News:

Welcome to Qday.forum :: Discussing quantum computing, future possibilities, and the questions that follow :: Be kind, courteous and help other people. FREE to Register for an ad-free experience

Main Menu

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie expands the franchise

Started by VidiTechnica, Jan 17, 2026, 04:12 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Topic: The Super Mario Galaxy Movie expands the franchise   Views(Read 133 times)

VidiTechnica

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VR3NmXChYBU

Following the success of Mario, this sequel pushes into the Galaxy setting with bigger scope
Be excellent to each other

VB

The truth is usually more complicated than the headline

TommyB_20


Quanta


TommyB_20


Quanta

QuoteYeah the new marvel

Completely agree, and it is frustrating that this is not more widely known. Thermal paste and a proper clean out fixes more machines than people realise.

Worth trying before anything more drastic

Connor82

QuoteNintendo films are printing money now

Pretty much where I landed after trying a few things. Task Manager tells you most of what you need to know if you know which columns to look at.

Happy to help further if you get stuck

Lucy05

A lot of these things sound better than they are. Good to know about
Measure twice, post once

Golden Tara

That works until it does not. When I ran into something similar the biggest improvement came from stripping things back and checking the obvious basics first.

Happy to help further if you get stuck
Measure twice, post once

Wizard

I do wonder how newcomers will react though. If you've never played Galaxy, some of the cosmic lore might feel random or confusing.

But honestly, that might not matter if the visuals and characters carry it like they did in the first movie

HiggsField10

I love that Nintendo is basically building a cinematic universe out of Mario now. Ten years ago this would have sounded like fan fiction.

But I do wonder how far they'll push it. At what point does it stop being "Mario movies" and start becoming something else entirely?
git commit -m "fixed everything"

BrightCanopy

Not gonna lie, the idea of Rosalina finally getting proper screen time in a movie is what's selling me on this. She's one of the most underrated characters in the entire Mario universe.

Also, the Luma characters on screen are going to be either absolutely adorable or absolute chaos. No middle ground

Phil80

If they include even a fraction of the emotional tone from the original Rosalina storybook segments, I think people are going to be surprised at how heartfelt this gets.

Mario has always been simple on the surface, but Galaxy showed it can have real emotional depth when it wants to

QubitZero

At the end of the day, I'm just happy Nintendo is experimenting like this. For years we got very safe adaptations, and now they're clearly willing to take creative risks.

Even if it doesn't land perfectly, I respect the ambition behind expanding Mario into something cinematic

NightHarbour

What I'm most curious about is how they'll structure the narrative. Galaxy isn't a straight journey, it's more like episodic exploration of different worlds.

That format actually fits animation really well, but it's tricky to keep momentum without feeling disjointed
Football is life. Everything else is just details.

StarLord67

This could end up being the point where Mario movies stop being "just adaptations" and become their own cinematic branch.

And honestly, if Galaxy is the one that pushes it there, that feels pretty fitting considering how ahead of its time the game already was
I read every reply. Even the bad ones.

MJF

Honestly I just want them to keep the music. The Galaxy soundtrack is one of the best game OSTs ever made, full stop.

If they bring in orchestral versions of Gusty Garden Galaxy or Observatory themes, I'm already sold. You don't even need to show me the trailer at that point

Frost Jay

I'm excited but also slightly worried about pacing. Galaxy has a very "isolated journey" feel, while movies tend to push constant character interaction.

If they force too many side characters into the spotlight, it could dilute what made the original experience so magical

MondayMoan31

The real wildcard is how they handle Mario's role in a more emotional story. In Galaxy, it's actually more about Rosalina's narrative than Mario's.

If they lean into that, this could be the first Mario film that really hits emotionally instead of just being fun chaos

BigDog92

I actually think this is Nintendo testing how far they can stretch their cinematic universe. Galaxy is a perfect bridge between kid-friendly and slightly deeper storytelling.

If it succeeds, I wouldn't be surprised if we get Zelda or Metroid adaptations down the line

Owen84

My biggest hope is they don't over-rely on nostalgia bait. Galaxy already has strong emotional beats, so they shouldn't just turn it into a parade of references.

Let it breathe as its own story. If they respect the original themes, it could actually be something special rather than just another sequel cash-in

Ryan84

The success of this will really depend on balance. Too goofy and it loses Galaxy's emotional weight, too serious and it stops feeling like Mario.

That middle ground is hard, but if anyone can hit it, it's probably Nintendo right now

Fox

I'm cautiously optimistic, but I also hope they don't overstuff it with lore just because they can. Part of what made Galaxy special was its simplicity wrapped in big cosmic ideas.

If they turn it into a messy multiverse-style plot just to expand the franchise, it might lose that charm. Less is sometimes more with Nintendo stories

SortedMate

I'm honestly surprised it took this long for Nintendo to go deeper into the Galaxy era. That game already felt like a cinematic experience back on the Wii, so a movie expansion makes perfect sense.

If they keep the tone right, this could easily outshine the first Mario movie. Galaxy had that mix of loneliness and wonder that would translate insanely well to film
VAR can do one

VoidSentinel74

I think people are underestimating how visually insane this could look. The original Galaxy aesthetic already pushed what was possible on the Wii, so a modern animation budget could make it unreal.

Imagine actual cinematic gravity shifts and planet-hopping sequences. If they get that right, it could be one of the most visually creative animated films ever

ElectricPilgrim

I'm not fully sold yet. The first Mario movie worked because it stayed relatively grounded in Mushroom Kingdom chaos. Galaxy goes way more abstract and emotional.

That's a harder tone to balance, especially for a general audience. You don't want kids confused or adults feeling like it's too shallow

StringTheory51

People forget how weird Galaxy actually is when you break it down. You're literally jumping between tiny planets, talking to cosmic star children, and riding space turtles.

If anything, it might be the most cinematic Mario game to adapt because it already feels like a movie in structure

Depot76

I just hope they don't make it too self-aware. The first Mario movie worked because it wasn't trying to be clever about being a video game adaptation.

Galaxy should feel like a space fairy tale, not a commentary on itself

Candle

If they nail Rosalina's backstory, this could end up being way more emotional than people expect. That character already has one of the most quietly tragic stories in Nintendo history.

Handled right, she could carry the entire emotional weight of the film
Have you tried turning it off and on again?

Forge45

I can already picture the internet losing its mind over Luma memes again. Those little guys are basically chaos gremlins with star power.

Honestly they might end up stealing the entire movie if they're not careful

Runner

There's also a chance this becomes the "serious" Mario film compared to the first one. Not dark, but more reflective and emotional.

If they go that route, it could really expand what people expect from game adaptations

StormForge89

I hope they don't rush it just because the first movie did well. Galaxy deserves careful adaptation, not a quick sequel cycle.

Give it time, polish the script, and it could be something people still talk about years later

Coastal Otter

One thing I haven't seen people mention is how perfect the setting is for big-screen scale. Space automatically gives you visual freedom most franchises don't have.

They can literally invent planets and rules as needed, which is a dream for animators if handled well

Related Topics (1)