The Super Mario Bros. Super Show aka: The Super Mario Bros Super Show
Hey, paisanos! It's the Super Mario Bros. Super Show!
The Super Mario Bros. Super Show was a 1989 animated/live action DiC 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 King Koopa
Catchphrase: 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...
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".
The Faceless: Indiana Joe, a one-shot character, literally did not have a face.
Friend or Idol Decision: The group finds another plumber who got stranded in the Mushroom Kingdom. He had finished building a machine that could get back to Brooklyn, but it had a short window of use. The Mario brothers have to choose whether to go back home or save Princess Toadstool and Toad from King Koopa, whose theme of the week was Koopa Khan. Here's a hint on what they chose: this isn't the series finale.
Another episode has them actually get back to Brooklyn... but find out that King Koopa and his Koopa Pack had followed them and were taking over the city. They end up having to lure Koopa back to the Mushroom Kingdom and destroy the pathway to Brooklyn, thus returning to the old status quo.
Idiot Ball: In the live-action episode "Goodbye, Mr. Fish", Mario is stopped from dropping a meatball into Kenneth's fishbowl by Luigi, yet Mario proceeds to do it anyway.
Insistent Terminology: Bowser was always referred to as "King Koopa", and never by his first name. Averted with the Princess; "Toadstool" was her Western name until 1996, years after this cartoon ended production.
He did refer to himself by his full name, King Bowser Koopa, at one point in the series.
Insult Backfire: Koopa often replies to being insulted by thanking the offender in some way.
Leitmotif: Since the show re-arranges most of the music from the first two Mario games, the tunes are indicative of the character or type of environment that is currently on-screen. Examples: The Star theme plays when Mario gets a star.
Lightning Can Do Anything: "Bad Rap": An electrical outlet boosts Mario to Super Mario (after zapping the hell out of him).
Musical Episode: "Bad Rap" is performed entirely in (awful) rap.
No One Could Survive That: In "Toad Warriors", Kar-Krazy Koopa blasts a fortress where the heroes are hiding. Though he immediately jeers like he assumes he's defeated his opponents, in the very next scene he refuses Mouser's insistence on the same outcome, thinking that the heroes might be lying low as a trick. It takes a couple more potshots and more urging from Mouser until Koopa finally agrees to move in, which is also when Mario & Co. initiate the plan they had just developed.
Obviously Evil: King Koopa and the Koopa Pack. The show, due to its pastiche nature, offered most genres' worth of Obviously Evil design. Because it's a comedic show, though, the lowest Mooks are occasionally given Affably Evil moments when they think nobody is looking.
On The Next: Each episode would feature Mario, Luigi or another character in the live-action segments introducing such a segment for that week's The Legend Of Zelda. That meant for different previews for one episode.
Once per Episode: The Mario Bros. battling Koopa Troopas to the beat of old pop music. Examples include Mario & Luigi fighting ninjas ("Kung Fu Fighting") and redcoats in 1776 ("He's a Rebel").
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 almost a decade beforeMario 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.
Rock Bottom: In one episode, Mario and friends are thrown into a dungeon. Mario tells Luigi that things could be worse. Luigi asks him how, and Mario tells him that the ceiling could flatten them like a pizza. Right on cue,the ceiling starts descending on them. Mario, undaunted, says that water could flood the room until they drown like rats. You know what happens next. Mario, still keeping his cool, says he could think of other things that could be worse, but Luigi promptly shuts him up.
Save the Villain: Subverted in the Christmas episode: Koopa, who has taken Santa Claus captive at this point and is threatening to throw him into the icy water below, stupidly causes an avalanche. Mario uses his plumbers' snake to rescue St. Nick, but instead of doing the same for the Koopa King, he gestures to the reptile that he'll just have to jump into the water himself (which, surprisingly, he survives).
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 straighter than an arrow.
Twist Ending: In the episode "Neatness Counts". the brothers try to fix Nicole Eggert's sink, but manage to get her all messy. They try to keep her from getting messier, but fail at every turn. At the end, Nicole thanks them for getting her ready for a "Sloppy Party" she's attending that night.
Uncanny Family Resemblance: Each of the Mario Bros.' relatives who visited them in the live-action segments were played by the same actors as the Bros. themselves.
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."
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.
Wheel o' Feet: Complete with a sound effect that sounded like the vine-climbing sound sped up.