The entire Kong section where she fails to accomplish the one thing she went there for despite it being her idea, and Mario instead steps up and wins them over through his skill and ability. And when he manages to get rid of the Big Bob-omb, and him and Luigi defeat Bowser in the climax. The only time he is ever shown to be lacking is during the obstacle course which is a literal training montage to justify a regular human learning to platform, and he is otherwise a capable if out of his element Isekai protagonist.
The only time we see her do anything remotely useful is during the wedding, where she was going along with it until a distraction arrived and they as a team fought back.
That's the thing about actually watching a movie instead of just hearing about it from people repeating a narrative they also heard. You can actually name things about it to support your position.
Going out of my way to watch a movie takes effort and time. Not watching it takes none. I'd need a justification to bother with it.
I have your opinion now, and it does sound believable. I'd like to hear from at least another person supporting it for me to decide if it's worth it. Even if it isn't as bad with the boss girl tropes as the rest of modern media, I'd still need to decide if it's something I'd enjoy watching at all.
And I watched it for similar reasons. I have a smallish child who loves Mario and explaining why anything seen in the movie was a bad thing was less effort and more likely to work than trying to reason with and explain politics to a small child about why we wouldn't be.
And I had to do basically none of that because it had almost none of the "woke" elements people kept telling me were so overt were there whatsoever, outside of a throwaway line about clearing the course in one try.
But its still a kid's movie and its not worth watching outside the context of bringing a child to it, because its not really that good. Passable is what I'd call it, family night watch instead of top tier cinema.
Oh? Then tell me. Is there any point whatsoever in the movie where Mario saves Peach? Or does anything better than her? How often does she save him?
The entire Kong section where she fails to accomplish the one thing she went there for despite it being her idea, and Mario instead steps up and wins them over through his skill and ability. And when he manages to get rid of the Big Bob-omb, and him and Luigi defeat Bowser in the climax. The only time he is ever shown to be lacking is during the obstacle course which is a literal training montage to justify a regular human learning to platform, and he is otherwise a capable if out of his element Isekai protagonist.
The only time we see her do anything remotely useful is during the wedding, where she was going along with it until a distraction arrived and they as a team fought back.
That's the thing about actually watching a movie instead of just hearing about it from people repeating a narrative they also heard. You can actually name things about it to support your position.
Going out of my way to watch a movie takes effort and time. Not watching it takes none. I'd need a justification to bother with it.
I have your opinion now, and it does sound believable. I'd like to hear from at least another person supporting it for me to decide if it's worth it. Even if it isn't as bad with the boss girl tropes as the rest of modern media, I'd still need to decide if it's something I'd enjoy watching at all.
And I watched it for similar reasons. I have a smallish child who loves Mario and explaining why anything seen in the movie was a bad thing was less effort and more likely to work than trying to reason with and explain politics to a small child about why we wouldn't be.
And I had to do basically none of that because it had almost none of the "woke" elements people kept telling me were so overt were there whatsoever, outside of a throwaway line about clearing the course in one try.
But its still a kid's movie and its not worth watching outside the context of bringing a child to it, because its not really that good. Passable is what I'd call it, family night watch instead of top tier cinema.