Tag Archives: New Line Cinema

Mortal Kombat II Review


This is a sequel where the gaming aspect runs deep with elements invigorating the senses to make audiences feel like they are in the video game of Mortal Kombat. Surrounding Mortal Kombat II though, is the actual competition. While the humor and egotistical characters sell, the rest of the film tends to be repetitive. With a lot of fighting and fantasy, Mortal Kombat II is hard to take seriously. However, all of the fighting has a role in creating a rollercoaster of punches that keeps the audiences elevated.

The first Mortal Kombat opened in April of 2021. A time where covid adjustments were taking place with many strange rules in many places around the world. That is where I believe the first one had its limitation but still sold. I feel Mortal Kombat II is slightly better, primarily because the enemies surrounding the realm to win exist. Even if it means sacrificing all, no one goes down without baths of blood in Mortal Kombat II. Director Simon McQuoid is literally building a franchise.

The new character joining the forces is Johnny Cage, played by Karl Urban. He is an actor that is considered to be a “has been”. Soon though, he finds himself with Liu Kang (Ludi Lin), Sonya Blade (Jessica McNamee), and Jax (Mehcad Brooks). The tournaments are a big deal in Mortal Kombat II. Despite Johnny failing as an actor, he has got some stunts to throw into the fighting pit. The enemy is Shao Kahn, played by Martyn Fordwith the center of danger being the Earthrealm. With Shao Kahn over it, it is in peril. Combat is the only way to gain ownership,however, accomplishing this all has many consequences down the line.

The film finds itself to have match after match with some adventures along the way and not much transitioning. I will say though, I had fun when Johnny realized he is truly made for combat. There are still a lot of twists and quirkiness combined to make the fights have some moments of laughter down the line.As one who got into some of the video games, the many moments of slashing knockouts came back to me. The lines of context for defeat still display heavily in Mortal Kombat II.

Johnny Cage is the biggest attraction of Mortal Kombat II. He is the champion focus, as so much is aimed at his moves andtalents. It is almost to the point where it seems as if he is the one and only hero. The “hero” side grows from knowing moves as an actor, which later turns into something bigger. That is of course him getting chosen to fight in the matches. A blur of writing, but also stellar with the egotistical attitude from Urban’s performance. This all actually of works well for a video game adaptation into a movie.

The film is a timeline moving forward to harder challenges. Even though Mortal Kombat II is not what I would call amazing, the fun is within the fighting. It is a slight improvement in that itcontinues down that path for something bigger. Overall, though, it is a steady continuation of a franchise—McQuoid is still channeling his directing path with this. Glitches here and there, but it is still an entertaining film with daring matches. Two-and-a-half out of four stars for Mortal Kombat II.