Clawgrip: Difference between revisions

From the Super Mario Wiki, the Mario encyclopedia
Jump to navigationJump to search
(In the cartoon's context, "lobster" is being used as an insult. He's clearly a crab.)
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:
|image=[[File:Clawgrip.png|200px]]<br>Artwork for ''Super Mario Advance''.
|image=[[File:Clawgrip.png|200px]]<br>Artwork for ''Super Mario Advance''.
|first_appearance=''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' ([[List of games by date#1988|1988]])
|first_appearance=''[[Super Mario Bros. 2]]'' ([[List of games by date#1988|1988]])
|species=[[Sidestepper]]
|species=[[Crab]]<br>[[Sidestepper]] (''[[Super Mario Advance]]'')
|latest_appearance=''[[Ultimate NES Remix]]'' ([[List of games by date#2014|2014]])
|latest_appearance=''[[Ultimate NES Remix]]'' ([[List of games by date#2014|2014]])
|latest_portrayal=[[Charles Martinet]] (2001)
|latest_portrayal=[[Charles Martinet]] (2001)

Revision as of 17:28, September 25, 2020

Template:Character-infobox Template:Quote2 Clawgrip (Clawglip in the cast roll of most versions) is a boss from Super Mario Bros. 2.

History

Super Mario series

Super Mario Bros. 2

Clawgrip's sprite, from the SNES remake of Super Mario Bros. 2.

Fought in World 5-3, Clawgrip attacks players by throwing boulders at them. In order to injure Clawgrip, these boulders need to be caught by the heroes and thrown back at him. After being hit five times, Clawgrip is defeated.

In Super Mario Advance, Clawgrip, instead of being a giant crab at the beginning of the battle against him, is simply a smaller Crab. Clawgrip is grown to his giant size when he is engulfed by several bubbles which resemble the ones Wart is capable of spitting. Once at this size, Clawgrip, in a stereotypical pirate accent, will exclaim "Yar! You'll make a tasty treat!" and begin to throw boulders. It is possible to hit him multiple times with one boulder if a player throws it so that it bounces off the wall behind him when he starts moving towards them. After defeating him, he will say: "Yar! You got me!", again in a pirate accent. He was voiced by Charles Martinet, who voiced all the bosses except Birdo and Robirdo.

BS Super Mario USA

Clawgrip's mugshot from BS Super Mario USA.

Clawgrip returns with the other bosses from Super Mario Bros. 2 in BS Super Mario USA. Like in the first game, Clawgrip serves as a mini-boss, and is fought in a similar way as in his battle from Super Mario Bros. 2. Despite the game's Japanese script, he has a tendency to lapse into English when he speaks,[1] possibly as a nod to his being an American addition.

The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!

Clawgrip, from The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! episode, "Mario of the Deep".

Clawgrip made three appearances in The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, where he, along with Mouser, Fryguy, and Tryclyde, was a minion of King Koopa instead of Wart. In all of his appearances on the show, Clawgrip wore a blue bandanna on his head.

Clawgrip's debut in The Super Mario Bros. Super Show! was in the episode "Rolling Down the River", where he manned the helm of Captain Koopa's ship, the Sinister Star, while Koopa was making Mario walk the plank. The Mouth of the River used a cannon to fire a Turnip at Clawgrip, knocking him down onto the ship's lower deck.

In "Pirates of Koopa", Clawgrip can be seen among the minions of Blackbeard Koopa waiting for his return to Pirate's Port.

Clawgrip's last appearance on the show was in "Mario of the Deep"; here, he attacks Mario, Luigi, Princess Toadstool, Toad and their Mermushroom companion in a sunken ship. The quintet avoid Clawgrip by jumping over him and going through a hatch that was too small for him to pass through. The characters commented that this Clawgrip was simply a Clawgrip, implying that Clawgrips are a species.

Nintendo Comics System

In Nintendo Comics System, Clawgrip, instead of being a single character, was portrayed as a species, all of whom seemed to work for King Bowser Koopa. In The Fish That Should've Gotten Away, several Clawgrips appear among the monsters trying to defeat Mario. Mario manages to avoid these Clawgrips, all the while being annoyed by Stanley the Talking Fish.

Nintendo Adventure Books

Clawgrip and some of his GLOM-created clones try to attack Mario while he is exploring the Mushroom Kingdom in Double Trouble, but he manages to avoid them.

In Pipe Down!, Clawgrip appears guarding a tunnel which leads to Pipe World under the Mushroom Palace, under the pretext of being a 'Toll Crab'. If Mario and Luigi give Clawgrip a noisemaker or a pair of boots, he will let them pass peacefully, but if they give him a balloon (which he accidentally pops, and thus gets angry as a result) or try to run past, he will give chase to them. The brothers can distract Clawgrip by throwing some coins at him, but if they do not have any or decide not to give any up, Clawgrip will catch up to the two, leading to a Game Over.

Super Mario-Kun

Clawgrip. Page 64, volume 8 of Super Mario-kun.

Clawgrip makes an appearance in volume 8 of Super Mario-Kun. He is first seen shortly after Fryguy is defeated. Mario, Luigi, and Yoshi eventually fight him. As with the games, he fights by throwing rocks at them. In one twist, however, Mario molds a boomerang from a small heart and then throws it at him. Clawgrip then transforms into a large polygonal being. Mario uses a rocket to defeat him.

Gallery

Names in other languages

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese チョッキー[2]
Chokkī
Referring to chokichoki, a cutting sound mainly by scissors.
Chinese 剪刀魔[3]
Jiǎndāo Mó
Scissor-like Demon
German Clawgrip[?] -
Italian Chelotto
Chelo
[?]
From chela (pincer) and the endearing male suffix -otto.
From chela (pincer) and the endearing male suffix -o
Korean 가위게[?]
Gawe Gae
From "가위"(Scissor) and "게"(Krab)

Trivia

  • In Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic, Clawgrip did not exist and his place as a boss was filled in by a third, cream-white Mouser. This makes Clawgrip the only Super Mario Bros. 2 enemy that actually was introduced in said game. Robirdo was similarly introduced in Super Mario Advance as another major enemy that did not exist in a prior version.
  • According to his original description, he apparently "grows suddenly"[4]. This detail is only present when approached in Super Mario Advance.
  • In the credits of Super Mario Bros. 2, as well as Super Mario All-Stars and the Japanese version of Super Mario Advance, Clawgrip is called "Clawglip." This is likely because the "r" sound is not normally distinguished from the "l" sound in Japanese compared to other languages.

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ Mario character book, page 111
  3. ^ From the ending scenes of Super Mario Advance as localized by iQue. Reference: 无敌阿尔宙斯 (August 28, 2013). 神游 超级马力欧2敌人官译. Baidu Tieba. Retrieved February 2, 2017.
  4. ^ "He grows suddenly, and he is surprisingly skilled at throwing rocks." - Super Mario Bros. 2 instruction booklet, page 28 (Clawgrip description).

Template:TSMBSS (animation)