In 1989 the two most famous plumbers from Brooklyn burst out of the Nintendo game world and onto television screens across America. The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! aired weekday afternoons and brought Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool and King Koopa more thrilling adventures as cartoon characters. And if that weren't enough, each episode also contained live-action segments featuring Mario and Luigi running their Brooklyn plumbing shop - all before they were flushed down a drainpipe into the Mushroom World.
In 1989 the two most famous plumbers from Brooklyn burst out of the Nintendo game world and onto television screens across America. The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! aired weekday afternoons and brought Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool and King Koopa more thrilling adventures as cartoon characters. And if that weren't enough, each episode also contained live-action segments featuring Mario and Luigi running their Brooklyn plumbing shop - all before they were flushed down a drainpipe into the Mushroom World.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! is primarily an apolitical children's adventure series focused on universal themes of good versus evil and heroism. Its core conflict of stopping a cartoon villain does not align with any specific political ideology, leading to a neutral rating.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! features traditional casting consistent with its source material, without any explicit race or gender swaps of established roles. The narrative focuses on adventure and comedy, and does not include critical portrayals of traditional identities or explicit DEI themes.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! is an animated children's series from the late 1980s, primarily focused on the adventures of Mario and Luigi. The show contains no discernible LGBTQ+ characters or themes, resulting in no portrayal to evaluate.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! faithfully adapts the established genders of core characters from the Super Mario Bros. video games, such as Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool, and King Koopa, without any changes to their canonical gender.
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! features live-action and animated portrayals of characters like Mario and Luigi, who are consistently depicted as white, aligning with their established race in the source video games. No characters established as one race are portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources