Movie Review: Nintendo's Favorite Plumbers Return In Frenetic 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie'

Movie Review: Nintendo's Favorite Plumbers Return In Frenetic 'The Super Mario Bros. Movie'

Thirty years ago, the first video game adaptation hit theaters. Super Mario Bros. In 2009, Max Headroom directors Rocky Morton and Annabelle Jankel will direct, while Bob Hoskins and John Leguizamo don red and green suits as Brooklyn plumbers Mario and Luigi.

The product faced a power struggle when Disney distributors tried at 11 o'clock to create a more kid-friendly atmosphere than Morton and Yankel had done in a teenage Blade Runner setting. The film, which was seen as a real disaster at the time, has now become a classic. But Mario video games are more popular than ever, and Nintendo must think they have unfinished business. So a remake of the animated Minions family by Illumination Entertainment.

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Super Mario Bros. Movies He sparked controversy over trailer ads, Chris Pratt screamed in circles, Muttachiod was a plumber and the internet was already cracked by his performance of Mario's rendition of "I Am Mario". Fortunately, the film soon devolves into a VHS-style television commercial for Mario and Luigi's plumbing business, which features an exaggerated Italian accent. It's the movement that allows the voices of Luigi, Pratt and Charlie Day, to snap into action. But their vocal performance is so impressive that it could be anyone.

The only voice worth the entry fee is Jack Black as Bowser, the koopa king, a shy turtle who loves heavy metal and has a crush on Princess Peach (Anya Taylor-Joy). With a black mic, expect Bowser to play a lot of rock. A good third of the movie is basically a Tenacious D concept album.

Written by Matthew Vogel and directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelink, The Super Mario Bros. This film is fun, fast, hard, and non-stop, which is par for the course, this is the studio that gave us Minions. Over 92 minutes, a series of playable episodes spanning the story of the hero's journey. After Mario and Luigi drink in a mysterious tube and are transported to a parallel universe in the Mushroom Kingdom, Mario sets out to find and save his brother from Bowser with the help of Toad (Kegan-Michael Key) and Princess Peach.

The film transitions from one scene to another and the animations are amazing. Some of the buildings and elements of this world are almost real.

Style also frees Mario's movements from the flat and horizontal poses we are used to, featuring action-packed and dynamic jumps and jumps over obstacles as the princess trains. He learns how to use his powers, meets Donkey Kong (Seth Rogen), forms an unlikely alliance, and the team embarks on a journey down Mario Kart's Rainbow Path.

Luckily, this naughty, naughty movie doesn't last long, but it doesn't have enough content to last a second. It was bright, intense, harmless, and the polar opposite of the 1993 film's grotesque, dark, and sensual. Maybe it's better to trade Mario, but it's not much fun either. "Wow! Wrong."

Super Mario Bros Movie Review (Pure) |: Nintendo:

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