Bloody, brutal fight scenes are the follow-up’s highlight but information-heavy story lacks punch.
Picking up where the 2021 flick left off, Earth’s champions – including Johnny Cage (Karl Urban) – are pitted against the dark rule of Shao Kahn (Martyn Ford) in a battle that threatens the planet’s existence.
Anyone wondering where the heck the familiar tournament from the hit games was in the first film will be satisfied as it’s here in all of its bloody, brutal glory.
The fight scenes are the highlight of returning director Simon McQuoid’s sequel as characters face off in a variety of imposing, colourful locations armed with superpowers and wild weapons.
The showdowns reach their apex during a clash at the blue portal which feels ripped straight out of the video games, while a fiery trip to the Netherrealm also packs a punch.
Urban, long suggested as a fans’ dream casting choice as Cage , adds much needed star power and wit, Adeline Rudolph’s brave, strong-willed Kitana gets a lot of focus and Josh Lawson remains a funny, zinger-laden anti-hero as the back-from-the-dead Kano .
But while Ford is physically intimidating and wields a mighty hammer, Kahn is a generic villain who completely sidelines previous movie baddie Shang Tsung (Chin Han), and Tadanobu Asano’s Lord Raiden also spends much of his screen time laid out on a slab.
It’s very difficult to adapt a fight-heavy game like Mortal Kombat and this follow-up struggles with its story beats.
The script’s tactic is basically throw fireballs of information dumps at the audience and hope we take it all in and the flick follows a face-off, little bit of chat then another face-off format throughout.
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A side mission regarding an all-powerful amulet swells the running time but feels otherwise unnecessary – and its possession would surely make the whole tournament redundant?
Outside of nostalgia increasing love for the 1995 film, the bombastically brutal Mortal Kombat II is probably as close to an effective live-action take on the games as we’re likely to get – frustrating flaws and all.
● What is your favourite flick based on a video game?
Pop me an email at ian.bunting@reachplc.com and I will pass on your comments – and any movie or TV show recommendations you have – to your fellow readers.
● Mortal Kombat II is showing in cinemas now.
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