Plus: That sci-fi twist in the 'Paradise' Season 2 finale, a smart new remake on Peacock, tons of trailers, & more.Plus: That sci-fi twist in the 'Paradise' Season 2 finale, a smart new remake on Peacock, tons of trailers, & more.
Inverse Daily
‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Review: Nintendo’s Newest Adaptation Is A Surprisingly Hollow Sequel
‘The Super Mario Galaxy Movie’ Review: Nintendo’s Newest Adaptation Is A Surprisingly Hollow Sequel

You could take Mega Man, Master Chief, Kratos, and half a dozen other popular video game characters and they would all still pale in comparison to the cultural presence of Mario, the Italian plumber whose bright red jumpsuit and “M” emblazoned cap have become some of the most recognizable images in all of gaming. Since jumping onto the scene with 1981’s original Donkey Kong, Mario (and inevitably his brother Luigi) have become flagship characters at Nintendo, appearing in over 200 games (only 24 of them being mainline Super Mario Bros. releases), as well as countless supplemental media including a handful of TV shows, comics, and of course, movies.

The 90s Super Mario Bros. movie is one of the most notorious failures of all time, and specifically from the standpoint of an adaptation, it’s easy to see why. There’s nothing wrong with tasteful deviations from the source material, but there was no engagement whatsoever with the colorful, surreal unreality of the Mushroom Kingdom or the iconic locales from the games; it was an adaptation that felt embarrassed to be based on a video game. Three decades later, 2023’s The Super Mario Bros Movie and its sequel, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie (both directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic) seem to have almost the exact opposite problem — they’re immensely entertaining if you want to be reminded of the existence of the games, but incredibly frustrating if you’re looking for anything resembling depth or the kind of substance kids movies should strive for.

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Rewind
20 Years Ago, A Gory Sci-Fi Horror Flop Paved The Way For A Crucial Superhero Director
Universal Pictures
20 Years Ago, A Gory Sci-Fi Horror Flop Paved The Way For A Crucial Superhero Director
'Slither' turns 20 in 2026, and while his budgets have gotten bigger, as a filmmaker James Gunn hasn't changed.
Jake Gyllenhaal in 'Source Code.'
Summit Entertainment
15 Years Ago, One Underrated Sci-Fi Thriller Set A New Time-Loop Standard
In 2011, 'Source Code' created a new kind of time-loop sci-fi thriller. Does it hold up?
Lon Chaney Jr, Lionel Atwill
Universal/Kobal/Shutterstock
85 Years Ago, A Forgotten Sci-Fi Thriller Introduced A Horror Icon
Without 'Man-Made Monster,' Lon Chaney Jr. of 'The Wolf Man' fame may never have become a Universal Monsters icon.
Trailers
Spoilers!
What Will Happen In 'Paradise' Season 3? Writer Teases Massive Time Travel Twist
What Will Happen In 'Paradise' Season 3? Writer Teases Massive Time Travel Twist
The Hulu series swung big at the end of Season 2, and now it's going to aim for an even wilder twist.
'Super Mario Galaxy Movie' Post-Credits Explained: What Spinoffs Are Next?
'Super Mario Galaxy Movie' Post-Credits Explained: What Spinoffs Are Next?
A throwaway plot point and the post-credits scene from The Super Mario Galaxy Movie might indicate where the franchise is heading next.
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Peacock Just Quietly Added The Paranoid Horror-Comedy We Need Right Now
Peacock Just Quietly Added The Paranoid Horror-Comedy We Need Right Now

“Does anyone really know their neighbors?” It’s the question that drives many a paranoid suburbianone more so than The Burbs, the self-aware sequel to the late ‘80s comedy starring Tom Hanks. The Peacock series comes from Celeste Hughey, who’s long demonstrated a love for the secrets and suspicion that lurk on quiet cul-de-sacs with shows like Dead to Me and Palm Royale.

“Everyone just wants to be in everyone's business,” Hughey tells Inverse at the 2026 SXSW Film & TV Festival.

It’s a tale as old as time, one that’s been a thing since neighborhoods were invented. “And still, we all look out the windows,” Hughey adds.

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