A high-impact fusion of martial arts mayhem, fantasy spectacle and video game mythology, the Mortal Kombat films brought arcade combat to the big screen with bone-crunching action, iconic characters and pure 90s attitude, helping turn a controversial fighting game into a global pop culture phenomenon. And hey — this set is just in time for the release of Mortal Kombat II!
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Mortal Kombat (1995): The premise of the original 1992 Mortal Kombat arcade game was essentially Bruce Lee’s Enter the Dragon with a heavy dose of sorcery, severed spines and color-swapped ninjas. So, it stands to reason that the 1995 film adaptation should follow the exact same blueprint: a grueling martial arts tournament to the death with the literal fate of the cosmos hanging in the balance. Against all odds, the movie absolutely delivers the goods.
Director Paul W. S. Anderson (Soldier, the Resident Evil films, the Death Race remakes) was the perfect director for this film — it feels like the ’90s in concentrated form. You’ve got your hard techno beats, your neon colors, green screen early CGI and plenty of quips during the Kombat.
The realms of Earth and Outworld come together for the Mortal Kombat and create a battle to the death, with the provision that if Outworld wins Mortal Kombat ten consecutive times, its Emperor Shao Khan may invade the Earth realm.
Standing in his way are Shaolin monk Liu Kang, Hollywood action star Johnny Cage and a military officer named Sonya Blade (Bridgette Wilson, I Know What You Did Last Summer). Cameron Diaz was originally up for the Sonya role but got hurt during filming. Helping them is Raiden (Christopher Lambert, Highlander), the god of thunder and the defender of the Earth realm.
Along the way, we meet Princess Kitana (Talisa Soto, License to Kill), Kano, Sub-Zero (François Petit, who would go on to be the head trainer for the WWE in the mid-90s), Reptile (who is played by Robin Cooke, who is also in Picasso Trigger and China O’Brien), Goro and Jax. They’re all here to be part of Shang Tsung’s tournament.
The tournament itself delivers a superb rhythm of action, but the plot kicks into overdrive when Johnny Cage pulls off the impossible and defeats the monstrous Goro. Sensing total defeat, Shang Tsung abandons the rules. He kidnaps Sonya Blade—who up until this point had been a fierce, take-charge heroine, only to suddenly succumb to the “helpless girl in distress” trope of 90s cinema—and drags her into the desolate, hellish wasteland of Outworld to force a final confrontation.
Liu Kang and Johnny Cage pursue them into the dark realm. In a climax that heavily leans into the game’s lore, Liu Kang must overcome his inner demons, embrace his destiny as the Chosen One, and face Shang Tsung in a brutal, final duel. With a spectacular bicycle kick and an iconic “Flawless Victory,” Kang sends the sorcerer plummeting onto a bed of spikes. As Shang Tsung dies, the thousands of souls he had consumed over centuries are liberated, including the spirit of Liu Kang’s brother, finally bringing peace to the Shaolin monk.
Everyone goes to the Shaolin temple to celebrate, but the skies turn dark, and Shao Khan appears. With the voice of Frank Welker, he screams, “You weak, pathetic fools! I’ve come for your souls!” All of the good guys show their fighting stances, cue the Mortal Kombat theme, and we’ve set up the sequel.
Where this film truly gets it right is its unwavering respect for the source material. Better yet, it actually expanded the franchise’s lore. The movie introduced and popularized narrative concepts—like the explicit hierarchy of Shao Kahn, the distinct visual identity of Outworld, and the deeper backstories of Kitana and Jax—that the video game developers would actually adopt into the mythology of future games.
It is genuinely baffling that mainstream critics savaged this movie back in 1995. It is fun as hell, unapologetic and completely true to its inspirations. It operates as a video-game version of a classic Hong Kong martial arts flick: a glorious mixture of bastardized pop culture that serves as the ultimate guilty pleasure. Furthermore, it doesn’t look cheap; despite being decades old, the practical sets, rich atmospheres, and intense choreography still hold up remarkably well.
I don’t even want to tell you how many hours I put into the last Mortal Kombat game. Or brag that I know the difference between babalities, fatalities and friendships. The thing is, even if you haven’t played a single game of Mortal Kombat, you can still enjoy the movie. And if you love the game, unlike so many video game adaptations, you won’t feel let down. That’s actually high praise.

Mortal Kombat Annihilation (1997): Ed Boon, one of the creators of the Mortal Kombat video game, calls this the “worst moment” in the history of the franchise. Coming from someone who loved the original film and has played every game, I agree.
Christopher Lambert was seen as one of the highlights of the last film. He’s gone, replaced by James Remar (The Warriors). I always dislike whitewashing in movies, but Lambert was so game in his scenes and such an integral part of getting the last film made (Lambert’s great attitude calmed director Paul W. S. Anderson as he worked on his first big movie. While he had the highest salary in the film, he paid his own way to Thailand and shot all his own scenes there for basically free, just to ensure the movie looked better. Plus, he paid for the wrap party.) that this feels like a major loss.
In fact, only Liu Kang (Robin Shou) and Kitana (Talisa Soto) are played by the same actors from the previous film. Robin Cooke, who played Reptile, plays Sub-Zero here, with that fighter gaining a much larger role.
Did you like Johnny Cage last time? Lots of people did. Bad news — he’s killed seconds into this new film to get over the new bad guy, Shao Khan. He’s opened a portal from Outrealm to Earth (hey, wait — didn’t we just fight a tournament to stop that from happening?) and has brought back his queen (and Kitana’s mother), Sindel, from the dead.
Sonya Blade (now played by Sandra Hess, who played the cave girl in Encino Man) brings in her partner Jax, and they immediately battle Cyrax and Mileena. Then there’s Nightwolf (played by Litefoot, the Native American who also portrayed Little Bear in The Indian in the Cupboard), a shaman who will guide Liu Kang and Kitana toward defeating Shao Khan. Another fight between Smoke and Scorpion, with the help of Sub-Zero, happens, and Kitana gets kidnapped.
Raiden meets with the Edger Gods, who don’t really give any answers. I have several questions for them. Like, why are we fighting Shao Khan when we won a tournament to stop things like this from happening? And why is there a fight every ten seconds instead of character development like the first film? Or why didn’t you bring back the actors we liked in these roles? And why doesn’t the “Toasty!” guy show up?
Nightwolf makes Liu Kang pass several trials to gain the power of Animality, which allows him to shapeshift into a new form. He must pass the self-esteem and focus trial. The trial of temptation, where Jade tries to get into his karate pants. And there’s a third test, but we never get to it! One assumes that he passes it, as we’ll see in the finale.
Raiden gives up his immortality to fight for Earth, which means that he needs to cut off his hair. Jade is a double agent, and while the good guys rescue Kitana, they still face tough odds. Raiden reveals that Shao Khan is his brother and their father, Shinook, is favoring his evil sibling. After a big battle, Raiden is killed at the hands of that very same brother.
Another lengthy fight sequence happens, with Motaro, Ermac, Sindel and even Noob Saibot all showing up.
Liu Kang then shows what an Animality is by turning into a poorly rendered dragon, a scene that makes this movie seem even more dated than the 1995 original. Luckily, the Elder Gods discover the shenanigans afoot and declare another round of Mortal Kombat.
Aren’t you glad we have Liu Kang on our side? He defeats Shao Kahn, allowing Raiden to return, as the Earth realm wins again.
Director John R. Leonetti would go on to be the cinematographer for The Scorpion King, I Know Who Killed Me, The Conjuring and the Insidious series before directing Annabelle: Creation and Wish Upon. He’s done great work in those films, but this film feels so much cheaper than the original. It’s weird because that film succeeded by transcending its junk-food origins, while the sequel just piles on way too much.
Originally, Paul W.S. Anderson decided to do Event Horizon instead of this film. He hated the results, and that’s why he’s stayed close to the Resident Evil franchise throughout its sequels.
It’s hard to hate a movie where alien monsters battle ninjas, so if you accept this one as goofy chop socky fun, it’s fine. But compared to the original—and with the rich mythology of the Mortal Kombat video games at its fingertips—this one really suffers.

The Arrow Video release of these movies has brand new 4K restorations of the two films by Arrow Films and includes a collectors’ perfect-bound booklet featuring new writing on the films by Simon Ward and John Torrani; reversible sleeves featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Matt Griffin and two double-sided foldout posters featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Matt Griffin.
For the first movie, there’s a brand new audio commentary with director Paul W.S. Anderson, as well as another new commentary with comic book expert and podcast host Dave Baxter; interviews with Linden Ashby, cinematographer John R. Leonetti, producer Lawrence Kasanoff and designer and suit performer Tom Woodruff; Mortal Kombat: A Journey Behind the Scenes; on-set interview bites with the cast and director and B-roll footage; trailers and an image gallery.
The second movie extras include a new commentary with director John R. Leonetti moderated by filmmaker Gillian Wallace Horvat and a second commentary with comic book expert and podcast host Dave Baxter; interviews with Musetta Vander, composer George S. Clinton and stunt performer J.J. Perry, who played Cyrax, Scorpion and Noob Saibot; pn-set interview bites with the cast and director and B-roll footage; a trailer and an image gallery.




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