The Wizard Movie Review
The Wizard Review
"The Wizard" Overview

Rating: PG
1989
Cast and Crew
Director : Todd HollandProducer : Ken Topolsky,David Chisholm
Screenwiter : David Chisholm
Starring : Fred Savage,Jenny Lewis,Luke Edwards,Vince Trankina,Beau Bridges,Christian Slater
I know a whole lot of people with vivid memories of The Wizard. It came out in
1989, during the heyday of the original eight-bit Nintendo videogame system,
and, like a lot of Nintendo commercials, you can imagine that it was pretty
convincing to the target audience. The movie is supposedly about Jimmy (Luke
Edwards), a kid who has a specialized mental illness that makes him really good
at videogames, and his older brother Corey (Fred Savage), who hauls Jimmy
across the country to compete in a videogame championship. As is often the case
in shlocky family films, this dangerous and senseless runaway jaunt somehow
brings a broken family together.
But even the cheap melodrama can't match the movie's primary concern, which is
advertising Nintendo and Nintendo accessories, especially the then-brand-new
Super Mario Brothers 3. At the time, a ticket to The Wizard came with a
miniature issue of Nintendo Power magazine; it should've come with a
subscription. Come to think of it, the DVD should at least be packaged with
some back issues, for proper ambience.
It might help someone like me get into the mood. Though I am in the age group
that should have affection for The Wizard, I didn't meet the interest-height
requirements to see it at the time. Watching it today, without any nostalgia,
is a curious experience – almost literally, as you ask yourself why Beau
Bridges or Christian Slater, whose careers were both humming along at this
time, are in this movie as the other members of Jimmy and Corey's dysfunctional
(all-male, natch) family.
There's also the added curiosity factor of young Jenny Lewis, who plays Haley,
a streetwise gambler of a preteen who accompanies the other kids on their trip
(she and Fred Savage have sort of an It Happened One Night in Elementary School
thing going on). Lewis went on to front the excellent rock band Rilo Kiley and
release her own folky solo record; though she's the only member of the
principal cast to more or less give up acting, she also gives the most spirited
and entertaining performance of the bunch. You can see the quirky stylishness
of an independent-minded rock star in Haley, who makes it seem almost amusing
that three kids are traveling unaccompanied through the skeevy bus stations of
our United States. But all the moxie in the world can't explain how she knows
where to find warp whistles in the climactic unveiling of Super Mario Brothers
3, which the movie makes great pains to say has never been played before
(indeed, that fact seems to be a major reason for the movie's existence).
The Wizard was directed by Todd Holland, who went on to a fine career in
television (My So-Called Life, Felicity, Malcolm in the Middle), but this film
shows little of the realistic emotional touches that dot even his more
outlandish TV projects. The closest The Wizard can come – at least as it's been
explained to me – is in its recollection of a simpler time, when there was just
one Nintendo system, and it was so dominant kids would pay to see a
run-of-the-mill comedy-drama just to catch a glimpse of a new game (now entire
franchises already look PlayStation-ready). Still, the movie's
industrial-strength product placement and slumming stars at least make The
Wizard a unique exercise in crappy '80s moviemaking – which has now become a
unique exercise in crappy '80s nostalgia.
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Review by Jesse Hassenger
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