descended from dinosaurs instead of apes. He's found a way to revert his citizens back to their prehistoric roots, and with his army of lizard lackeys he's going to bridge the split between worlds (that formed when the meteorite that "killed" the dinosaurs hit) and take over our own.
And through all this we find references of the sort that Mario's biggest fans will drool over, so long as they are watching this in the way I suggest. These prove that the film has been put together not by someone ignorant of the games, but by someone very well versed in their lore. A large woman called Big Bertha, dressed all in red, is named in reference to a large red fish enemy from Mario 3. She wears mechanical boots named "Thwomp-Stompers", after the classic ice block enemies, and they are powered by capsules that look exactly like Bullet Bills, from Super Mario Bros 1. Shops are apparently owned by people with the same names as characters from the games (Hammer Bros and Bullet Bill), a protest singer is named after Toad, the happy little mushroom from the games, but his hair is shaved into the pattern on the shell of Lakitu, a fan favourite since day one. These references go on throughout the film and shape its world - the fungus, which turns out to be a conscious entity, helps the brothers in every way it can; they are saved on more than one occasion by mushrooms, in what has become a literal mushroom kingdom.
It's all in here if you keep your eyes peeled. Go in ready to watch not a Mario film, but a film that references Mario, and you will love it. It doesn't "change" anything from the games, because it is not any kind of filmed version of them, but it nods to them constantly.
Viewed in this light, it is a treat to watch, and a rare treat, because no other film has ever crammed in so many references to videogaming before. Simply put, a live action Mario film could never be made, and the directors asked to make one did a brilliant job at trying something new and original. Well worth the ten dollars for the DVD.
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Showing 1-9 of 9 posts in this discussion
Initial post: Feb 13, 2010 1:12:53 PM PST
Dana Johnson says:
This review has it just right. I am now 60 and grew up well before the world of video games, but not before great Sci Fi flicks. (saw the first star wars 7 times in a row the first day it showed up in theaters ). I knew about the Mario Brothers video game, but never played it. The movie didn't need the game, though the game was obviously a common touchstone throughout which kept it focused. The characters were great, all a bit crazy and just plain fun as was the premise of the movie. I've noticed that a lot of people seem to have forgotten how to just let go of their pre conceived notions and be taken on a fun ride. I'm glad I thought to look for it in DVD.

In reply to an earlier post on May 8, 2010 7:59:00 PM PDT
TheNilvarg says:
Uhh, I like the movie without all of that bleeding-heart hippie crap. So you don't have to hate it because it's not a Mario movie, and you don't have to like it because it has some idiotic social commentary. You can simply like it because it's fun and entertaining - because that's what movies are supposed to be.

Posted on Jun 6, 2010 6:45:31 PM PDT
I really appreciate this review. As a kid I loved this movie, and for the reason you say that people should like this movie: the references. Toad, the Bullet Bill cartridges, use of the Babomb, all of those things. It made it a fun dystopian sci-fi movie. Now do to my more adult fascination with evolution, I think that the idea of dinosaurs evolving into humans (or a human like species) is really cool. This movie has really been misjudged by history. RIP Dennis Hopper.

Posted on Jun 27, 2010 8:40:15 PM PDT
An interesting angle or approach that I had never thought of. I saw this in theaters when I was 13 and left very confused if not disappointed. However, from your perspective one could enjoy the movie. May have to give this a second look.

I remember Hammer Brothers tattoo parlor. That was brilliant.

Posted on Dec 1, 2010 6:00:57 AM PST
[Deleted by Amazon on Jul 2, 2012 11:40:23 AM PDT]

Posted on Jan 10, 2011 10:59:55 AM PST
I have to say that I enjoyed reading this piece. You really seem to understand the difficulties this film had in simply being adapted from a half-baked video game. You just get what they were going for, which is something very few people do.

You're very right about the film being an "alternate take" on the video games. The directors and writers set out to tell the story of how the Mario brothers became the "Super" Mario Brothers. The film was fully intended to be a prequel to the games. The writers themselves envisaged the film as what "really happened," while the games are the dreamland, Wizard of Oz version of events. The games the idealized version of the parallel world that Koopa pushes in his propaganda.

I actually help run a website for the movie. We've done a lot in the last six months or so, including compiling early scripts and interviewing the cast and crew. You should really check it out sometime. We'd love to have you around and give your perspective on all of this. After all, if you can analyze the film so well from what little you do know I can only imagine what you'd think after discovering all the information we have.

http://smbmovie.com/

Looking forward,

Steven Applebaum (Redstar)

Posted on Jul 2, 2012 10:08:57 AM PDT
This review is just awesome. That "thesis" you proposed work in a lot of other movies as well, e.g. Dragon Ball Evolution. Seeing it as a dragon ball movie makes it suck donkey duty, but seeing it as simply an adventure/mystical kung fu movie, it's actually not half bad (Although, I still personally dislike it). Having learned to use that thesis has changed the way I look at a ton of movies, and in a good way, so just thanks man :)

Posted on Sep 22, 2013 7:14:19 PM PDT
I saw this movie 20 years ago, and parts of it have remained vivid in my memory. Last night when I watched Bob Hoskins in another movie, I struggled to recall where I had first seen him .. and finally remembered "Super Mario Brothers." Gotta see it again!

Posted on May 30, 2014 7:14:45 PM PDT
Daymareog says:
This review really sums up the best way to watch the movie.My brother was born after this movie came out and it was his first viewing of the movie last night and he actually enjoyed it.Bare in mind we both were annoyed at how during the first hour Mario wore a green jacket and Luigi a red sweater,but once they went into the parallel realm it started making more "sense" and I got to say I loved this movie as a kid and I still love this movie as an adult.
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