Super Mario Bros. (film)

This article is about the 1993 live-action film. For the 2023 animated film, see The Super Mario Bros. Movie.
Super Mario Bros.
MoviePoster.jpg
General information
Director(s) Rocky Morton
Annabel Jankel
Writer(s) Parker Bennett
Terry Runté
Ed Solomon
Starring Bob Hoskins
John Leguizamo
Dennis Hopper
Samantha Mathis
Fisher Stevens
Fiona Shaw
Richard Edson
Country of origin United States of America
Original language English
Rating PG
Production
Editor(s) Mark Goldblatt
Production company Hollywood Pictures
Lightmotive
Allied Filmmakers
Cinergi Pictures
Cinematography Dean Semler
Runtime 104 minutes
Budget $42–48 million
Distribution
Distributor(s) Buena Vista Pictures (United States)
Entertainment Film Distributors (United Kingdom)
Release date USA May 28, 1993[1]
Australia June 10, 1993[1]
Japan July 3, 1993[1]
Box office $38.9 million
“This Ain't No Game.”
Film tagline

Super Mario Bros. is a sci-fi adventure film loosely based on the Super Mario series of video games, produced by Lightmotive and released in theaters on May 28, 1993 by the now-defunct Hollywood Pictures division of Walt Disney Studios.[2] While the film draws inspiration from the games, it spins these elements into a more realistic and darker fashion. The movie was originally written as a fantasy-style film, but was gradually changed over numerous rewrites to the point where it became a sci-fi/action film. It was written by Parker Bennett, Terry Runte, and Ed Solomon, and directed by Annabel Jankel and Rocky Morton.[3] Produced on an estimated budget of $48 million[2] for its high-profile cast and special effects, Super Mario Bros. was the first live-action film based on a video game property.[4]

In stark contrast to the video games, the Super Mario Bros. film embodies a dystopian science-fiction and cyberpunk feeling and setting. This is in part due to the film's art designer, David Snyder, having previously been designer for the science-fiction cyberpunk film Blade Runner and both directors of the film having previously created the satirical dystopian science fiction series Max Headroom. With Super Mario World having been released in North America less than two years prior to the film, the film carries a strong dinosaur theme and plot inspired by Dinosaur Land.[5] The film was a financial failure, grossing $38.9 million worldwide against a budget of $42–48 million, and was widely lambasted by critics, who criticized the plot, inconsistent tone, and lack of faithfulness to the source material, but praised the special effects, artistic direction, and cast performances. Many actors involved with the production of the movie reported highly negative experiences with the filming; notably, Mario's actor, Bob Hoskins, regarded it as his worst and most regrettable work. Despite appearing on several lists of the worst films ever made, the film has gained a cult following and has been described as a cult classic.

In a 1989 issue of Los Angeles Times, it was reported that "DIC Enterprises will produce a full-length animated feature film based on the characters from Nintendo's 'Super Mario Bros.' game" to be released in 1990.[6] Similarly, in a 1990 issue of TV Guide magazine listing some upcoming animated movies, this movie was among those listed (suggesting it was originally meant to be animated) and scheduled for release in summer of 1991.[7] Super Mario Bros. was released on VHS later in 1993, and was later re-released on DVD in 2003. On August 15, 2010, the DVD version was re-released in memory of Dennis Hopper, who had died two months earlier.[8] United Kingdom film distributor Second Sight Films later re-released the movie on both DVD and Blu-ray formats, originally stated to be released on August 11, 2014[9] before being delayed to November 3 due to needing to work on new extras.[10] A SteelBook special edition of the Blu-ray release with even more special features was released on February 13, 2017, exclusively through UK retailer Zavvi.[11] Over twenty minutes of deleted scenes were discovered in 2019.[12]

For the film's 30th anniversary, a 4K restoration was screened in selected locations in Japan from September 15 to October 5, 2023.[13][14] Additionally, a 30th anniversary release of the movie by Australian film distributer Umbrella Entertainment was made available starting January 2024 on Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD formats, with both normal and "Trust the Fungus" Collector's Editions featuring new extra content.[15]

CastEdit

Main article: List of Super Mario Bros. (film) staff

Plot synopsisEdit

IntroductionEdit

 
The animated intro.

An animated prologue to the film is given, taking place in Brooklyn, sixty-five million years before the present. The dinosaurs rule over the Earth while tiny mammals scurry about unnoticed. However, when a meteorite crashes into the Earth, the impact carries a force powerful enough to kill off all the dinosaurs; however it also created a parallel dimension. In this dimension, the evolution of dinosaurs continues parallel to our world's mammals, resulting in human beings with reptilian traits and temperaments. The narration asks, "What if they found a way back?"

The film cuts to live-action, twenty years before present day with a young woman hurriedly running down a Brooklyn street to a cathedral, carrying a bundle covered in a blanket. There, she places her bundle down, revealing a metallic oval case. She pounds on the door, but after a while, she locks a blue crystalline-shard into the case's opening and flees through the streets of Brooklyn once more.

A nun eventually discovers the metallic case at their doorstep and takes it inside. Meanwhile, the young lady continues to dash down the Brooklyn streets, narrowly dodging honking cars before climbing down an open manhole. Back at the church, the nuns observe the case as it opens, revealing a large egg.

 
The sewer scene featured in the introduction.

The woman continues to run down a long sewer tunnel, eventually reaching the end, frequently looking back in fear. As she backs into another tunnel, a tall, sinister man emerges from the dark and demands the location of "the rock". She jumps away from him in surprise, exclaiming, "Koopa!" He grabs her, accidentally knocking a support beam which causes the tunnel to collapse around them. Koopa blocks the exit, leaving her to be crushed as she screams.

Back at the cathedral, the nuns watch as the egg cracks and a baby is heard crying. The egg then fully hatches, revealing a baby human girl. The nuns then look at the rock shard that came with the metallic case they found.

Present dayEdit

 
Mario and Luigi, at their home.

In the present day, Mario Mario and Luigi Mario are at their home and business, Mario Brothers Plumbing Services. Luigi lies on the couch, watching a television program in which the host introduces the concept of other dimensions as Mario receives a call in the other room for a job. As the brothers hastily prepare to leave, Mario complains that Luigi has spent money on the New York Post despite their lack of money. Luigi protests that it has the article on the missing Brooklyn girls, which does not satisfy Mario.

The two set off in their van, still arguing over their lack of money. Luigi takes a "shortcut" through an alleyway instead of Mario's directions, much to the latter's chargin. The Mario brothers arrive at the Riverfront Café only to see that Scapelli Construction, their corporate rivals, have beaten them to it.

 
Iggy and Spike.

Meanwhile, a newscaster discusses the closing of one of New York's largest construction projects to allow New York University students to continue excavation in the advent of the discovery of dinosaur bones in the area. Head construction contractor Anthony Scapelli arrives to persuade excavation to cease so contruction can continue. Noticing his arrival, a blonde, female student named Daisy approaches him and holds her ground, refusing to quit until work is finished. Scapelli threatens Daisy, forcing her to find a phone to call the university for increased security.

Elsewhere, Spike gets into a car, where Iggy is sitting in the passenger seat. As they notice Daisy walking into town, they begin discussing their previous failures, and that if they make another, Koopa is going to "kill them". They begin their persuit of the oblivious Daisy. At that moment, Mario and Luigi are driving down the street when their van stalls. They pull over and open the hood, which causes steam to flow in their faces. Mario tells Luigi to check their messages for work while he attempts to fix the radiator. Daisy continues to walk down the street, unaware of the following Spike. Before Spike can get closer, he slams against a glass pane carried between him and Daisy. Defeated, he returns to their car.

 
Luigi first meeting his love interest, Daisy.

Mario enters a nearby store for bottles of water to cool the radiator down, just as Daisy approaches the pay phone. She paces about, waiting for Luigi to finish checking their messages. Enamored, he wordlessly hands her the phone. Mario emerges and questions Luigi for jobs. Luigi comes up empty-handed, and his brother walks toward the van. Luigi eventually follows and asks Mario if he thought Daisy was attractive. Mario pressures his younger brother to talk to her, and upon finishing her call, she approaches Luigi to thank him. He awkwardly offers her a ride, leaving Mario to "translate" his message for him. She looks about and sees Iggy and Spike in their car, and, thinking them thugs of Scappelli's, accepts their offer and goes back to the dig site. Once there, Luigi asks her out for dinner later that evening, which she agrees to.

That night, Luigi with Daisy, and Mario with his girlfriend, Daniella, have a double-date at an Italian restaurant together. Here, the two girls discuss the dig and how it began: Scapelli's dig-team found iridium, suggesting that a meteorite had struck there at one time. Findings suggest that the meteorite could have been the same one that caused extinction of the dinosaurs. The conversation then shifts to the rock shard Daisy wears around her neck. She reveals that she never takes it off because it is the one connection with the life she never had when she was abandoned. On hearing this, Luigi excitedly tells that he also doesn't know his parents due to their death in his childhood. Because of this, his brother Mario brought him up as a parent as well as a brother. Daisy and Luigi look into each other's eyes before in shy connection before awkwardly looking away. At this point, Daniella suggests that she and Mario take the van back themselves to allow Luigi to walk Daisy home.

 
The restaurant the four of them visit.

As Mario and Daniella leave the restaurant and enter their van, Iggy wakes Spike, who was sleeping in their car. Iggy, upon seeing Daniella, believes her to be Daisy in disguise in an attempt to trick them, and gets out of the car to try and capture her, but Spike pulls him back in. Spike notices that she is not Daisy, but Iggy tells him that she is, but she is wearing a disguise. They then decide to follow Daniella to where she lives and kidnap her there.

Down the street, Luigi and Daisy start talking, eventually leading to a discussion about what Daisy is working on. They then decide to go to the excavation site so Daisy can show Luigi more about her work. Meanwhile, Mario is saying goodbye to Daniella near her apartment. Iggy and Spike then arrive at their location on foot, waiting for Mario to drive off before grabbing her. Her screams for help go unnoticed.

At the excavation site, Daisy and Luigi finally arrive, and she tells him about how Scapelli himself showed up earlier, and that she was calling her university for extra money that they would not give. Daisy then leads Luigi into an underground sewer-like area, and shows him various dinosaur fossils lined on the floor, one of which has opposable thumbs and looks to her as if "...it was a monster, trying to be a human being," unaware that it was her mother. The two move in to kiss, but are interrupted by the sound of water spraying and the sight of two of Scapelli plumbers fleeing, after having broken a set of pipes in an effort to flood the site. Luigi and Daisy run back to Mario's apartment to get help in repairing the damage. Mario and Luigi then set to work.

Iggy and Spike then show up, arguing over how they have failed in capturing Daisy five times. Hearing a noise nearby, Iggy senses the presence of Daisy. They then find the Mario brothers, having fixed the pipes and stopping the flooding, and knock both of them out and capture Daisy.

 
Mario and Luigi searching for Daisy.

The brothers soon regain consciousness and frantically follow the sound of Daisy's voice, utilizing Mario's knowledge of pipe echoes to guide them through the cave. They finally come to a ledge over a steep drop, a river having formed from the flooding, across from which Daisy's voice seems to come though the solid rock wall. As they stand there, Daisy's face appears through the rock and Luigi tries to jump for her but is held back by Mario. Daisy leans herself though the rock again and Luigi attempts to grab her, but only succeeds in taking her necklace. With her necklace in his hand, Luigi looks back at the rock; Mario commenting that it was impossible. With a feeling, Luigi kisses Mario's forehead in goodbye and leaps straight through the solid rock. Mario then slips and falls through himself, transporting through a psychedelic landscape before disintegrating and reassembling on the other side in a large chamber.

"...We're not in Brooklyn no more"Edit

 
The city of Dinohattan.

Circling around a giant meteorite embedded into the floor, Luigi and Mario chase after Daisy and her kidnappers, who claim to be taking her back to where she belongs. The brothers burst out of the tunnel, through a metallic door, and emerge into a crowded, noisy, fungus-covered street in the city of Dinohattan. Pushing through the crowds, they stop dead in their tracks and look around, taking in their surroundings. Suddenly, they see Iggy, Spike, and Daisy on the street below. The kidnappers pull a screaming Daisy into a cab. A cop then arrives and pulls the brothers away for creating an "incident." They fall through a railing and onto the streets below. They then decide to take in their surroundings before taking the next step. As they are walking away from an area in the city, a hidden Goomba peers from the shadows.

In Koopa's Tower, Koopa and his lover, Lena, discuss how pathetic and disgusting their world is. Koopa notes the situation is worsening by the day, while in the parallel world the mammal-evolved humans have plenty of resources, such as food and clean air and water. He continues to bemoan the germs and fungus that fill their world, which he claims were "exiled" too by the meteorite strike sixty-five million years ago. However, he also claims that the mammals may roam free in the other dimension now, but not for much longer. With ecstatic pleasure, Koopa claims that with the rock and Princess Daisy, he is finally able to merge their world with that of the mammals, as well as destroy them. As he sits at his desk, Iggy and Spike enter, greeting him as their cousin and reporting that the princess has been captured. Excited, Koopa asks where the rock is. The two admit that "the plumbers took it", referring to Mario and Luigi. Instantly, Koopa demands Lena to put up an alert for their capture.

 
Toad, a musician on the streets of Dinohattan.

Outside, Mario and Luigi are trying to figure out where they are, and are eventually confronted by an old lady who asks if they are "new in town", citing that the city is dangerous to be in without a weapon. When Luigi admits they are unarmed, the old lady pulls out a large taser and demands "Koopa coins". Noticing Daisy's necklace around Luigi's neck, she pulls it off just as a large black woman in red, Big Bertha, approaches from behind. Seeing the necklace, Bertha grabs the old lady and throws her down into the street, causing much confusion below, and taking the necklace for herself. Mario asks for the rock back, but she then activates a pair of Thwomp Stompers and escapes to the other side of the street. Having noticed their dismay, a friendly street-musician named Toad begins to play an anti-Koopa song on his guitar, detailing the far-worse things in his world. Two police officers then drive up and arrest him, then arrest the brothers after noticing they have plumber's gear.

Meanwhile, two Goombas drag Daisy to a prison room in Koopa's Tower. Daniella and four other women are also inside. The two share a joyful reunion, with Daniella explaining that Koopa is looking for a princess but took the wrong girls. Elsewhere, Mario, Luigi, and Toad arrive at the police station. The two brothers are "de-fungused", then placed in a prison resembling a chicken coop. Toad is placed above Mario and Luigi, who are sharing a cell. Playing his harmonica, Toad sings about the brothers being from another dimension. Luigi then asks what he meant by that. The musician clarifies by explaining that, according to history, the impact of a meteorite divided their universes into two parallel dimensions. He goes on to explain that he believes that the fungus infesting the city was their old king, who was de-evolved by Koopa and is now seeking revenge.

The police chief calls for the Mario Bros. to be brought before their lawyer. The lawyer is actually Koopa, claiming to be a "Larry Lazard of Lazard Lazard Conda Dactyl" in an attempt to trick them into giving him the necklace. His attempts fail, however, because Mario and Luigi don't understand what he's talking about. After his patience fails, Koopa drops the facade and attacks Luigi before ordering them to be taken to the de-evolution chamber.

The de-evolution chamberEdit

 
The Devo Chamber.

Koopa casually walks into a large chamber with an elaborate throne-machine, in which Toad is strapped into. He insults Koopa while saying the King has returned and is all around them. Unfazed, Koopa orders the machine to be activated and Toad de-evolved. Toad transforms into a Goomba, and Koopa explains that evolution is an upward process, while de-evolution is the opposite. Using this process, he can create a strong, loyal, and, most importantly, stupid subject. In anger, Luigi tries to attack Koopa but is held back by Mario. Mario asks him what he evolved from, to which Koopa replies that his ancestor was the Tyrannosaurus rex. He then threatens to de-evolve them if they do not tell him where the meteorite piece is. Instead, the brothers shove Koopa into the de-evolution chair and take out his men. Luigi then sets the machine to the Jurassic period and the pair push the chair into the de-evolution device before running off. However, their speeding up of the process causes it to end prematurely. Koopa's eye briefly fluctuates to a reptilian-slit before returning to normal.

 
The Police Chase.

Pursued by Goombas, Mario and Luigi flee. They hide behind a support and Luigi notices that the fungus appears to be offering them a Bob-omb. Mario pulls him away before he can take it, though, and the two escape using a zipline-like contraption. Two Goombas attempt to blast them with their fireball guns, but fail to hit them. The brothers then enter the police garage, where they steal a police car. Although Mario struggles to turn it on, Luigi successfully operates the computer as a result of playing video games, and they drive off with two other police cars in pursuit. After a short chase, Mario tricks the officers into crashing into each other, killing the police officers. The two brothers celebrate their victory and enter a tunnel leading to the Koopahari Desert. The computer warns them that the tunnel is unfinished, but the car leaves the city's power grid and powers down before they can brake. The car propels out of the tunnel and nearly crashes into the rocks below but is caught by the fungus, allowing them to climb out and escape into the desert.

 
Mario and Luigi are saved by the fungus.

Back at his tower, Koopa and Lena are enjoying a mud bath together when Iggy and Spike hurry into the room. Apologizing for interrupting, they report on the location of Mario and Luigi, and Koopa tells them to go capture them. He then orders Lena to have Daisy cleaned and brought to him. She does so, bursting into the prison cell where the women are being held. She identifies Daisy as, "Princess Daisy," prompting surprised looks from the other women, and leads her away.

Meanwhile, Iggy bids farewell to a nervous Spike, who is locked into the de-evolution machine. On Koopa's signal, the machine is flipped from "de-evolve" to "evolve," resulting in a more intelligent Spike. Two nearby workers pull Spike from the chair and force in Iggy, who is unaware he is also going to be evolved. The two cousins, now intelligent, are ordered by Koopa to retrieve Mario and Luigi and the meteorite piece from the desert or be personally killed.

Koopa's planEdit

Daisy prepares to meet Koopa, now wearing a purple dress that belonged to her mother. Lena then enters the room and tells Daisy more about her mother, telling her that she took Daisy to the other dimension before she was "born," then died. Daisy asks if her father is alive, but she does not reveal anything. Lena then states that Koopa thinks she is the only one with the ability to merge the dimensions, and that she is not ready to let her efforts go to waste.

Meanwhile, Mario and Luigi wander in the desert lost, arguing over who is to blame for their situation. At his tower, Koopa discusses the Goomba's Devolution Gun training with the police chief until Lena enters, announcing Daisy is ready. Daisy waits nervously in another room lit with candles and a fire, where she meets Yoshi, a dinosaur resembling a velociraptor walking about the room, chained by its neck. He curiously observes Daisy, who is initially frightened, then fascinated. Koopa, who had walked in seconds earlier, then surprises her by speaking and confirming that Yoshi truly is a dinosaur. He remains calm, introducing himself as ruler of this dimension. He ignores Daisy's demands about the whereabouts of her father, instead flirting while confirming that Daisy also descended from the dinosaurs. Koopa's face then begins to show lizard-like features again, which scares Daisy. She runs from Koopa and into Toad, whom Koopa instructs to take her away, before kicking Yoshi in the face for licking his leg.

 
Yoshi chained to the floor.

The Marios fight backEdit

Back in the desert, Iggy and Spike locate Mario and Luigi, driving a small, six-wheeled vehicle towards them. They accidentally drive off a cliff, attracting the attention of the Mario Bros. Quickly, the brothers tie them up, demanding information. They reveal the purpose of Daisy's necklace and Koopa's plan with it. Luigi offers a trade: the meteorite shard in exchange for Daisy. Iggy and Spike agree and, based off of Luigi's description of Big Bertha, head to the Boom Boom Bar.

At Koopa's Tower, Daisy is looking out the window, but turns her attention to Yoshi when she sees him trying to bite his chain in two, and offers the dinosaur sympathy. Back in the desert, the Marios, along with Iggy and Spike, notice a garbage truck (the Sludge Gulpers), which is unloading the trash in the middle of the desert. They knock out the garbage men (Snifits), hijack the truck, and drive back into the city.

At the Boom Boom Bar, Mario and Luigi don Spike's ex-wife's dance clothes to fit into the dance club. Once inside, Mario and Luigi attempt to locate Big Bertha. Iggy and Spike head to the bar, ordering drinks as a toast to Koopa's downfall. Mario finds and confronts Big Bertha, attempting to seduce her, but resulting with a punch in the face. Mario then walks over to her again, trying reverse psychology this time, and Big Bertha demands he dance with her, during which he attempts to snatch Daisy's necklace back. He finally does so, just as the song ends, but Lena and a squad of Goombas arrive after having been tipped off by the coat check. Mario and Luigi attempt escape, but lose the necklace, saved from falling into a floor vent by Lena, in the process before being aided by Big Bertha. She lends them each a pair of Thwomp Stompers, instructing them on their use. They then escape through the roof, and, while they are moving, Luigi notices that the fungus is once again trying to give them a Bob-omb. The brothers then continue running from Goombas, only to be cornered on a catwalk by cops, but escape by jumping into the back of a moving Sludge Gulper. Mario complains that it is impossible for them to enter the tower, but Luigi insists that nothing is impossible, only improbable.

Back at Koopa's tower, the president enters a chamber filled with a type of fungus, a portion of which retreats into a larger section when Koopa enters. He then engages in small talk with the fungus, eventually leading to him stating that, once the dimensions are merged, all of its rebellion is going to have been in vain.

 
Mario and Luigi don their famous suits

The Slude Gulper then dumps its load, Mario and Luigi included, outside Koopa's tower. Entering, they observe the badly maintained heating pipes that serve the tower. Under Mario's instruction, Luigi begins blocking off all of the valves. An alarm is set off, forcing them to leave quickly. As they head for the elevator, Mario stops at a locker, opens it, and pulls out two mechanics' uniforms (which look like the clothes worn by their counterparts from the games). As the two celebrate in the elevator, the door opens and two Goombas enter. They manage to hide behind the oblivious Goombas, and as the elevator continues upwards, more and more Goombas enter, all unaware of the Marios.

Meanwhile, Lena, secretly in possession of the meteorite shard, has returned to the tower with Iggy and Spike as her prisoners. She reports to Koopa that they were preaching his overthrow, to which Koopa orders them killed. He walks off, followed by Lena. She attempts to tell him she has the necklace, as well as tell him to not use Daisy, feeling he only cares for her, but he ignores her out of anger, and mentions that the only thing he truly cares about is the future of their species. Lena then privately decides to work on her own.

Back in the elevator, Luigi gets an idea from the elevator music. Gently rocking each of the Goombas individually, he begins making the Goombas dance, distracting them. At the top of the tower, Toad enters the chamber Daisy is held in, offering her some dinner, though she replies that she is a vegetarian, and requests some steamed vegetables. Lena then enters the chamber. Daisy asks her if she would help her escape, though Lena replies by pulling a knife in an attempt to kill her, her reason being that "everyone deserves what they've earned." Yoshi uses his long tongue to pull Lena over, allowing Daisy to escape through the open door. However, Lena then stabs Yoshi and chases after her.

Meanwhile, as the Goombas continue to dance in the elevator, Mario and Luigi escape through a vent on top of it. Eventually, the elevator door opens again, and standing in front is another Goomba. Seeing the others dancing in the elevator, the Goomba shouts at them to stop and get out, which they do.

In the hall, Daisy runs into Toad, carrying her plate of steamed vegetables, and runs away from him before encountering two Goombas escorting Iggy and Spike for execution. They beg for her help as the Goombas pull out their fireball guns and ignite Toad. Iggy, Spike, and Daisy escape, though she takes the fire extinguisher off the wall and puts out Toad. As the trio continue their escape, Iggy and Spike claim that they were her most loyal supporters, having been with her father since his de-evolution. They take her to Devo 4, the chamber in which her father, as a fungal mass, is kept and leave her alone to take it all in.

As Mario and Luigi make their way to Daisy, they encounter a seemingly bottomless pit. Luigi tries to jump across, and both brothers are surprised when he finds he is suspended in midair. Eventually, he is able to convince Mario to jump as well; however, Luigi finds out that his belt was caught by a hook attached to a rope, and tries to tell Mario, but it is too late. Mario begins the plummet to his doom, only to be saved by the fungus below, which creates a trampoline for him. Luigi then fails to grab Mario's hands, due to being caught off guard. Mario then falls back down and gets tramped up again, this time being caught by Luigi and the two escape the room.

As Daisy is taking in the sight of her father, Yoshi enters the room. Daisy runs over to him, notices the knife in his neck, and pulls it out. The dinosaur then directs her attention to a communication device, which she uses to activate a speaker. Mario and Luigi, having heard Daisy over the speakers, then find a grate. Daisy then tells the brothers her location, Devo 4, before they knock the grate in, unaware that Koopa is watching. Walking through the air ducts, Luigi notices that the fungus is trying to communicate, and picks the mushroom, but Mario is still unconvinced.

The police chief then contacts Koopa to alert him that, per instructions, the troops were in place for the invasion of Earth. Koopa, surprised, then questions who supplied the order, to which the chief explains that he did, according to Lena. Realizing Lena possesses the meteorite piece, he demands her arrest. In Devo 4, Daisy meets up with Mario and Luigi and introduces them to her father. Luigi then realizes and tells Mario that he was the fungus that has been helping them the entire time. Daisy then reminds Mario of Daniella and tells him that she is being held prisoner in the Goomba barracks. Mario quickly dashes away to save her. However, Luigi and Daisy run straight into Koopa and an entourage of Goombas and are immediately captured.

Koopa mobilizesEdit

Immediately after capturing Luigi and Daisy, Koopa orders preparations for the invasion of Earth. Meanwhile, Lena attempts her escape, but is ambushed and caught by the police chief, who takes the meteorite shard from her. In the tower, Mario locates the Goomba barracks and defeats the Goomba guard inside, saving Daniella and the rest of the missing Brooklyn girls. He hastily barricades the door just as more Goombas attempt to enter, then sets to work on the ventilation shaft.

The police chief presents the meteorite shard to Koopa, who orders Lena's release and begins rallying the Goombas. At the barracks, several Goombas blow the door open with their fireball guns, but are greeted by an empty room. They realize that the women had escaped with Mario by riding on a mattress down the frozen pipe, and they do the same in pursuit. Mario and the girls then duck under some icicles, which one of the Goombas hits, knocking him off the mattress. The chase continues until Mario leaves a wrench in a hole, causing the Goombas's mattress to flip over and its passengers to fly off. Mario and the girls then notice the exit of the air vent, with the two Goombas still following them, one on top of the other. The remaining mattress and its passengers fly out of the shaft, while the Goombas stop short. Their crash landing distracts Koopa and allows Luigi and Daisy to join Mario's side.

Koopa approaches them wielding a fireball gun, declaring that he has won and Earth's humans are soon about to de-evolve. Several announcements then come through his communicator, distracting him. This allows Luigi to grab a Thwomp Stomper's fuel cartridge from a broken shop display and hand it to Mario. Mario inserts it into a Stomper from the shop, then activates the device. It flies into Koopa and knocks him into an empty vat located over the street. However, Koopa quickly recovers and starts to fire his fireball gun. Using some fungus, Mario swings onto the vat, climbs up it, and begins fighting Koopa, hitting him from above and causing Koopa to drop the meteorite shard, which he held in his mouth, to the ground below. Lena catches it, but falls off the ledge and onto some electrical wiring. However, Mario tricks Koopa into believing he has the shard, and he is attacked. Lena then runs off to the meteorite chamber to merge the dimensions. Luigi, Daisy, and the other girls run after her, hoping to stop her while Mario and Koopa continue to fight, Koopa being unaware that Lena has the shard.

Merging the dimensionsEdit

 
The Bob-omb ready to go off at any moment.

Luigi and Daisy enter the chamber, just in time to see Lena about to insert the shard into the meteor. Daisy begs her to stop, but she continues with her progress anyway. Koopa and Mario continue their fight on a catwalk. Looking into his belt, Mario pulls out the Bob-omb, prompting mass panic on the surrounding streets and walkways. Realizing the power the object possesses, Mario winds the Bob-omb's key and places it onto the ground, where it begins walking towards a panicking Koopa. However, it falls through a crack. Unaware of its continuing progress, Mario gives up on the Bob-omb and the two enemies approach each other menacingly. As the girls escape through the rock wall, Lena inserts the shard completely. The resulting energy burst kills her, leaving behind her skeleton. Daisy then realizes that Koopa was correct; only she could merge the dimensions, because only she could withstand the energies the meteorite would create. Back on the street, Mario and Koopa start to disappear as the dimensions merge and Koopa begins to laugh maniacally. Luigi and Daisy begin to work together to pull out the shard, using an assortment of Mario's tools.

In Brooklyn, Daniella and the other women warn those at the dig site about the coming invasion. Daniella then notes that the World Trade Center has merged with Koopa's tower. Scapelli is there, yet believes the whole thing is a hoax for publicity. Mario, Koopa, and his legion of Goombas appear next as Koopa attempts unsuccessfully to hit Mario with his fireball gun, which is broken again. Casting it aside, Koopa takes a devolution gun from a Goomba and fires it at Mario, who dodges, allowing the beam to instead hit Scapelli, de-evolving him into an ape. Koopa then turns to de-evolve Mario, but the latter pulls out the mushroom Luigi grabbed and uses it to absorb the beam. The mushroom becomes larger and larger, eventually to the point where Mario uses it to knock the ray gun out of Koopa's hands. Meanwhile, Luigi and Daisy manage to remove the shard from the meteor, causing the two dimensions to separate once more.

 
Koopa is affected by his own devolution guns.

Meanwhile, the Bob-omb Mario dropped earlier is walking around the lower section of the city. A citizen driving a car notices it and stops the car, trying and succeeding in not hitting the Bob-omb. Up on the catwalk, Toad gives Luigi and Daisy each a de-evolution gun. Koopa orders his Goombas to de-evolve Mario, but Toad distracts them with his harmonica. They begin dancing as they did in the elevator. As Luigi and Daisy pass, Big Bertha throws Luigi a pair of Thwomp Stompers. Koopa, enraged at both the failure of his plans and the Goombas' failure to comply to his orders, angrily calls them "stupid" and punches them down dominoes-style. As the Bob-omb continues its trek, Koopa turns his attention to Luigi, who flies on over by using the Thwomp Stompers. Koopa fires at him using his fireball gun, but misses, allowing Luigi to land next to his brother and hand him a devolution gun. As the Bob-omb walks below Koopa, the brothers begin de-evolving him into a fierce, dinosaur-like form. The Bob-omb then finally reaches Koopa, exploding from beneath him, causing him to shoot into the air and land in the empty vat. Mario, Luigi, and the city's inhabitants watch the container in silence. Suddenly, Koopa, having been de-evolved into a Tyrannosaurus rex, emerges with a roar. After initially panicking, the brothers aim the guns and fire once more, further de-evolving Koopa into a glob of primeval slime. Immediately, all of Dinohattan cheers at the defeat of their dictator.

VictoryEdit

Stepping onto Luigi's stompers, the brothers wave and flash a victory sign to the crowd as they jump over to Daisy, who embraces them. Meanwhile, in Devo 4, Daisy's father is restored to his former self.

The three of them enter the meteorite chamber, prepared to leave for home. Unfortunately, the wall is now sealed, prompting Daisy to re-open it by reusing the power of the shard. Luigi then beckons her to join them, but she sadly tells him she must stay to help restore Dinohattan and get to know her father. With an intimate kiss, they part ways.

Three weeks later, Daniella has now moved into the brothers' apartment and is preparing dinner for them. Just as Luigi stands up to join them, Our Miraculous World comes on with the host discussing the Mario brothers, whom he calls the "Super Mario Brothers.", having saved both Earth and Dinohattan. Someone knocks on the door, Mario stating that it is open, and it bursts open to reveal Daisy, wearing torn military clothes and wielding a fireball gun, asking Mario and Luigi for help. The two strap on their tool belts, prepared to leave.

In a post-credits scene, two Japanese businessmen comment to someone that they have a proposal to make a video game based on their many adventures, then ask for the game's name. The camera pans to reveal they are talking to Iggy and Spike, who suggest "Iggy's World" and "The Indomitable Spike," respectively, but then agree upon "The Super Koopa Cousins."

QuotesEdit

Main article: List of Super Mario Bros. (film) quotes

ProductionEdit

Overall, what’s your abiding memory from working on this movie?
“Humiliation.”
Director Rocky Morton, in a 2014 interview with Nintendo Life.
 
Bob Hoskins, who played Mario in the film, expressed a distaste for his role.

Film producer Roland Joffé visited Nintendo of America’s headquarters in 1991, and pitched his concept for a Super Mario Bros. film to then-president Minoru Arakawa, after the idea was originally decided upon during a script meeting at Lightmotive Studios. Nintendo had already received several offers for a Super Mario movie, but Arakawa was interested by Joffé’s pitch, and the producer later flew to Nintendo's headquarters in Kyoto to present his pitch directly to Hiroshi Yamauchi.[16] Joffé pitched the film as a prequel to the game,[17] described by him in his pitch as "'a food chain game — it tells us we’re all just somebody else’s dinner.'"[16] Nintendo later agreed to sell Joffé and Jake Eberts the rights to produce a Super Mario Bros. film for $2 million,[16] while Nintendo would retain merchandising rights.[18] Other than imposing a deadline on production,[18] Nintendo exerted little creative control over the project; Joffé would later speculate that Nintendo was mostly interested in seeing if a big-budget movie would have any impact on the Super Mario brand.[16]

Joffé initially met with Harold Ramis to direct the film, who took the meeting as a fan of the Super Mario Bros. game, but he declined the offer.[19] Joffé then chose Greg Beeman to be the director, but, after losing faith in him, replaced him with duo Rocky Morton and Annabel Jankel, best known for Max Headroom.[17] Morton hated the script they were sent after reading it, but saw potential in the concept, and thought of the idea of the dinosaurs living in a parallel universe rather than going extinct, which Mario and Luigi happen to discover.[20]

Dustin Hoffman, looking to impress his kids, was the first to offer to play the role of Mario, but was let down by Bill White, who handled Nintendo of America's promotions at the time, as Nintendo wanted Danny DeVito to direct and play Mario.[17] However, DeVito wanted to read the script before signing on,[21] and ultimately declined in order to focus on his movie Hoffa.[17] Tom Hanks later agreed to play lead role for $5 million, which the studio decided was too much, and instead chose Bob Hoskins to be Mario, believing he would be more profitable.[17][18] Arnold Schwarzenegger and Michael Keaton were both offered to play King Koopa but turned the role down.[18]

A treatment for the script was done by Barry Morrow, but was turned down as it was seen as too dramatic. The job was then handed to Jim Jennewein and Tom S. Parker, who wrote a light-hearted fantasy tale comparatively closer to the source material. However, after the departure of Greg Beeman, the script went through multiple rewrites and revisions, each adding increasingly "darker" content and science-fiction elements.[22] Both the new directing team and Roland Joffé wanted a more adult-oriented production, justifying this direction by stating that Super Mario Bros. appealed to many demographics besides children.[16] A satirical, Mad Max-inspired script impressed the directors[23] and actors Bob Hoskins, Dennis Hopper, and Fiona Shaw,[22] but was revised after receiving concerns from the studio that the film was straying too far from the family-friendly license. Ed Solomon, one of the writers for Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, was brought in to make further revisions, and despite production being well underway the directors were forbidden from working with him.[18] Director Rocky Morton has since defended the film's more dark direction and departure from the games, stating his intention for the movie was that it would be the "real story", while the Super Mario Bros. game was an unfaithful retelling after the Japanese had heard the story.[23][20]

There were frequent conflicts between the directors and the rest of the staff. Most of the film crew disliked Morton and Jankel, referring to them with nicknames such as "Rocky and Annabel, the Flying Squirrel Show". Furthermore, the script was rewritten and revised on a daily basis even after filming had begun,[18] making the lead actors feel apathetic toward the shoot.[24] Filming was originally scheduled to last ten weeks, but due to these issues ended up going for fifteen.[18] The directors were shut out of the production after most of the main scenes were filmed, and other production companies were brought in to complete the late and overbudget shoot.[18] Morton and Jankel were able to get back into the production during editing with help from the Directors Guild of America, and wanted the movie cut digitally, but the editors insisted on using Moviola and Steenbeck, leading to a slow editing process.[18]

A featurette of the development of the film was also made, called The Making of... Super Mario Bros. It describes in detail the production of the movie, with behind-the-scenes interviews with much of the key cast and production staff. A book about the film's production was released the same year titled From Microchips to Moviestars: The Making of Super Mario Bros.

Deleted scenes and early draftsEdit

Main article: List of Super Mario Bros. (film) deleted scenes

ReceptionEdit

At release, Super Mario Bros. was widely lambasted by critics that praised the acting, set design and special effects while criticizing the poor grasp of source material, writing, and directing. The film currently maintains an average review score of 28% on Rotten Tomatoes, with 31 out of 43 reviews being negative, their consensus stating that, "Despite flashy sets and special effects, Super Mario Bros. is too light on story and substance to be anything more than a novelty."[25] Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, on their program Siskel & Ebert At the Movies, gave the film two thumbs down; while they praised the film for its special effects work, their complaints were mostly about the indecision of the movie being aimed for children or adults. The film also made their list of the worst movies of 1993. The film is estimated to have grossed $20,915,465 domestically, under half of the estimated $48 million budget.[2]

Bob Hoskins was particularly praised for his performance as Mario. Dennis Hopper's performance was praised as well, causing him to land villainous roles for more successful films such as Speed the following year. John Leguizamo's and Samantha Mathis's performances helped kick them off into more successful productions. The film was also nominated for two Saturn Awards, one being for Best Costume and the other for Best Make-up.[26] The film was shortlisted for the category of Best Visual Effects at the 66th Academy Awards, but did not make the final nomination.[27]

In a 2007 interview with The Guardian, Bob Hoskins stated that Super Mario Bros. was "the worst thing I ever did",[28] and was especially critical of the directors, whom he thought of as arrogant.[29] In a later interview with The Guardian, Hoskins answered with the film when asked, "What is the worst job you've done?", "What has been your biggest disappointment?", and, "If you could edit your past, what would you change?"[30] Dennis Hopper, when asked about his time on set, echoed Hoskins's statement, stating that he did not like working on Super Mario Bros.[31] John Leguizamo also expressed a dislike of his role, writing in his 2006 autobiography Pimps, Hos, Playa Hatas, And All the Rest of My Hollywood Friends: My Life, "Oh man [Super Mario Bros.] sucks. And I suck in it." Both Leguizamo and Hoskins have also mentioned that they were constantly drunk during filming to make the experience easier on themselves; this included a scene in which Leguizamo drove a vehicle.[32] However, Leguizamo would go on to reflect on the film more positively when recording a 20th anniversary message.[33] The opinions of various background staff on the overall production were also more positive.[34][35] Director Rocky Morton has also said that the movie's production was "a harrowing experience", but that he is proud that the film is still remembered and discussed among fans.[20]

Mario's creator, Shigeru Miyamoto, stated, "[In] the end, it was a very fun project that they put a lot of effort into," but also said, "The one thing that I still have some regrets about is that the movie may have tried to get a little too close to what the Mario Bros. video games were. And in that sense, it became a movie that was about a video game, rather than being an entertaining movie in and of itself."[36]

In a 2017 interview, Reggie Fils-Aimé, discussing Nintendo's recent collaborations and partnerships, stated that the film "left a really bad taste in the mouth of our developers," commenting that Nintendo's lack of creative control over the project was what resulted in its failure,[37] a sentiment that Illumination founder Chris Meledandri agreed with in a 2018 Variety news article.[38]

Reviews
Reviewer, Publication Score Comment
Michael Wilmington, Los Angeles Times N/A "It's not enough to say the script, by another tag-team of writers, including Parker Bennett, Terry Runte ("Mystery Date") and Ed Solomon (the "Bill & Ted" movies), is obvious, the wisecracks flat or the characters--except for a few brief Brooklyn scenes at the beginning--thin as a razor and not as engaging. The level of inspiration here can be clued by the name of the dinosaur alternate world's Manhattan--it's called "Dinohattan." Does it make sense to make movies from video games? (Should Pac-Man be dangled in front of Danny DeVito?) Of course it does: commercial sense. Given the massive international popularity of the four Nintendo Mario Bros. games, this movie is virtually "pre-sold." But a built-in audience should be a challenge as well as a reassurance. On the non-technical level, "The Super Mario Bros." (MPAA-rated PG) dodges the challenge, drowns in the reassurance. The movie knocks your eyes out, at the same time it dulls the mind's eye. Ultimately, it's one more stop in the arcade, beckoning, waiting to soak up time and money."
Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, Siskel & Ebert at the Movies N/A Siskel: "It is [a complete waste of time and money], and I think you know the timing would have been right with this explosion in infotech (or whatever you want to call it, the computers and all that); kids are very sophisticated now, and if you could mirror that in some way, you could be a big bonanza. This film doesn't even try."
Ebert: "What this movie shows is that it's a lot harder to make a high-tech movie like this than you would think, and when you see ones maybe that still have problems with, like, Batman Returns, it's so much better than this; that you would admire it more when you see something like this."
Aggregators
Compiler Score
Rotten Tomatoes 28%
"Despite flashy sets and special effects, Super Mario Bros. is too light on story and substance to be anything more than a novelty."

SoundtrackEdit

Super Mario Bros. (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
 
Composed by:
Per Gessle, Andy Mackay, Bryan Ferry, David Was, Randy Jacobs, Mike Leeson, Peter Vale, Donnie Wahlberg, Spice, Nuno Bettencourt, Joe Satriani, Dave Mustaine, David Ellefson, Nick Menza, Brian May, Geoff Wilkinson, Herbie Hancock, Mel Simpson, Rahsaan Kelly
Publisher(s) Capitol Records
Release date   1993[39]
Format Compact disc
Cassette
Vinyl (12" 33⅓ rpm)
Track(s) 12
Length 55:17
Catalog number(s)   CDP 0777 7 89117 2 2

An official movie soundtrack titled Super Mario Bros. (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) was released in 1993[39]. It was released on CD, vinyl and cassette tape by Capitol Records, and credits Peter Afterman and Tim Devine as producers, with David Simoné as co-producer.

TracklistingEdit

Formatted: Artist-Song title (Length)

  1. RoxetteAlmost Unreal (3:59)
  2. Divinyls–Love Is The Drug (4:35)a
  3. The Goombas featuring George ClintonWalk the Dinosaur (4:08)b
  4. Charles & Eddie–I Would Stop The World (4:24)
  5. Marky Mark And The Funky Bunch–I Want You (6:11)
  6. Extreme–Where Are You Going? (4:34)
  7. Joe Satriani–Speed Of Light (5:10)
  8. Megadeth–Breakpoint (3:29)
  9. QueenTie Your Mother Down (3:46)
  10. Us3 featuring Rahsaan & Gerrard Prescencer–Cantaloop (Flip Fantasia) (4:29)
  11. Tracie Spencer-Don't Slip Away (5:19)c
  12. Roxette-2 Cinnamon Street(5:06)c

NotesEdit

a - Cover of "Love Is the Drug" by Roxy Music
b - Cover of "Walk the Dinosaur" by Was (Not Was)
c - Not released on American or Canadian versions; only on subsequent international releases

PublicationsEdit

MangaEdit

 
Cover to the Super Mario Bros. manga.
Main article: Super Mario: Makai Teikoku no Megami

Super Mario: Makai Teikoku no Megami (スーパーマリオ 魔界帝国まかいていこく女神めがみ, "Super Mario: Goddess of the Demon World Empire") is a 34-page, one-shot manga published in Shogakukan's Gekkan CoroCoro Comic Haruyasumi Zōkangō on March 23, 1993. It bears the same name as the film does in Japan, and was published shortly before its release to promote a behind-the-scenes book and a Japanese novelization. The manga loosely follows the events of the film, but omits a lot of characters and story points; for example, Lena, Bertha, Yoshi, Daniella, and Anthony Scapelli do not appear.

In addition, Super Mario-kun, 4koma Manga Kingdom and the Kodansha Super Mario manga have all parodied or used elements from the film within issues. For example, the Super Mario Kodansha manga featured the realistic film adaptation of Yoshi during the Yoshi's Safari story arc.[40]

NovelEdit

 
Cover to the novelization.

An official novel of the film simply titled Super Mario Bros. was written by Todd Strasser and published May 1st, 1993 by Fantail. At 128 pages, the novel closely follows the events of the films, but the author relied on earlier versions of the scripts. As a result, one glaring difference between the novel and the film is that the character of The King gets referred to as "King Bowser", as certain drafts of the movie intended that to be his name.[41] Other deviations include the inclusion of deleted scenes not present in the final cut of the film.

Little Golden BooksEdit

Main article: Super Mario Bros. (activity books)

A coloring/activity book and a sticker book were published and released by Little Golden Books in 1993. A book titled Super Mario Bros. "Look-Look" Book was also released, a simplified re-telling of the film's plot aimed at children.

MerchandiseEdit

Main articles: ERTL, Super Mario Bros. Trading Cards

Multiple toys and products were released based on the Super Mario Bros. film.

Home video releasesEdit

This article is under construction. Therefore, please excuse its informal appearance while it is being worked on. We hope to have it completed as soon as possible.

VHSEdit

DVDEdit

The film was released on DVD in the United States in 2003. It contained a non-anamorphic widescreen transfer of the film and no special features. It was released by Buena Vista Home Entertainment (through Hollywood Pictures Home Entertainment).

Blu-rayEdit

Second Sight UK Blu-rayEdit

In 2014, cult UK film distributor Second Sight Films released a Blu-ray of the film with a new 2K HD transfer and brand new extras. This transfer is used as the basis for the movie's release on European streaming and on-demand video services.

Distributor: Second Sight Films
Release date: November 3, 2014
Region coding: Region B
Audio track: English 2.0 DTS-HD MA
Subtitles: English
Special Features:

  • This Ain't No Video Game Featurette: Documentary with interviews of the movie's cast and crew
  • "Making Of" Featurette
  • Original electronic press kit with cast interviews and behind the scenes footage
  • Galleries: Stills, storyboards and concepts
  • US Theatrical Trailer

Japanese Blu-rayEdit

Distributor: TC Entertainment
Release date: 2017
Region coding: Region A
Audio tracks: English DTS-HD MA 5.1, Japanese Home Video Dub DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo, Japanese TV Dub DTS-HD MA 2.0 Mono
Subtitles: Japanese
Special Features:

  • This Ain't No Video Game Featurette: Documentary with interviews of the movie's cast and crew
  • "Making Of" Featurette
  • Japanese Trailer
  • 4 page booklet

Umbrella Australian Blu-rayEdit

This release is based on the Second Sight UK Blu-ray and reuse its extras and transfer, with one major addition: an extended workprint cut of the movie discovered by fans in 2019, featuring over 20 minutes of deleted footage. The workprint cut is presented in Standard Definition.

Distributor: Umbrella Entertainment
Release date: October 2021
Region coding: Region Free
Audio track: English 2.0 DTS-HD MA
Subtitles: English
Special Features:

  • This Ain't No Video Game Featurette
  • "Making Of" Featurette
  • Original electronic press kit with cast interviews and behind the scenes footage
  • Galleries: Stills, storyboards and concepts
  • Extended workprint with deleted scenes
  • US Theatrical Trailer

30th anniversary Blu-rayEdit

 
Promotional image for the "Trust the Fungus" Collector's Edition

For the film's 30th anniversary, a special release of the Australian Blu-ray featuring a new 4K restoration from the original camera negative was released in January 2024. It was curated by fan site Super Mario Bros. The Movie Archive and The Bigger Pictures Film Restoration and officially distributed by Umbrella Entertainment.[42][43] It was released on both Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray formats.

Two Collector's Editions were also released: a normal Collector's Edition containing an over 250 page book of behind the scenes material, a slipcase, a rigid case, eight replica lobby cards, and an A3 reversible poster featuring the American and Australian posters, and a "Trust the Fungus" Collector's Edition featuring all content from the normal Collector's Edition as well as an over 200 page book of the film's scripts, a genuine film cell, a replica A6 34 page souvenir magazine, another reversible poster featuring the Japanese and Thai posters, and a sticker sheet.

A Final Cut and Princess Cut were planned to be included, but they were not approved by the film's international rights holder Pathé.[44]

Distributor: Umbrella Entertainment
Release date: January 2024
Region coding: Region Free
Audio track: English 2.0 DTS-HD MA
Subtitles: English
Special Features:

  • Disc 1
    • Audio commentary with Parker Bennett
    • Audio commentary with Fred Caruso and David Snyder
    • Audio commentary with Jeff Goodwin, Mark McCoy, and Craig Edwards
    • Audio commentary with Steven Applebaum and Ryan Hoss
    • Restored deleted scenes
    • Restored Ain't No Game trailer
    • Restored I've Got The Power trailer
  • Disc 2
    • Restored HD workprint
    • Storyboard to screen animatics
    • Katabasis: From Damsel to Goddess Featurette
    • Anarcho-Dino-Sado Chic: The Fashion of Dinohattan Featurette
    • The Hero Moment: Super Mario, Superhero Featurette
    • (D)evolution, Dystopia, and Trusting the Fungus Featurette
    • Restored Spike and Iggy Revolutionary Rap music video
    • Anti-Koopa protest music video
    • Collection of archival Japanese trailers
    • Collection of archival commercials
    • This Ain't No Video Game Featurette
    • "Making Of" Featurette
    • Original electronic press kit with cast interviews and behind the scenes footage
    • Galleries: Stills, storyboards and concepts

ContinuationsEdit

The film ends in a cliffhanger, with Princess Daisy entering Mario and Luigi's home and asking them for help, saying "You're not going to believe this." This moment set up the possibility of a sequel film, but due to the critical failure of the film in both the box office and in critical reception, a sequel never came into fruition.

Sequel webcomicEdit

An unofficial webcomic sequel, written by Steven Applebaum and Ryan Hoss and illustrated by Eryk Donovan, was being written and published under the name Super Mario Bros. 2. One of the film's surviving original writers, Parker Bennett, helped outline the webcomic's storyline.[45] The comic is loosely based on the American Super Mario Bros. 2, directly following the end of the original film, and features Mario and Luigi trying to stop the game's villain, Wart, from taking over the parallel world. It has not been continued since 2015.[46]

Subsequent animated Super Mario filmEdit

Main article: The Super Mario Bros. Movie

On November 14, 2017, The Wall Street Journal reported that a subsequent movie based on the Super Mario franchise was being planned by Universal Pictures and Illumination. On February 1, 2018, Nintendo officially confirmed that Illumination would be developing an animated Super Mario film, co-produced by Shigeru Miyamoto and Chris Meledandri, aiming for a purported 2022 release. It was eventually released as The Super Mario Bros. Movie in April 2023, and stars Chris Pratt as Mario, Anya Taylor-Joy as Princess Peach, Charlie Day as Luigi, Keegan-Michael Key as Toad, Seth Rogen as Donkey Kong, Jack Black as Bowser, Fred Armisen as Cranky Kong, Kevin Michael Richardson as Kamek, and Sebastian Maniscalco as Spike.

References to the gamesEdit

Though the story is only loosely inspired by the games, the movie includes many in-jokes and references relating to the games. Some can only be caught in a frame-by-frame viewing, such as the presence of Shigeru Miyamoto in the crowd[citation needed]. The following is a list of some of these references:

 
The Snifits featured in the film.
  • "King Koopa" is used by Toad in his anti-Koopa song, by Koopa when placing a pizza delivery, and as the character's name in the credits; "King Koopa" is Bowser's original Japanese name, as well as his name in the various cartoons related to the games.
    • Ironically, his localized name, King Bowser, was utilized in the film's novelization with the previous ruler that he deposed and de-evolved into fungus.
  • Dinohattan being infested with the King's fungus is referred to derisively as a "Mushroom Kingdom" by President Koopa.
  • Charges used for the Thwomp Stomper-boots resemble Banzai Bills, while the boots themselves are inspired by the item Goomba's Shoe and enemy Thwomps. The sound the boots make when activated is also the effect made when Mario takes a hit and dies.
  • The junkyard workers are referred to as Snifits with a vague resemblance, while a group known as the "Fungus Unit" resemble Snifits from the source material and (debatably) Shy Guys.
  • A Bob-omb is used prominently near the end of the film after appearing twice before.
  • Big Bertha is a large woman in red at the Boom Boom Bar. She is based on the giant red fish in Super Mario Bros. 3.
  • The Boom Boom Bar features graphics from Super Mario World projected onto the dance floor's wall, such as the Valley of Bowser rock-protrusion in the sea and a Boo. Boom Boom is also the name of the enemy boss at the end of every fortress in Super Mario Bros. 3.
  • Iggy is named after one of Bowser's Koopalings (who, at the time the film was released, were considered Bowser's children) while Spike is named for the minor enemy from Super Mario Bros. 3.
  • Several neon signs displayed in shots of the city read names of Mario characters/enemies. These include "Thwomp", "Bullet Bill's", "Hammer Bros. tattoos", "Sparky's", "Rexx", and "Ostro". There is also graffiti with references such as "Toad" and "Shy Guy".
  • When Daisy is first captured, she is forced into a taxi advertising the brand of a drink known as "Wiggler".
  • The King's transformation back into human form at the end of the film is a reference to the end of each world in Super Mario Bros. 3 where the king of that world changes back into his normal form after the defeat of a Koopaling.
  • Yoshi appears in the film as an actual dinosaur, complete with use of his trademark long tongue.
  • When Koopa is talking to one of the policemen about the Devo Guns, the sound effect of getting an extra life can be heard in the background.
  • After the credits end, two Japanese businessmen are seen proposing a deal to make a video game on unseen persons' adventures. The people are then revealed to be Iggy and Spike, with Iggy suggesting the game be titled Iggy's World and Spike suggesting The Indomitable Spike. Both then agree that the game should be titled the Super Koopa Cousins, a parody of Super Mario Bros.
  • During the film's climax, Mario faces Koopa first as the latter attacks him from a empty vat, then with the two on a catwalk, approximating the confrontations with Bowser at the end of Super Mario World and Super Mario Bros.
  • The original Super Mario Bros. theme can be heard over the production logo and on the DVD version's menus.

References in later mediaEdit

  • The Super Mario Bros. Movie: Some of the story is adapted from the original film, notably the brothers stumbling into the other world while dealing with a flood under Brooklyn and later returning during the final battle when the other world begins intruding upon it. Mario and Luigi are sometimes seen posing with a wrench and plunger respectively, similar to certain promotional images for the film.

GalleryEdit

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Super Mario Bros. (film).

Names in other languagesEdit

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese スーパーマリオ 魔界帝国の女神[47]
Sūpā Mario Makai Teikoku no Megami
Super Mario: The Goddess of the Demon World Empire
Catalan Super Mario Bros.[48] -
Chinese (traditional) 超級有寶兄弟[?]
Chāojí yǒubǎo xiōngdì
Super rich brothers
Croatian Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Czech Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Danish Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Dutch Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Finnish Super Mario Bros.[?] -
French Super Mario Bros.[?] -
German Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Hungarian Super Mario fivérek[?] Super Mario brothers
Italian Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Korean 슈퍼 마리오[?]
Syupeo Mario
Super Mario
Norwegian Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Polish Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Portuguese (NOA) Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Portuguese (NOE) Super Mario[?] Super Mario
Romanian Super frații Mario[49] Super Mario brothers
Russian Супербратья Марио[?]
Superbrat'ya Mario
Mario Superbros
Serbian Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Slovenian Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Spanish Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Swedish Super Mario Bros.[?] -
Thai ซูเปอร์มาริโอ[?]
Sūpexr̒ Mārixo
Super Mario
Ukrainian Супербрати Маріо[?]
Superbraty Mario
Super Mario Bros.

ReferencesEdit

  1. ^ a b c Super Mario Bros. (1993) - Financial Information. Retrieved August 3, 2024. (Archived February 5, 2024, 09:51:24 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  2. ^ a b c Super Mario Bros.. Box Office Mojo (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  3. ^ Super Mario Bros. (1993) - Full Cast & Crew. IMDb (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  4. ^ Super Mario Bros. (1993) - Trivia. IMDb (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  5. ^ "We knew the game and we knew one of its areas was Dino World, so we thought that it would be a great place to go into." – Rocky Morton. Australian "Dinosaur Magazine. Starlog Telecommunications, Inc. (Australian English).[page number needed]
  6. ^ Puig, Claudia. MOVIES - April 17, 1989. Los Angeles Times (American English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  7. ^ The Lost Art of TV Guide Advertising, Vol. 10 of 265,890. Platypus Comix (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  8. ^ Holmes, Jonathan (Aug 15, 2010). Super Mario Bros: The Movie gets re-released on DVD. Destructoid. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  9. ^ Redstar (April 25, 2014). Second Sight DVD/Blu-Ray Release of Super Mario Bros.. A place for those who "Trust the Fungus" (English). Archived March 13, 2016, 08:31:17 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  10. ^ Second Sight Films (June 19, 2014). RELEASE DATE CHANGE; SUPER MARIO BROS. will now be released on 3rd November 2014. We've put the date back because we are working on a lot of new extras for the film, including interviews and a whole new documentary. We will post further details here as they become available.. Facebook. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  11. ^ Dewell, Ron (December 30, 2016). Super Mario Bros movie getting a slick re-release on Blu-ray with a steelbook case. TechnoBuffalo. Retrieved December 30, 2016.
  12. ^ SMB Movie (April 18, 2020). Exploring the Super Mario Bros. (1993) Extended Rough Cut Special: Restoration Commentary!. YouTube. Retrieved August 13, 2021.
  13. ^ August 8, 2023. 30年前の実写映画『マリオ』9月に再上映 当時50億円で製作…吹き替えキャストに富田耕生・辻谷耕史ら. Oricon News (Japanese). Retrieved August 13, 2023. (Archived August 8, 2023, 00:30:36 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  14. ^ @mario_1993_4K (October 5, 2023). 🎬新宿ピカデリーでの上映 本日10.5(木)20:50の回がLASTです⭐️ スーパーマリオ 魔界帝国の女神 製作30周年 4Kレストア版 #実写マリオ #魔界帝国の女神. X (Japanese). Retrieved October 13, 2023. (Archived October 13, 2023, 15:10:35 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  15. ^ @UmbrellaEnt (October 12, 2023). Here's SUPER MARIO BROS in its worldwide debut 4K with a NEWLY restored alternate workprint cut. We’ve taken it to the next level with the 'Trust the Fungus' Collector’s Edition which includes almost 500 pages of content and over 10 NEW extras! Pre-order: bit.ly/3LZKy4N]. X. Retrieved October 12, 2023. (Archived October 12, 2023, 17:33:41 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
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  21. ^ January 11, 1991. Mario: The Movie. Times-News. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
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  25. ^ Super Mario Bros.. Rotten Tomatoes (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  26. ^ Past Winners Database. The Los Angeles Times. Archived August 16, 2007, 03:01:40 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  27. ^ Mavity, Will (January 22, 2017). A History Of Visual Effects Shortlists & Bake-Offs. Next Best Picture. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  28. ^ Hattonstone, Simon (August 3, 2007). Bob Hoskins: 'The Method? Living it out? Cobblers!'. The Guardian. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  29. ^ San Sebastian Film Festival Press Conference. Angelfire. Retrieved May 26, 2024. (Archived May 13, 2004, 09:41:52 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  30. ^ Greenstreet, Rosanna (June 18, 2011). Q&A: Bob Hoskins. The Guardian. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  31. ^ Murray, Noel (December 2, 2008). Random Roles: Dennis Hopper. AV Club (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  32. ^ Gaming Historian (November 18, 2016). The Making of the Super Mario Bros. Movie. YouTube (English). Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  33. ^ SMB Movie (May 25, 2013). John Leguizamo's Super Mario Bros. 20th Anniversary Message. YouTube. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
  34. ^ Applebaum, Stephen (September 16, 2010). Super Mario Bros. The Movie Archive -- Interviews. Super Mario Bros.: The Movie Archive. Retrieved May 26, 2024.
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  40. ^ BONUS: Other depictions of the Super Mario Bros. Movie in Manga. archive.org.
  41. ^ Strasser, Todd (1993). Super Mario Bros.. Fantail. ISBN 0-14-090037-3.
  42. ^ @smb_ryan (October 12, 2023). Our wonderful team @smbmovie has been busting tail on this release for months! The crazy collectors edition has a TON of physical components but the new special features are just as (or more) exciting and are things we’ve worked towards for years. Get those pre-orders in! 🍄. X. Retrieved October 15, 2023. (Archived October 15, 2023, 21:52:48 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  43. ^ @biggerpicsfilm (October 12, 2023). Here’s the 4K and Blu-ray announcement from @UmbrellaEnt - so many options to choose from! We will answer questions on the pieces we worked on (Workprint, Deleted Scenes, Trailers) once we are able! @smbmovie. X. Retrieved October 15, 2023. (Archived October 15, 2023, 21:55:16 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  44. ^ @smbmovie (October 12, 2023). Unfortunately, we did not receive approval from Pathé to include either the Final Cut or Princess Cut.. X. Retrieved October 15, 2023. (Archived October 15, 2023, 21:56:56 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  45. ^ Super Mario Bros 2's FAQ page
  46. ^ Super Mario Bros. 2: The Sequel Comic
  47. ^ File:SMB movie JP Blu-ray Box Art.jpeg
  48. ^ Fitxa de doblatge Súper Mario Bros.. el doblatge (Catalan). Retrieved May 26, 2024. (Archived January 4, 2023, 08:31:58 UTC via Wayback Machine.)
  49. ^ Super frații Mario. CineMagia (Romanian). Retrieved May 4, 2020.

External linksEdit