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Corey et Jimmy sont séparés depuis le divorce de leurs parents. Jimmy est mentalement instable depuis la mort de sa soeur quand il était petit. Un jour Corey découvre que son frère a un don pour les jeux vidéo...
Avis de la communauté (7)
Unironically may be one of the most important films for _80_'s film preservation. No film captures the childlike spirit of that time than this sweet little film about a couple kids traveling cross country to a video game competition. The film starts with a little boy, Jimmy, walking across the deserted country road alone on his journey to get to California to properly bury his sister's remains, and by the end, is driving back with his family, happy and fulfilled. It's genuinely funny, heartwarming, and fun for the whole family. The product placement and Nintendo partnership is just an icing on the cake that adds to it's dated charm. This will definitely go in my collection.
There are parts of my life that only make sense if I've seen The Wizard. I can't recall going to the movies to see this movie. But I must have. The way I remember it only works that way. The way I play Super Mario Bros 3 only works that way. This movie was darn near formative for me not just as a person but as a video game player. It's just about everything you could want in a kids movie from the late 80s. Fred Savage, Nintendos, the BLOODY POWER GLOVE. Heck Christian Slater too. And at the time I lived in California so I related to this weird kid saying California the way people relate to Ludacris' _Area Codes_. It's the hypest movie of all video game history. I'd argue it's more hype than _Super Mario Bros_ and for all it's flaws the one thing SMB the movie had was hype so much hype. The movie holds up fairly well. Better than the power glove IRL which I did see as a kid so I have that going for me. It's a story about a kid achieving his dreams and it's a story about family both the ones you start with and the ones you make along the way. All wrapped up in the excitement of the Nintendo Entertainment System. They could not have produced a better vehicle for themselves. It's got solid acting. You may not be getting Oscar material here but everyone is in for the cause. They're putting forth effort. This wasn't a throwaway film. The plot of easy enough for kids to follow and yet not annoying for adults to watch unlike the aforementioned Super Mario Bros. It's bombastic and fun and everything you kinda wanted a Nintendo movie to be.
Between coin-operated booths, street maps, and consoles that get hit and instantly start working, spending an hour and a half in that lost world was strange, but a beautiful kind of strange.
Made up of two seemingly unrelated stories but still fast enough to be a fun watch. Savage and Lewis were good together. Destroy Putnam.
Fred Savage leads his young half-brother, an 8-bit savant who's disengaged from the world, on a road trip to Los Angeles for an all-star video game competition. It's basically _Rain Man_ meets _Tommy_, with a heaping helping of Nintendo product placement and a sparkling, hand-held promotional tour of Universal Studios. While their family (and a selfish private eye) give chase, the kids coast along on money earned from illicit arcade bets and the generosity of strangers, making friends and enemies alike en-route to that big stage in California. Although the plot does show occasional signs of heart, it's mostly an awkward blend of childish fantasy and out-of-touch adult posing. Savage, his brother and a wily female friend (Jenny Lewis) essentially wish their way out of the tough situations, and most of the gaming scenes are stuck in a decidedly Atari state of mind. High scores all around, even in games that don't actually track points. It's like talking to a forty-something about the latest middle school trends; the more it tries to prove it's hip and fashionable, the further we get from reality. A handful of ridiculously silly quotes and moments ("I love the Power Glove, it's so bad") are worth revisiting, and I can still remember the thrill I felt at catching my first glimpse of _Super Mario Bros. 3_ on the big screen, but all that amounts to maybe ten minutes of a drawn out hundred-minute runtime. And to think, the original cut stretched for an extra hour.