The only other time I attended an empty screening, aside from my brother, was when I saw a morning screening of Minority Report. I won't forget it, because they turned off the movie right at the point when Tom Cruise's character learns he will murder someone. They thought no one was in the theater.
Who Saw This At The Theater?
Who Saw This At The Theater?
I did! My mother, brother and I were the only ones in the theater. They actually didn't want to screen it, due to the low attendance, but my mother FORCED them to show it. We had a ball and walked out with grins on our faces.
The only other time I attended an empty screening, aside from my brother, was when I saw a morning screening of Minority Report. I won't forget it, because they turned off the movie right at the point when Tom Cruise's character learns he will murder someone. They thought no one was in the theater.
What's your story?
The only other time I attended an empty screening, aside from my brother, was when I saw a morning screening of Minority Report. I won't forget it, because they turned off the movie right at the point when Tom Cruise's character learns he will murder someone. They thought no one was in the theater.
- LBD_Nytetrayn
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
First day, with a friend of mine, if memory serves me correctly.
My parents were less interested.
As for him, he doesn't care for the movie at all now, but we really dug it when we watched it.
--LBD "Nytetrayn"
My parents were less interested.
As for him, he doesn't care for the movie at all now, but we really dug it when we watched it.
--LBD "Nytetrayn"
Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
I did! With my dad and younger brother. We both got one of the souvenir button/pins! I remember going to see it super specifically and hearing the Mario theme in the opening thinking what a treat I was in for! The movie itself is a blur!!!
"What single celled organism did you evolve from?"
- WildWinger88
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
I saw it! Twice actually!! The first time was at a big theater nearby our house and I went with my mom, dad, and brother. I was about 5. The second time was a week later at sort of a cinema/dinner house during a Saturday afternoon. I loved the movie growing up.
"Here we go!" - Mario
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Prime Evil
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
Good grief...this thread makes me revisit a place I thought I'd long since banished to the furthest corners of my mind. Still, duty before reason...
Ah, let's see. When did this thing come out? 1991? 92? 93? One of those years. Hmm, I vaguely remember seeing it at Harlem Corners on Harlem Avenue in Burbank when they were still operating (it's now a beauty-school or somesuch). They were a "cheapies" movie-house that had good ticket deals...I definitely remember seeing "Toy Story" there (the film broke halfway through), and possibly "Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie" (I seem to have blocked that one out, funnily enough).
Or was it Ford City? Ach! I shall never remember completely. Harlem Corners seems to be the better bet...Ford City was Beauty and the Beast and Batman: Mask of the Phantasm on Christmas Day 1993. (Can't remember much of those two, either. Like I said, the furthest corners of my mind.)
I remember being caught up in the hype of the commercials and the 7-Eleven Slurpee promotion (one of you guys has to have the cups)...the main reason I wanted to see it, I think, was because of Toad caught in the Devo Thingy, and I just had to find out what was happening to him. (Bloody commercials didn't even show him turning into a Goomba, just his face going all loopy. Odd choice for a TV spot...)
It went straight to video, didn't it? I think we rented it from the video shop in the corner of Dominick's (yes, Dominick's had a video shop back then) and we somehow made a duplicate from two VCRs hooked up to the same TV. I had that for many years 'til the tape broke, and I remember hating the part where Koopa's forehead goes a bit funny.
Good heavens, I feel old. Someone pass the Geritol.
Ah, let's see. When did this thing come out? 1991? 92? 93? One of those years. Hmm, I vaguely remember seeing it at Harlem Corners on Harlem Avenue in Burbank when they were still operating (it's now a beauty-school or somesuch). They were a "cheapies" movie-house that had good ticket deals...I definitely remember seeing "Toy Story" there (the film broke halfway through), and possibly "Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie" (I seem to have blocked that one out, funnily enough).
Or was it Ford City? Ach! I shall never remember completely. Harlem Corners seems to be the better bet...Ford City was Beauty and the Beast and Batman: Mask of the Phantasm on Christmas Day 1993. (Can't remember much of those two, either. Like I said, the furthest corners of my mind.)
I remember being caught up in the hype of the commercials and the 7-Eleven Slurpee promotion (one of you guys has to have the cups)...the main reason I wanted to see it, I think, was because of Toad caught in the Devo Thingy, and I just had to find out what was happening to him. (Bloody commercials didn't even show him turning into a Goomba, just his face going all loopy. Odd choice for a TV spot...)
It went straight to video, didn't it? I think we rented it from the video shop in the corner of Dominick's (yes, Dominick's had a video shop back then) and we somehow made a duplicate from two VCRs hooked up to the same TV. I had that for many years 'til the tape broke, and I remember hating the part where Koopa's forehead goes a bit funny.
Good heavens, I feel old. Someone pass the Geritol.
- LBD_Nytetrayn
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
Prime Evil wrote:Good grief...this thread makes me revisit a place I thought I'd long since banished to the furthest corners of my mind. Still, duty before reason...
Ah, let's see. When did this thing come out? 1991? 92? 93? One of those years. Hmm, I vaguely remember seeing it at Harlem Corners on Harlem Avenue in Burbank when they were still operating (it's now a beauty-school or somesuch). They were a "cheapies" movie-house that had good ticket deals...I definitely remember seeing "Toy Story" there (the film broke halfway through), and possibly "Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers: The Movie" (I seem to have blocked that one out, funnily enough).
1993.
Prime Evil wrote:I remember being caught up in the hype of the commercials and the 7-Eleven Slurpee promotion (one of you guys has to have the cups)...the main reason I wanted to see it, I think, was because of Toad caught in the Devo Thingy, and I just had to find out what was happening to him. (Bloody commercials didn't even show him turning into a Goomba, just his face going all loopy. Odd choice for a TV spot...)
I don't remember seeing the cups in the Merch section. I'd like to, though... wonder how hard they are to get a hold of...
Prime Evil wrote:It went straight to video, didn't it?
Nope, it was definitely in theaters first.
--LBD "Nytetrayn"
Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
^There are a few cups from 7-Eleven. I have two (I think), but there may be more.
Even less known is that they also had two (I think) Super Mario Bros-flavored slurpees. Plumber's Passion and Reptile Rasperry (I think, again.) And I have the plastic signs that were placed on the slurpee containers. I'll update with those eventually...
Even less known is that they also had two (I think) Super Mario Bros-flavored slurpees. Plumber's Passion and Reptile Rasperry (I think, again.) And I have the plastic signs that were placed on the slurpee containers. I'll update with those eventually...
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Prime Evil
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
LBD_Nytetrayn wrote:Prime Evil wrote:It went straight to video, didn't it?
Nope, it was definitely in theaters first.
--LBD "Nytetrayn"
I meant after it died a quick and painless death in the theaters.
Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
I went to see it in the theater, although it was so long ago I can't remember which one. It was a cheaper theater, though, because I didn't want to go the first week. Since I was a kid, I didn't understand that movies that bombed tended to get taken out of the main theaters quickly so I was surprised we didn't go to either one of the two spots I we normally went to to go see movies (both of which have been demolished and replaced with other buildings).
I remember missing the first five minutes of the movie because back then, I wanted to get to the theaters late to avoid all the boring trailers and the opening logo. Unfortunately, my dad and I got there too late. which meant I missed both the opening an the first couple of minutes (I later saw that part on TV, which cleared up some of my confusion as to how this parallel universe came to be). I had been reading about this movie in Game Players, so I knew it was going to be different from the games. While I wasn't disappointed since I had low expectations, I found the movie was okay. Not excellent, but not awful. There weren't that many people in the theater, but they weren't making catcalls at the film but watched it as if it were a normal movie.
I remember missing the first five minutes of the movie because back then, I wanted to get to the theaters late to avoid all the boring trailers and the opening logo. Unfortunately, my dad and I got there too late. which meant I missed both the opening an the first couple of minutes (I later saw that part on TV, which cleared up some of my confusion as to how this parallel universe came to be). I had been reading about this movie in Game Players, so I knew it was going to be different from the games. While I wasn't disappointed since I had low expectations, I found the movie was okay. Not excellent, but not awful. There weren't that many people in the theater, but they weren't making catcalls at the film but watched it as if it were a normal movie.
- Serum
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Re: Who Saw This At The Theater?
It pains me to admit this, but I didn't even know who Mario was until 1996.
My parents never really bought into the video-game thing until the Nintendo 64-- which I got on either my ninth birthday or Christmas of 1996. The first game I got on that system was Super Mario 64, both of which (the very same console and the cartridge) are still in pristine condition to this day.
However, it was not until the next year, 1997, a banner year, that I was made aware of the existence of a movie based on our favorite plumbers. I was watching a movie and I said to my Dad, "wouldn't it be cool if they made a movie out of Mario?" To which he replied: "Oh yeah, the Super Mario Bros. movie was on the Sci-Fi channel the other day, I wanted to call you but you weren't home," much to my shock and awe. Now, before you read on, you must know that when I was 9 or 10, Bob Hoskins was my favorite actor (and still is today) and I had no idea of his involvement in a Mario motion picture. So I said: "Oh my God, we got to rent it-- who plays Mario?" To which my jaw dropped to the center of the Earth when he replied "Your buddy, Bob Hoskins," who I admired for such movies as Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Mermaids. So we dropped everything we were doing and drove to the video-store and rented a copy of the movie.
Well, it blew me away then, and it blows me away now, every time I watch it. Bob Hoskins, albeit hating his experience on the project pulled through tried and true and delivered a powerful performance as Super Mario and I was introduced to a bunch of other actors like John Leguizamo, who I would go on to admire in Romeo + Juliet and Land of the Dead, as well as Dennis Hopper who is in two of my favorites: Mad Dog Morgan in which he plays the titular character, and in Tobe Hooper's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, which to this day is the only movie I've ever seen him play a hero and not a villain. (Incidentally, John Leguizamo and Dennis Hopper appear together on screen as adversaries once again in George Romero's Land of the Dead, which you should check out!) Other actors like Fisher Stevens I would enjoy in the "Short Circuit" films, and Samantha Mathis I already admired for Fern Gully, and would go on to enjoy her in American Psycho, in which she plays Christian Bale's affair. I was so young when I first saw the movie, I didn't care that it wasn't exactly like the games-- but I appreciated that they just went ahead and made a movie based on Super Mario Bros. That's something that has truly withstood the winds of time-- I still love the movie today as much as I did when I was a kid.
Even though it's not the best movie in the world, it is my favorite, and has been my favorite movie since the summer that, I think, truly concluded my childhood. In the years since, Super Mario Bros. continues to be a source of inspiration and happiness for me. And I thank everyone involved in the movie for that. And I know that in the years to come, with the possibilities of a director's cut on Blu-Ray and lots of special features, it will be a source of endless happiness for me for the rest of my life.
My parents never really bought into the video-game thing until the Nintendo 64-- which I got on either my ninth birthday or Christmas of 1996. The first game I got on that system was Super Mario 64, both of which (the very same console and the cartridge) are still in pristine condition to this day.
However, it was not until the next year, 1997, a banner year, that I was made aware of the existence of a movie based on our favorite plumbers. I was watching a movie and I said to my Dad, "wouldn't it be cool if they made a movie out of Mario?" To which he replied: "Oh yeah, the Super Mario Bros. movie was on the Sci-Fi channel the other day, I wanted to call you but you weren't home," much to my shock and awe. Now, before you read on, you must know that when I was 9 or 10, Bob Hoskins was my favorite actor (and still is today) and I had no idea of his involvement in a Mario motion picture. So I said: "Oh my God, we got to rent it-- who plays Mario?" To which my jaw dropped to the center of the Earth when he replied "Your buddy, Bob Hoskins," who I admired for such movies as Who Framed Roger Rabbit and Mermaids. So we dropped everything we were doing and drove to the video-store and rented a copy of the movie.
Well, it blew me away then, and it blows me away now, every time I watch it. Bob Hoskins, albeit hating his experience on the project pulled through tried and true and delivered a powerful performance as Super Mario and I was introduced to a bunch of other actors like John Leguizamo, who I would go on to admire in Romeo + Juliet and Land of the Dead, as well as Dennis Hopper who is in two of my favorites: Mad Dog Morgan in which he plays the titular character, and in Tobe Hooper's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, which to this day is the only movie I've ever seen him play a hero and not a villain. (Incidentally, John Leguizamo and Dennis Hopper appear together on screen as adversaries once again in George Romero's Land of the Dead, which you should check out!) Other actors like Fisher Stevens I would enjoy in the "Short Circuit" films, and Samantha Mathis I already admired for Fern Gully, and would go on to enjoy her in American Psycho, in which she plays Christian Bale's affair. I was so young when I first saw the movie, I didn't care that it wasn't exactly like the games-- but I appreciated that they just went ahead and made a movie based on Super Mario Bros. That's something that has truly withstood the winds of time-- I still love the movie today as much as I did when I was a kid.
Even though it's not the best movie in the world, it is my favorite, and has been my favorite movie since the summer that, I think, truly concluded my childhood. In the years since, Super Mario Bros. continues to be a source of inspiration and happiness for me. And I thank everyone involved in the movie for that. And I know that in the years to come, with the possibilities of a director's cut on Blu-Ray and lots of special features, it will be a source of endless happiness for me for the rest of my life.
What would you do without your big brother?
I'd like to give it a shot and find out.
I'd like to give it a shot and find out.
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