Mortal Kombat 1995 Archive [VERIFIED]

Does it hold up? Like a digitized photo of a 90s arcade cabinet: fuzzy around the edges, brutally charming, and surprisingly ambitious. Paul W.S. Anderson’s Mortal Kombat is not a good movie in the classical sense. It is, however, the definitive video game movie of its era—a film that understood that the game’s paper-thin plot (“Ten fighters. One tournament. Save the world.”) was actually its greatest strength.

It is better than the first Street Fighter . It is lightyears better than Super Mario Bros . And in the archive of 90s blockbusters, it remains the one video game movie you can still watch with a group of friends, a bowl of popcorn, and not feel embarrassed. mortal kombat 1995 archive

Mortal Kombat (1995) – The Arcade Perfect Flawed Gem Archive Date: October 2023 (Retrospective) Format: Theatrical Cut (DVD/Blu-ray Archive) Does it hold up

7/10 – Flawless Victory (in spirit, if not in CGI) Anderson’s Mortal Kombat is not a good movie

If you are watching the 2021 reboot, remember this: the 1995 film had a soul. The reboot had better fatalities, but it never had Tagawa’s whisper. Respect the source.

7 replies

Trackbacks

  1. Where’s The Rock n’ Roll We Were Promised? Suicide Squad – New Release Review | Elements of Madness
  2. “Aquaman” ensures that Arthur Curry is no one’s punchline anymore. – Elements of Madness
  3. “Shazam!” – A New Challenger Enters the Ring! – Elements of Madness
  4. Packed inside the superhero excess of “Wonder Woman 1984” is a compelling story of greed versus virtue. – Elements of Madness
  5. Can you find the real “Archenemy” when the film comes to home video? – Elements of Madness
  6. Where’s The Rock n’ Roll We Were Promised? Suicide Squad – New Release Review – Elements of Madness
  7. War is on the way in “Zack Snyder’s Justice League.” – Elements of Madness

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from Elements of Madness

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading