Itll make $1 billion — and it sucks

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Itll make $1 billion — and it sucks…

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THE SUPER MARIO GALAXY MOVIE

Running time: 98 minutes. Rated PG (motion, delicate violence, and impolite humor). In theaters.

In a good world, fed-up audiences would say, “Let’s-a-go see something else.”

Alas, “The Super Mario Galaxy Movie,” the exhausting sequel to 2023’s “The Super Mario Bros. Movie,” will make $1 billion just like its terrible predecessor.

That which brings me agony is, sadly, massively profitable.

Apparently it doesn’t matter that all Mario, Luigi and Peach do for a screeching hour and 40 minutes is partake in a tedious chain of overlong chase and combat scenes.

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Who cares that the superstar voice performing from the likes of Chris Pratt, Charlie Day, Anya Taylor-Joy, Keegan-Michael Key and Brie Larson is so flavorless, the actors in some way sound neither like their characters nor themselves?

Why harp on the hardly there, barely understandable plot (you need the Rosetta Stone to decipher its Wikipedia web page) in which Bowser Jr. goals to destroy a bunch of planets I believe?

So what if somebody named Princess Rosalina (Larson), who has no, um, traits, is inexplicably the mom to lots of of speaking celestial stars called Lumas? Why dwell on the feeble villainy of Baby Bowser (Benny Safdie), an annoying little rascal who kidnaps the princess to steal her magic?

Who are we to decide the lackluster high quality of the galaxy’s many locales? A “Blade Runner”-like city metropolis, a Vegas on line casino fort and a beehive ruled over by an awkward giant queen are all boring and endure from deadly monotony.

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Why hassle complaining that Mario (Pratt) and Luigi (Day) are cardboard heroes with no real drive past generic do-goodery? Even when they enter driving bikes through the desert, they’re Bore-ence of Arabia.

Here’s the factor: This migraine of a follow-up from co-directors Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic banks on audiences not minding that they’re being force-fed bottom-of-the-Donkey-Kong-barrel intellectual-property vomit to promote merch.

And it’s a fairly secure guess that viewers received’t, for they’re youngsters and a curious subset of peculiar adults. A few grown-ups at my screening applauded the arrival of Fox McCloud (Glen Powell), a pilot who’s principally Han Solo with fur. Those people need skilled help.

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There is nothing to like or admire in this groaner galaxy. The film has the unconfident, powder-sugar tone of a Disney direct-to-video release, like “The Lion King 1½,” paired with the overeager promoting of an web pop-up.

That’s definitely why cuddly Yoshi’s right here this time, voiced by Donald Glover according to the credit. The creators may as properly have animated a price tag onto him.  

Some Super Mario maniacs may call me unreasonable for demanding that a film based on a video sport about adventurous plumbers be one thing more substantial than a lazily dramatized video sport about adventurous plumbers. But endearing characters and targeted tales needs to be a given at an animated movie.

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“Super Mario Galaxy” hasn’t acquired any of that. Even Jack Black’s Bowser, an evil turtle who yells, “Mario! I was a terrible father!,” isn’t remotely humorous this time.

At the end of the first film, Peach downsized the evil shell dweller and trapped him in a doll’s home as punishment. His newly mini standing, portrait-painting pastime and efforts to restrain his volcanic mood are lame. Poor Black scores a Tenacious F.

None of my whining will make a dent in the box-office armor of “Mario” though.

You can all but hear it shouting, “It’s-a-me! Cash grab!”

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