Super Smash Bros.: The Movie (2007 film)

Super Smash Bros.: The Movie is a 2007 computer-animated action-adventure superhero comedy film directed by Shigeru Miyamoto and Chris Wedge, produced by Ayika Sakamoto, Kensuke Tanabe and Lori Forte based on a screenplay by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and a story by Masahiro Sakurai, translated into English by Gerry Swallow. It features the voices of Charles Martinet, Jen Taylor, Kenneth Wendell James, Grant Kirkhope, Andrew Sabiston, Rebecca Denise, Alésia Tokoyo Glidewell, Jonathan Potts, Bonnie Jean Wilbur, Jim Walker, Jay Ward, Dex Manley, Catherine Disher, Scarlett Johansson, Amy Birnbaum, Ted Lewis, Eric Newsome, Sarah Natochenny, Kate Bristol, Sean Schemmel, Rachael Lillis, Eric Kelso, Dakota Fanning, Lani Minella, Dan Woren, Greg Chun, Spike Spencer, David Hayter, Jason Griffith, Freddie Highmore, and Jeff Manning.

Set in the fictional Smash-verse, a brand new worldwide tournament was happening in just 10 days. Mario, Peach, Donkey Kong, Diddy Kong, Samus, Zero-Suit Samus, Link, Zelda, Fox McCloud, Popo, Nana, Yoshi, Kirby, King Dedede, Pikachu, and many others, are training for the big tournament, and one will be crowned the greatest fighter of the year. Mario, an all-time winning champion, had his doubts on winning, after hearing that Donkey Kong had been training ever since the previous tournament the year prior.

Development on a film based on Super Smash Bros. was first conceived in 2000 after the critical success of Super Smash Bros. 64 for the Nintendo 64. Director Shigeru Miyamoto had a plan of making a cinematic SSB film, though never came to full agreement until 2003. 20th Century Fox and Paramount Pictures had approached Nintendo about a film adaptation to the popularity of the series, after the success of Super Smash Bros. Melee. Miyamoto, with producers Ayika Sakamoto and Kensuke Tanabe and writer Masahiro Sakurai, agreed on a film based on the series. Production began in July 2003 and wrapped up in April 2007.

Produced by 20th Century Animation, Paramount Pictures, Legendary Pictures, Regency Enterprises, Nintendo Films and Nintendo Animation, with Sony Pictures Imageworks and Rhythm & Hues Studios providing animation services, Super Smash Bros.: The Movie had its world premiere on June 17, 2007 at the Regency Village Theater in Westwood Village, Los Angeles and was theatrically released five days later on June 22, 2007 in the United States by 20th Century Fox, and on June 25, 2007 in other territories by Paramount Pictures. It was acclaimed by critics and audiences alike, praising its animation, visual effects, plot, musical score by Brian Tyler, voice cast (particularly Martinet, Taylor, Denise, Potts, Walker, Sabiston, Birnbaum and Bristol), humor, themes, and emotional weight, with many praising its use of source material, though some criticized the 115 minute runtime. It was a box office hit, grossing $875.6 million worldwide on its budget of $190-$250 million.

Plot
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Cast

 * Charles Martinet as Mario, Luigi, and Wario
 * Jen Taylor as Princess Peach
 * Kenneth Wendell James as Bowser
 * Grant Kirkhope as Donkey Kong
 * Andrew Sabiston as Diddy Kong
 * Sabiston also provides the voice of Yoshi
 * Rebecca Denise as Samus
 * Alésia Toyoko Glidewell as Zero Suit Samus
 * Jonathan Potts as Link
 * Bonnie Jean Wilbur as Zelda
 * Wilbur also provides the voice of Sheik
 * Tara Strong as Toon Link
 * Jim Walker as Fox McCloud
 * Jay Ward as Wolf
 * Dex Manley as Falco Lombardi
 * Manley also provides the voice of R.O.B.
 * Catherine Disher as Popo
 * Scarlett Johansson as Nana
 * Amy Birnbaum as Kirby
 * Ted Lewis as King Dedede
 * Eric Newsome as Meta Knight
 * Sarah Natochenny as Ash Ketchum
 * Kate Bristol as Pikachu
 * Sean Schemmel as Lucario
 * Rachael Lillis as Jigglypuff
 * Eric Kelso as Captain Falcon
 * Dakota Fanning as Ness
 * Lani Minella as Lucas
 * Dan Woren as Mr. Game & Watch
 * Greg Chun as Ike
 * Spike Spencer as Marth
 * David Hayter as Solid Snake
 * Jason Griffith as Sonic the Hedgehog
 * Freddie Highmore as Pit
 * Jeff Manning as the Announcer
 * Manning also provides the voice of Master Hand

Development
The hard-planned development first came up in the year 2000, after the critical success of Super Smash Bros. for the Nintendo 64 console. Shigeru Miyamoto had once conceived the idea of a cinematic Smash Bros. film that year, though the company had declined the idea initially at the time, due to the critical and commercial failure of Super Mario Bros. (1993). Miyamoto had tried explaining ways that the cinematic Smash Bros. film couldn't fail, though most employees were still skeptical on the film.

In 2003, the idea was brought up again, and the employees were now thinking of the idea being a reality. Ayika Sakamoto and Kensuke Tanabe, two producers responsible for the Smash Bros. games, was hired to produce the theatrical film, which would be a fully computer-animated film. Around the same time, 20th Century Fox and Paramount Pictures had approached the company prior to the events mentioned before, and Shigeru Miyamoto gladly accepted the idea, and had shared it with employees at Nintendo. Chris Wedge of Blue Sky Studios served as director of the film with Miyamoto, while Lori Forte served as producer with Ayika Sakamoto and Kensuke Tanabe.

The storyboarding process began in July 2003. Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, a film production and scriptwriting duo, was hired to write the screenplay of the film, with Masahiro Sakurai providing a scripted story. Since it was in Japanese, Gerry Swallow helped translate the script into English. The storyboarding process concluded on November 5, 2005.

Casting
In April 2004, it was revealed that Charles Martinet would voice Mario, Luigi, and Wario in the film, along with Jen Taylor, Kenneth Wendell James, Grant Kirkhope and Andrew Sabiston voicing Princess Peach (Taylor), Bowser (James), Donkey Kong (Kirkhope), Diddy Kong and Yoshi (Sabiston), respectively.

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Visual effects and animation
The visual effects and animation was provided by Sony Pictures Imageworks, with additional work done in its Canadian studio, with additional visual effects provided by the Los Angeles-based Rhythm & Hues Studios.

Soundtrack
"Main article: Super Smash Bros.: The Movie (soundtrack)"The music for Super Smash Bros.: The Movie was composed by Brian Tyler. Original music samples from Super Smash Bros. and Super Smash Bros. Melee were re-orchestrated by Tyler. The score's album was released on Varese Sarabande on June 22, 2007, coinciding with the film's release.

Release
Super Smash Bros.: The Movie premiered at the Regency Village Theater on June 17, 2007 in Westwood Village, Los Angeles, and was later theatrically released on June 22, 2007 in the United States by 20th Century Fox, and on June 25, 2007 in other territories by Paramount Pictures. The film was rated PG by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) for violence, rude humor and mild language.

Marketing
Super Smash Bros.: The Movie was marketed alongside the upcoming fighting game Super Smash Bros. Brawl, which was still in its finalization process. The first teaser poster for the film was revealed on February 28, 2007, which depicted the Smash Ball, with a golden glow shining around it, with shadows of Mario, Peach, Donkey Kong, Link, Star-Fox, Kirby, Samus, Captain Falcon, and Pikachu present in front of the Smash Ball, with the text: "Prepare for the big day." under it.

Home media
Super Smash Bros.: The Movie was released on DVD, Blu-ray and Universal Media Disc (UMD) on September 5, 2007 by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment and Paramount Home Entertainment.

Box office
Super Smash Bros.: The Movie opened theatrically in North America and Japan on June 22, 2007 and peaked at #1 with its opening of $102.1 million on its first day. The film grossed $358.5 million in the United States and Canada and $517.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $875.6 million on its budget of $190-$250 million.

Critical response
Super Smash Bros.: The Movie received near critical acclaim upon release, with many considering it one of the greatest films of all time, and one of the greatest video game films of all time. Review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reports an approval rating of 97% based on 288 critic reviews, with an average rating of 8.55/10. The site's critical consensus reads: "Gorgeously animated, heart-pounding, and possibly the greatest action movie from Nintendo yet, Super Smash Bros. can easily hype up any fan of the original video games with its more mature themes compared to other films, and possibly some of the greatest visuals for the beloved characters." On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 91 out of 100 based on 28 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Audiences polled by CinemaScore assigned the film a rare grade "A+" on its scale of A+ to F.

Trivia
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