The Super Mario Bros. Movie

The Super Mario Bros. Movie is a U.S.-Japanese computer-animated film directed by Teen Titans Go! developers Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic, based on the popular video game franchise, produced by  in association with  and distributed by. It was released in the on April 5th, 2023.

Cast

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Music

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International versions

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Trivia

 * Charles Martinet voices Giuseppe (a man who speaks with the exact same accent and voice that Martinet used for Mario in the Mario games) not just in the original English version, but also in a very large amount of official foreign-language dubs (though strangely not in the Arabic, Indonesian, Russian, or Putonghua Mandarin dubs). He also reprises his role as Mario and Luigi's father in a smaller number of dubs—namely European Spanish, Catalan, European French, Canadian French, Italian and German.
 * While Giuseppe is still voiced by Charles Martinet in the Japanese dub, his line is for some reason retained in English from the original English version—presumably a nod to his voice being retained in all localizations of Mario games where he voices the character. This is unlike all other dubs where Martinet still voices the character; in those, Martinet recorded his line to be in the same language as the dub.
 * Interestingly the film would be the very last time he voiced characters in something Mario related as on August 21 2023 it was announced that Charles Martinet would be stepping down from his roles in the series for currently unspecified reasons and would become the “Mario Ambassador” for the series instead.
 * In most official dubs, the "Mario Brothers Rap" and "Peaches" are dubbed into the target language. However, both of the aforementioned songs remain in undubbed English in the Vietnamese dub, while only the former of the two songs remains in undubbed English in the Danish, Swedish, Norwegian and Putonghua Mandarin dubs.
 * This is the first piece of Super Mario-related media to be dubbed into Estonian, Flemish, Canadian French, Georgian, Hindi, Central Kurdish, Latvian, Lithuanian, Malay, Slovak, Uyghur, Uzbek and Vietnamese; the other American-produced televised adaptations of the franchise, as well as the 1993 live-action film, were not dubbed into said languages.