Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros.: Difference between revisions
m (Please stop duplicating files!) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
Happytoads.gif|Several Toads rejoicing. | Happytoads.gif|Several Toads rejoicing. | ||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
==Trivia== | |||
*Interestingly enough, one piece of music used in the series, ''New Hampshire Hornpipe'', written by Dave Grusin, was originally composed for and used in the 1981 American drama film ''On Golden Pond''. | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Revision as of 05:25, February 19, 2018
- This article is about the three OVAs based on well-known fairy tales. For the Mario anime movie, see Super Mario Bros.: Peach-hime Kyushutsu Dai Sakusen!
The title of this article is official, but it comes from a non-English source. If an acceptable English source is found, then the article should be moved to its appropriate title.
The Amada Anime Series: Super Mario Bros. (アマダアニメシリーズ スーパーマリオブラザーズ) is a series of anime. It is a collection of three original video animations based on fairy tales, and was released only in Japan on August 3, 1989. The series used characters and other elements from the Mario franchise in place of characters and concepts from the original fairy tales.
The series contains: Super Mario Momotarō, Super Mario Issun-bōshi, and Super Mario Shirayuki-hime. The two former episodes in the series are retellings of fairy tales of the same name, while Super Mario Shirayuki-hime is a retelling of the Western fairy tale Snow White. When the titles are read aloud by the narrator, the possessive particle の no is spoken between "Super Mario" and the name of the specific story; translated, this would render the titles as "Super Mario's Momotarō", etc.
Voice cast
- Toru Furuya as Mario
- Miyako Endou as Princess Peach, Toad, Morton, Wendy
- Masaharu Satou as Koopa, Larry, Iggy
- Naoki Tatsuta as Luigi, Papa, Roy, Lemmy, Ludwig
- Toshiko Sawada as Narrator
Episodes
Gallery
Princess Peach along with Ojīsan and Obāsan.
Mario being born from a peach.
Mario punches Roy.
Mario, Princess Peach, and seven Toads.
Trivia
- Interestingly enough, one piece of music used in the series, New Hampshire Hornpipe, written by Dave Grusin, was originally composed for and used in the 1981 American drama film On Golden Pond.