The Super Mario Galaxy Movie

2026 animated film From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is a 2026 American animated adventure comedy film based on Nintendo's Mario video game franchise. Directed by Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic and written by Matthew Fogel, it is the sequel to The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023). Chris Pratt, Anya Taylor-Joy, Charlie Day, Jack Black and Keegan-Michael Key reprise their roles, with Benny Safdie, Donald Glover, and Brie Larson joining the cast. It was produced by Illumination and Nintendo. In the film, Mario and Luigi and their friends adventure into outer space, where they face off against Bowser and his son Bowser Jr. to save Princess Rosalina.

Directed by
Written byMatthew Fogel
Based on
Quick facts Directed by, Written by ...
The Super Mario Galaxy Movie
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Written byMatthew Fogel
Based on
Produced by
Starring
Edited byEric Osmond[1]
Music byBrian Tyler
Production
companies
Distributed byUniversal Pictures[2]
Release dates
  • March 28, 2026 (2026-03-28) (Minami-za)
  • April 1, 2026 (2026-04-01) (United States)
Running time
98 minutes[3]
Countries
LanguageEnglish
Budget$110 million[4]
Box office$943 million[5][6]
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Nintendo's president Shuntaro Furukawa stated in May 2021 that Nintendo was interested in producing more animated films based on its properties if the then-untitled Mario film was successful. Illumination CEO and producer Chris Meledandri was asked about the possibility of a sequel to The Super Mario Bros. Movie before the film's release in April 2023. Following its box office success, a new animated Mario film was announced to be in development at Illumination in March 2024, with Horvath and Jelenic returning as directors and Fogel as screenwriter. The film takes inspiration from Mario video games such as Super Mario Galaxy (2007) and Super Mario Galaxy 2 (2010), among other Nintendo games such as the Star Fox series.

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie premiered at Minami-za in Kyoto on March 28, 2026, and was theatrically released in the United States on April 1 by Universal Pictures. While the critical response was considered mixed[a] to negative,[b] it was a commercial success like its predecessor, grossing $943 million worldwide against a $110 million budget, becoming the highest-grossing film of 2026.

Plot

Princess Rosalina, the adoptive mother of the Lumas living in the Comet Observatory, is kidnapped by Bowser Jr., who plots to drain her powers to fuel a universe-destroying cannon in honor of his father, Bowser, who was defeated by Mario and Luigi and shrunken by Princess Peach.[c] Meanwhile, Mario and Luigi are called to inspect a disturbance in the Tostarena Town, where they discover and befriend the dinosaur Yoshi, who had hatched in Brooklyn and was pursued back to his home world after accidentally breaking a dinosaur skeleton in a museum. A Luma sent by Rosalina arrives in the Mushroom Kingdom, where it enlists Peach and Toad for help. In Peach and Toad's absence, Mario, Luigi, and Yoshi protect the Mushroom Kingdom and attempt to rehabilitate Bowser.

Bowser Jr. lifts Peach's castle into space in an attempt to free his father, but a battle with the brothers and Yoshi causes his spaceship to drop the castle into the Honeyhive Galaxy. Bowser goads Mario into attacking him, thus unshrinking him, but kindly offers to be arrested for damaging the fields in exchange for the brothers and Yoshi getting transported to the Gateway Galaxy. Bowser later gets abducted by his son, whom he had not seen in years. In the Gateway Galaxy, Toad's backpack is stolen by monkey thief Ukiki, who takes it to a hidden casino. Peach meets Wart, the casino's owner. Peach forces him to reveal Rosalina's location, the Space Junk Galaxy, but then alerts the Bowsers about Peach.

Mario, Luigi, and Yoshi reunite with Peach and Toad, who have hired pilot Fox McCloud to transport the group. Fox's Arwing crash-lands into Fossil Falls after an attack from Bowser Jr., who transforms Mario and Luigi into babies with a Super Scope. Bowser expresses regret over double-crossing the brothers but is inspired to return to his old ways to mend his relationship with his son. Yoshi finds the Super Scope, rescues the brothers from a Tyrannosaurus, and restores their ages. Luigi alerts the Lumas to pick them up in the Comet Observatory, where Peach learns that she has the same powers as Rosalina, her long-lost older sister. She and Rosalina were born from stardust, and Rosalina sent an infant Peach to the Mushroom Kingdom to protect her from an unidentified attacker.

Fox, Toad, and the Lumas pilot the Comet Observatory to send the other four to the newly-made Planet Bowser. Mario and Peach confront Bowser on a bridge; Mario drops Bowser into the lava moat below, but the latter survives in a skeletal form.[d] Luigi and Yoshi assist Mario in defeating the Bowsers with power-ups. Peach revives a dying Rosalina and they transform Planet Bowser into a new world. Mario, Luigi, and Yoshi help the sisters, Toads, and Lumas rebuild Peach's castle. Fox sends the Bowsers to prison before heading home to his universe. Back at the Gateway Galaxy, Princess Daisy prevents Ukiki from committing another robbery.

Voice cast

Reprising their roles from the previous film are Eric Bauza as the blue Toad general in Peach's royal court and Juliet Jelenic, daughter of co-director Michael Jelenic, as Lumalee, a nihilistic blue Luma who was held prisoner by Bowser in the previous film and now works as a prison guard where the Bowsers are sent by Fox.[21] Roxana Ortega voices Ukiki, a monkey-like thief living in the Gateway Galaxy. Michael Jelenic's two other daughters, Pepper and Virginia Dare, collectively voice the Lumas, Rosalina's star-like adopted children. Story supervisor Ed Skudder voices R.O.B., a robot that works in the Gateway Galaxy.[22]

Production

Development

In May 2021, Nintendo president Shuntaro Furukawa said that Nintendo would be interested in producing more animated films based on its intellectual properties if the first Mario film was successful.[23] The post-credits scene hinted at a potential sequel featuring Mario's dinosaur steed Yoshi.[24] Jack Black expressed interest in Pedro Pascal being cast to voice Mario's self-declared arch-rival Wario in the sequel.[25]

Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic speaking during a WonderCon panel for "Teen Titans Go!" in 2016
Aaron Horvath (left) and Michael Jelenic (right) returned to direct.

In April 2023, following the box office success, Nintendo stated that there would be more films based on their properties, though they did not confirm a Mario sequel.[26] In June 2023, Chris Pratt said a sequel would be announced "soon", but with the caveat that the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike would have an effect on the production.[27] In December 2023, Black expressed interest in the sequel being a musical titled Bowser's Revenge.[28]

In March 2024, during a Mario Day presentation, Illumination CEO and producer Chris Meledandri and Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto confirmed development of a new Mario film with Aaron Horvath and Michael Jelenic returning to direct and Matthew Fogel returning to write the screenplay. Meledandri said that Illumination's team was in the process of storyboarding and "developing set designs for new environments".[2] In October 2024, Keegan-Michael Key said that the sequel would be "broader in scope" and feature "new folks and old favorites and some folks that [he thinks] are really deep cuts".[29] Meledandri said that, while the games Super Mario Galaxy (2007) and Super Mario Galaxy 2 (2010) were the core inspiration, it would include "surprises for fans of every Mario era".[30] According to Miyamoto, the sequel was originally planned to be a Yoshi movie, with Yoshi being in Brooklyn. The idea about Yoshi being in Brooklyn was later turned into a montage sequence in the final film.[31] Miyamoto stated that he, Horvath, Jelenic and Meledandri felt that Princess Peach's portrayal as a "strong woman" in the first film "wasn't enough", so she was depicted as having worries, emotions, and relationship fluctuations with Mario to make her more relatable.[32]

Casting

Larson in 2018
Safdie in 2025
Glover in 2015
Rae in 2017
Guzmán in 2009
Powell in 2025
Top: Brie Larson, Benny Safdie, and Donald Glover joined as the respective voices of Rosalina, Bowser Jr. and Yoshi.
Bottom: Issa Rae, Luis Guzmán, and Glen Powell voice Honey Queen, Wart and Fox McCloud, respectively.

Nintendo announced the title The Super Mario Galaxy Movie in September 2025, during a Nintendo Direct presentation. Pratt, Anya Taylor-Joy, Charlie Day, Black, Key, and Kevin Michael Richardson were confirmed to reprise their roles from the previous film, with Brian Tyler returning to compose the score.[15][33] Two months later, on November 12, a Nintendo Direct presentation for the film trailer was released,[34][35][36] and Brie Larson and Benny Safdie were announced to have been cast as Rosalina and Bowser Jr., respectively.[16] On March 9, 2026, with the release of the final trailer, it was revealed that Donald Glover, Issa Rae, and Luis Guzmán had joined the cast, with Glover voicing Yoshi in all dubbed versions of the film.[17][21][37] Days ahead of the release on March 27, 2026, Glen Powell was revealed to have joined the cast as the Star Fox protagonist, Fox McCloud.[19] Powell and Glover both pitched themselves for their parts after the first film was released.[38][39] Being in a Star Fox film was a dream of Powell's and Glover had always wanted to be in a Nintendo film, so Meledandri contacted them both back.[38][39] Star Fox developer Argonaut Games felt proud upon seeing Fox's inclusion in the film,[40] while designer Takaya Imamura was "overwhelmed with emotion" and thanked Miyamoto for his inclusion.[41] For the Japanese dub, the actors were given freedom to improvise their characters' dialogue.[42][43]

Animation and design

Like its predecessor, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie was animated by Illumination Studios Paris in Paris, France. Production was underway by March 2024,[2][44] with animation finishing in November 2025.[45] In January 2026, Meledandri confirmed that animation had been completed and post-production had begun.[46] The scene where Fox explains his backstory was animated by Benjamin Faure.[47]

Music

On September 12, 2025, it was reported that Brian Tyler, who composed the score for The Super Mario Bros. Movie, would be returning to compose the score for the sequel.[48] According to Tyler, he composed several pieces of the score for the movie from the hospital without telling the staff.[49] The score is performed by a 70-piece orchestra and features arrangements of themes from the two Super Mario Galaxy games and other installments in the Super Mario series.[46] The soundtrack was released on Back Lot Music[citation needed] and iam8bit on April 1, 2026, coinciding with the film's theatrical release.[50]

Release

Marquee with the film's title at the Moreland Theater in Portland, Oregon, U.S.

Theatrical

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie was theatrically released in the United States on April 1, 2026,[46] and in Japan on April 24,[51] in RealD 3D and IMAX formats.[52] It was originally scheduled to be released on April 3.[2]

Home media

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie was released on video-on-demand (VOD) on May 5, 2026. As part of Universal's long-term deal with Netflix for its animated films, the film is contracted to stream in the US on Peacock for the first four months of its pay-TV window, then move to Netflix for the next ten months, and then return to Peacock for four months, and will be released on 4K Ultra-HD Blu-ray, Blu-ray, and DVD on June 16, 2026.[53][54]

Reception

Box office

As of May 13, 2026, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie has grossed $414 million in the United States and Canada, and $529 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $943 million.[5][6] Produced on a budget of $110 million, the film is currently the highest-grossing film of 2026 and the highest-grossing animated film of the year. The film also set the record for the biggest global opening at the box office in 2026, the only animated film franchise with two films opening to over $350 million globally, the fifth-biggest global opening for an animated film of all time, the second-biggest global opening for an Illumination film, the second-biggest opening for a film based on a video game, and the fourth-biggest Easter three-day opening of all time.[55]

United States and Canada

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie made $34 million on its first day, outperforming its predecessor's $31.7 million, and earned a total of $122.1 million worldwide over its first two days of release. With a three-day opening of $131.7 million[56] the film became the fourth-biggest Easter three-day opening of all time, behind The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($146.4 million), Furious 7 ($147.8 million), and Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice ($166 million).[57]

The film ended up debuting with $190.8 million, obtaining the fourth biggest five-day opening in the region, behind Moana 2 ($225.4 million in 2024), The Super Mario Bros. Movie ($204.6 million in 2023), and Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ($200 million in 2009).[58] The film has earned the highest Monday box office gross of 2026, at $16.8 million.[59] In its second weekend, the film retained the top spot at the box office and made $68 million, a decline of 49%.[60][61] The Super Mario Galaxy Movie once again topped the box office in its third weekend with $36.5 million.[62][63] It was dethroned its fourth weekend by Michael and finished in second place with $20.6 million.[64][65]

International

In its opening weekend from 80 markets, the film grossed $182.4 million, for a global debut of $372.6 million.[5][58]

Critical response

Metacritic review
breakdown (unweighted)

Positive
7 (16%)
Mixed
23 (51%)
Negative
15 (33%)

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 42% of 215 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 5.2/10. The website's consensus reads: "Packed with colorful world-building that's as frenetic as it is weightless, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie's visuals are often out of this world but the threadbare story ultimately loses its Milky Way."[66] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 37 out of 100, based on 45 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable" reviews.[67] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, down from the first film's "A", while those at PostTrak surveyed that 79% of audiences gave the film a positive review, with 62% saying they would "definitely recommend" it.[57]

Glenn Garner of Deadline Hollywood gave the film a positive review writing, "The Super Mario Galaxy Movie is a fun sequel full of nostalgic references, all-star voices and epic animation, grounded by the father-son story of redemption for Bowser (Jack Black) and a sisterly origin story [sic] Princess Peach, both of which pave the way for more video game adaptation fun," while also praising the voice performances of Donald Glover and Glen Powell.[68] Barry Hertz of the The Globe and Mail stated: "...whereas a cosmic beast like Cthulhu or Azathoth at least possess all-knowing knowledge in addition to their sanity-breaking powers of terror, a horror like The Super Mario Galaxy Movie retains no vaguely redeeming qualities."[69] In a one-and-a-half out of four review, Eli Friedberg of Slant Magazine said it was "an unpretentiously vapid cocktail of big-budget technical mastery and lack of artistic ambition. The visual language is divorced from reality and referent to the games; even Looney Tunes action is grounded in the real world—the better to subvert it."[70] Tara Brady of The Irish Times said "the dynamic between Bowser and his son, and the Frozen-like sisterhood between Peach and Rosalina, are jettisoned as quickly as they are introduced. Subplots remain half-formed. New additions – especially Glen Powell's inexplicably underused Fox McCloud – barely register. The abrupt conclusion feels like an abandonment. At least it's short."[71] William Bibbiani of TheWrap said, "So lacking in substance and purpose that after a while you can't even hear the dialogue over the incessant sound of Aristotle's ghost punching himself."[72] Kevin Maher gave the film zero out of five in The Times, called it "the end of cinema", and said it "provoked periods of actual physical discomfort. I had to stab myself repeatedly in the hand with a pen to distract from the howling distress."[73]

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian gave The Super Mario Galaxy Movie one out of five, calling it a "bland screensaver of a movie that's actually worse than AI" and "an inert and uninteresting follow-up".[74] Owen Gleiberman of Variety, who praised the previous film, called it a "frenetic and disappointing sequel", while also stating: "[It] almost seems like these talented artists have been body-snatched."[75] Clint Worthington of RogerEbert.com gave it one and a half out of four, writing: "This is not a movie to be scrutinised, but to allow beleaguered elder millennial dads to sit their tots down for a precious two hours (if you count the trailers) and get some much-needed rest."[76] Wilson Chapman of IndieWire gave The Super Mario Galaxy Movie a grade of C−, saying that while the video game "is filled with moments of euphoric joy", the film "registers as flat, imagination packed into the most cleanly corporate and focus-group approved form possible."[77] In Screen International, Tim Grierson wrote that it had "strained humor and cluttered action sequences ... too often this Illumination production mistakes visual and narrative busyness for genuine excitement."[1] Clarisse Loughrey of The Independent gave the film two out of five, calling it "a joke-free sequel that doubles down on its own blandness."[78] Andrzej Lukowski of Time Out gave it three out of five, saying it was "not deep, but [is] made with love and it hits the spot."[79]

Miyamoto stated that the film's fast pacing was intentionally done to keep children and parents engaged.[80][81]

Future

Nintendo and Universal filed copyright information for an "Untitled Donkey Kong Project" in May 2025.[82] In March 2026, Jack Black inadvertently revealed plans for a third Mario film to be released in 2029.[83][84]

In April 2026, following the release of The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, Miyamoto implied that there were no plans for a crossover film based on the Super Smash Bros. video game series, "I'll say that unlike something like Super Smash Bros., I don't think you'll have a situation [where] all Nintendo characters would be joining."[85] That same month, an "untitled Illumination/Nintendo event film", rumored to be a Donkey Kong-centric spinoff, was given a release date of April 12, 2028.[86]

See also

Notes

  1. Attributed to multiple sources: [7][8][9][10]
  2. Attributed to multiple sources: [11][12][13][14]
  3. As depicted in The Super Mario Bros. Movie (2023)
  4. Commonly known as Dry Bowser.

References

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