The Wizard

1989 "It's more than a game...it's the chance of a lifetime."
6.1| 1h40m| PG| en| More Info
Released: 15 December 1989 Released
Producted By: Universal Pictures
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A boy and his brother run away from home and hitch cross-country, with help from a girl they meet, to compete in the ultimate video-game championship.

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Reviews

Jeanskynebu the audience applauded
Chirphymium It's entirely possible that sending the audience out feeling lousy was intentional
TrueHello Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.
Candida It is neither dumb nor smart enough to be fun, and spends way too much time with its boring human characters.
mrdie1 As others have pointed out, this is basically a very long commercial for Nintendo. The difference between a very long commercial and this film is that this film's creators decided to surround the commercial with an uninteresting story.Because the movie has to juggle the need to promote Nintendo with the need to have a story that went beyond "promote Nintendo," the result feels forced and insincere with its emotional moments coupled with game scenes that never really take off because you don't really care about the characters involved in them. It's easy when you're a kid, especially back in 1989, to overlook the obvious flaws, but they're otherwise unavoidable.Almost none of the actors stood out to me with the exception of Will Seltzer, playing a villain who tries capturing Jimmy in order to bring him back to the institution from whence he came. His was the only character whose antics I was amused by.
Mr-Fusion I imagine that if I'd had a stronger childhood connection to "The Wizard", then I'd be better able to appreciate it as an adult. I did see this movie in the theater - I was 9, so naturally I gravitated toward the Nintendo aspect - but no further rewatches until many years later. But it feels like a movie at odds with itself. You've got the competing interests of a family drama (and there's some fairly serious stuff going on here) with a branded product designed to sell NES games and a trip to Universal Studios. They don't gel. There's a "Karate Kid" feel with our contender training and strolling into the tournament, but once he's won (because he's supposed to), then we've got that whole family subplot we still have to sort out in the closing moments. Almost as an afterthought.I know this is a kids' movie and I have no problem with that. But the toy commercial cheapens the serious stuff. Although I do think it's very funny that Lucas Barton has attained his own Internet fame.5/10
Rich Wright Oh, I miss those days when video games were limited to 64 colours, controllers only had two buttons and the latest titles were sixty quid a pop. Wait a minute... no I don't.Regardless, here we have a movie where three runaways including Wonder Years (never watched it) star Fred Savage, his dysfunctional little brother and some tagalong chick hotfoot it to California so the youngest of their number to compete in a Nintendo tournament. On the way, they play plenty of arcade games for 'practice' (e.g Product Placement) while dodging the unwelcome attentions of a hired private eye on route.Cue parents and kids bonding over Ninja Turtles, minors hitchhiking across the USA without barely ANYTHING GOING WRONG and false claims of sexual assault against a pre-teen girl somehow being justified so she and her friends can make a quick getaway from their pursuer... "HE TOUCHED MY BREAST" indeed. It's as thin as rice paper, as cheesy as a Camembert festival and as haphazardly put together as my failed Scalextric projects.Despite all this, I have a soft spot in my scaly old heart for road movies, and seeing all those ancient Nintendo games brings with it something of a warm nostalgic glow (Which is a bit odd, considering I was a Sega dude). Plus, the final Super Mario Bros 3 showdown at the contest is genuinely thrilling... even IF we all know who the victor will be (CLUE: Not the blonde jerk or the girl geek).One final question... What DID happen to the Power Glove? 5/10
mattboy07 There's a lot of things this movie is and isn't. It is a great trip down memory lane, a blast from the past, a reminder of all things late 80s and early 90s, and a shameless Nintendo promo. It isn't a work of art, a plausible scenario, or even a decent movie by its own standards.If you were born before 1994, this movie is pretty much a love letter to ye olden days when Nintendo was king of the living room and emotional strife was brewing in 9/10 American families. This has all the components of a story that could draw in kids at the time. Our story features Corey (Fred Savage) who steals away with his younger and emotionally disturbed brother Jimmy (Luke Edwards) to escape the mounting tension of their family that is falling apart around them. Along the way they encounter a feisty red-headed girl named Haley (Jenny Lewis) and discover that Jimmy has a natural talent for playing video games and beating anyone that he faces. Soon they devise a plan to escape to L.A. to compete in a video game contest for $50,000 and in doing so prove that Jimmmy isn't a lost cause and possibly saving their family in the process. However, they have to dodge the boys' father and older brother (played by Beau Bridges and Christan Slater), a kid bounty hunter, and beat the competition.Yeah, the plot is seemingly ridiculous, and it really is. At one point the kids resort to hustling money in arcades to pay for their cross country trip. Then they encounter the a 13 year old boy who lives by himself and only plays video games for sustenance (with the aid of the Power Glove) who plays the evil foil for the main characters. And finally, they go into a casino complete with preteen girls in full showgirl uniform selling concessions.As mentioned before, this is for people who were kids and remember the Nintendo Era in all its splendor. If you missed this gem growing up or don't care at all, you won't change your mind and should avoid this corny rose-tinted film at all costs. But if you want to inject some nostalgia into your eyes or haven't seen this since you were a kid, rent it off Amazon or track down a copy and have a laugh. We were dumb kids.