![dlive mario and the mudic box dlive mario and the mudic box](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/beTiOZjYQRE/hqdefault.jpg)
Of course, the cartoon is only part of the show. Characterizations were pretty good (even though it's based off a video game and you actually had no frame of reference as far as characterization goes). You have some minor technical errors here and there (sometimes Mario would be speaking with Luigi's voice, or his hat would be the wrong color), but these things happens in all the old cartoons (see the old Ninja Turtles as a good example - yes, you know who you are!) The voices were pretty good nothing great, but alright nonetheless.
#Dlive mario and the mudic box series
The stories are rather cheesy, crude, and cheap parodies of certain series and movies, but who cares? They were fun and back then, that's all you really needed.
#Dlive mario and the mudic box movie
The cartoon stayed true to the original games, as opposed to the later movie which was a bastardization of what was good and wholesome. The way I see it, the cartoon (and even the Captain Lou Albano live skits) was what truly defined Mario as an Italian plumber from Brooklyn who enjoyed eating pasta rather than this fat plumber who ate mushrooms, something that the games depicted.
![dlive mario and the mudic box dlive mario and the mudic box](https://pm1.narvii.com/6962/01d809c32483ea8d84c38f19fd41a3540cba5d18r1-1024-741v2_hq.jpg)
2 (Mario USA to Japanese folk - the less said, the better) than it did the original game, but I'm not complaining. Odd thing was that this had more in common with Super Mario Bros.
![dlive mario and the mudic box dlive mario and the mudic box](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/sTzI8HPW-iE/maxresdefault.jpg)
Every Mario cartoon had the same basic plot evil King Koopa (Bowser, although he never goes by that name in the cartoon) wrecks havoc in various worlds of the Mushroom Kingdom and it's up to Mario, faithful brother Luigi, loyal Mushroom Retainer Toad, and the Princess (when she isn't kidnapped) to spoil his nefarious plans. After '85, he practically salvaged the video gaming industry and got a cartoon out of it. But that's irrelevant, because before 85, Mario wasn't a big deal. You wouldn't have noticed, because in that cartoon, Mario was a generic guy who pursued the big dumb ape. Rather, it was in an obscure Donkey Kong cartoon that aired as part of Saturday Supercade during the early-1980s, before Nintendo rose into prominence. Contrary to what many claim, Mario's first initial cartoon appearance was NOT the Super Mario Bros.