The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Pie Eyed]]: Almost everyone, in a rare modern use that's not a deliberate throwback.
* [[Pie Eyed]]: Almost everyone, in a rare modern use that's not a deliberate throwback.
* [[Planet of Hats]]: Most episodes took place in a world built around a particular theme (Pirates, Wild West, outer space, etc.). And that's [[Hilarious in Hindsight|almost a decade before]] ''[[Mario Party (Video Game)|Mario Party]] 2'' offered a similar premise with themed boards.
* [[Planet of Hats]]: Most episodes took place in a world built around a particular theme (Pirates, Wild West, outer space, etc.). And that's [[Hilarious in Hindsight|almost a decade before]] ''[[Mario Party (Video Game)|Mario Party]] 2'' offered a similar premise with themed boards.
* [[Power Up Food]]: In the Sherlock Holmes episode, Mario eats a hamburger he'd kept in his pocket, and it gives him the strength to break out of a [[Death Trap]].
* [[Power-Up Food]]: In the Sherlock Holmes episode, Mario eats a hamburger he'd kept in his pocket, and it gives him the strength to break out of a [[Death Trap]].
* [[Powered Armor]]: Robo-Koopa.
* [[Powered Armor]]: Robo-Koopa.
* [[Product Placement]]: As if this show didn't advertise ''[[Super Mario Bros]]'' and ''[[The Legend of Zelda]]'' enough, the episode "Bats in the Basement" shows Mario eating [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_Cereal_System Nintendo Cereal System].
* [[Product Placement]]: As if this show didn't advertise ''[[Super Mario Bros]]'' and ''[[The Legend of Zelda]]'' enough, the episode "Bats in the Basement" shows Mario eating [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nintendo_Cereal_System Nintendo Cereal System].
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* [[Shout Out]]: One episode was based off of ''[[Star Wars]]'', except with Mario characters and a [[Mundane Made Awesome|FLYING CASTLE IN SPACE?!]] Interestingly enough, this was one of Mario's first times in space, before even [[Super Mario Galaxy (Video Game)|Super Mario Galaxy]]. Also, [[What Could Have Been|one of the original concepts for Star Wars was that most everyone would have Lightsabers, but was nixed in favor of only Jedi and Sith having them.]] In this Mario episode, however, during the first scene [[Fridge Brilliance|all of Bowser's mooks have lightsaber knock-offs.]] Coincidence?
* [[Shout Out]]: One episode was based off of ''[[Star Wars]]'', except with Mario characters and a [[Mundane Made Awesome|FLYING CASTLE IN SPACE?!]] Interestingly enough, this was one of Mario's first times in space, before even [[Super Mario Galaxy (Video Game)|Super Mario Galaxy]]. Also, [[What Could Have Been|one of the original concepts for Star Wars was that most everyone would have Lightsabers, but was nixed in favor of only Jedi and Sith having them.]] In this Mario episode, however, during the first scene [[Fridge Brilliance|all of Bowser's mooks have lightsaber knock-offs.]] Coincidence?
* [[Terrible Trio]]: The Koopa Pack.
* [[Terrible Trio]]: The Koopa Pack.
* [[Theme Music Power Up]]
* [[Theme Music Power-Up]]
* [[Theme Tune Rap]]: [[Ear Worm|Doo doo doo da da doo, doo!]] We're the Mario Brothers, and plumbing's our game...
* [[Theme Tune Rap]]: [[Ear Worm|Doo doo doo da da doo, doo!]] We're the Mario Brothers, and plumbing's our game...
* [[Totally Radical]]: Subverted in both the live action skits and for the most part , the cartoon. However, when it was changed to "Club Mario" during the Summer of 1990, it was played [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEwIyV-4uRI straighter than an arrow.]
* [[Totally Radical]]: Subverted in both the live action skits and for the most part , the cartoon. However, when it was changed to "Club Mario" during the Summer of 1990, it was played [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gEwIyV-4uRI straighter than an arrow.]
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* [[Unlimited Wardrobe]]: King Koopa often has a different outfit depending on the theme of the episode (i.e. dressing like a cowboy in "Butch Mario and the Luigi Kid" and dressing like Julius Caesar in "The Great Gladiator Gig."
* [[Unlimited Wardrobe]]: King Koopa often has a different outfit depending on the theme of the episode (i.e. dressing like a cowboy in "Butch Mario and the Luigi Kid" and dressing like Julius Caesar in "The Great Gladiator Gig."
* [[Unusual Euphemism]]: "What the koop are you talking about?"
* [[Unusual Euphemism]]: "What the koop are you talking about?"
* [[Water Is Air]]: "Mario of the Deep" has the main characters spending the entire episode underwater [[Super Not Drowning Skills|with no apparent repercussions]] (of course, [[Fridge Brilliance|that kinda problem doesn't happen in the 2D games either...]]). In fact, they actually manage to walk around like if they were on land ''and'' they manage to not have their headwear (or the Princess's hair) drift upward once.
* [[Water Is Air]]: "Mario of the Deep" has the main characters spending the entire episode underwater [[Super Not-Drowning Skills|with no apparent repercussions]] (of course, [[Fridge Brilliance|that kinda problem doesn't happen in the 2D games either...]]). In fact, they actually manage to walk around like if they were on land ''and'' they manage to not have their headwear (or the Princess's hair) drift upward once.
* [[We Will Meet Again]]: King Koopa often said something to this tune, most often "He who koops and runs away lives to koop another day!" while performing a [[Villain Exit Stage Left]].
* [[We Will Meet Again]]: King Koopa often said something to this tune, most often "He who koops and runs away lives to koop another day!" while performing a [[Villain Exit Stage Left]].
* [[Weird Trade Union]]: Mario and Luigi had a flashback where they were part of a plumbers' union. The weird part is that it had stringent physical fitness requirements.
* [[Weird Trade Union]]: Mario and Luigi had a flashback where they were part of a plumbers' union. The weird part is that it had stringent physical fitness requirements.
* [[Wheel O Feet]]: Complete with a sound effect that sounded like the vine-climbing sound sped up.
* [[Wheel-O-Feet]]: Complete with a sound effect that sounded like the vine-climbing sound sped up.
* [[Wrong Turn At Albuquerque]]: The [[Christmas Episode]] has Toad making a wrong turn at "that last iceberg", resulting in the group winding up at the North Pole.
* [[Wrong Turn At Albuquerque]]: The [[Christmas Episode]] has Toad making a wrong turn at "that last iceberg", resulting in the group winding up at the North Pole.
* [[You Can't Go Home Again]]: "Brooklyn Bound" did focus on the duo finding a way back home, but they opt to stay in order to protect the Princess.
* [[You Can't Go Home Again]]: "Brooklyn Bound" did focus on the duo finding a way back home, but they opt to stay in order to protect the Princess.

Revision as of 18:09, 8 January 2014

Hey, paisanos! It's the Super Mario Bros. Super Show!


The Super Mario Bros. Super Show was a 1989 animated/live action Di C production was an Animated Adaptation of Nintendo's flagship games, featuring the adventures of those plucky plumbers from Brooklyn (although Yoshi's Island eventually revealed that they were born in the Mushroom Kingdom), the Super Mario Bros. Mario is voiced and portrayed live by professional wrestler Captain Lou Albano, with Danny Wells as Luigi.

The show was presented in a Three Shorts style, where one live-action story is split into two parts and straddles an animated short. The live-action short features the brothers in Brooklyn before they were sucked into the Mushroom Kingdom, providing plumbing duties for normal joes (like Dr. Frankenstein) and celebrities (like Lyle Alzado and Cyndi Lauper) alike. The animated short features Mario and Luigi in the Mushroom Kingdom, looking for a way to get home and save Princess Toadstool's kingdom from the evil [1].

The show ran four days a week in syndication, with Fridays reserved for a cartoon based on The Legend of Zelda.

Now available on Hulu (Region Locked) Not to be confused with the The Adventures of Super Mario Bros 3 or Super Mario World.


The Super Mario Bros. Super Show contains examples of:

  • And Now You Must Marry Me: "Do You, Princess Toadstool, Take This Koopa..."
  • Attack of the 50 Foot Whatever: Koopa becomes a giant in two episodes. So does Mario in one of these two.
  • The Blank: Indiana Joe from "Raiders of the Lost Mushroom" is literally drawn without an actual face.
  • Brown Note: In one episode, Koopa is defeated by the playing of The Legend of Zelda theme song. Seriously.
  • Captain Ersatz: Stand-ins for Indiana Jones [the above-mentioned Indiana Joe], Robin Hood [Hooded Robin] and Elvis Presley [Elvin Parsley], among others, appear.
  • Catch Phrase: Koopa had two: "He who Koops and runs away lives to Koop another day!" and "Koopa Pack, ATTACK!"
  • Celebrity Paradox: Captain Lou Albano played Mario in both the live-action and animated segments of the show. In a particularly memorable live-action segment, Luigi mentions that Mario idolizes Captain Lou, who goes missing. Cyndi Lauper then shows up to lead a search to find Albano. Albano appears at the end of the episode, shortly after Mario leaves...
  • Christmas Episode: "Koopa Klaus".
  • Clumsy Copyright Censorship: Most of the episodes featured a cover song during an action sequence. When the show was reran in the early 1990s, these were removed and replaced with BGM from the series. In many instances, the cover songs were the highlights of the episodes, as the subject matter often tied into the action (for example, "Proud Mary" played in "Rollin' Down the River", an episode taking place on a steamboat; "Bad" by Michael Jackson is played in the episode, "King Mario of Cramalot", after Mario says, "I'm bad!"; "Thriller" by the same Michael Jackson in "Count Koopula", an episode taking place in Koopa's haunted castle), so their removal really hurt part of the show's appeal.
  • Continuity Nod: In the live-action segment "Defective Gadgetry", Mario discovers and subsequently tosses away a dead goldfish named Kenneth, whom Mario had to look after and whom he unwittingly killed in the segment "Goodbye, Mr. Fish".
  • Cover Version: Nearly every episode featured a cover song of a famous song, such as "Bad", "Thriller", and "Beat It".
  • Crossover: Two live-action segments had the Mario Bros. meet Inspector Gadget (played by Maurice La Marche, no less).
    • Capt. Lou Albano also managed to get a couple WWE wrestlers on the show, such as Sgt. Slaughter and Rowdy Roddy Piper.
  • Dance Sensation: Do the Mario!
  • Demoted to Extra: Clawgrip got this bad. A boss in the second game, he was not only reduced to a mook, but a generic mook.

 "Look out! A clawgrip!"

  1. Bowser
  2. fuck
  3. hump