Mortal Kombat
((Martial arts fantasy -- Color))
Most Viewed:
'New Moon' shines at box office(8026 views)'New Moon' takes opening day record(1398 views)Weitz digs 'Gardener'(935 views)Oprah gets steamy with HBO(735 views)ABC adopts 'Find My Family' show(664 views)Few frontrunners for revamped Oscars(654 views)
|
But the best of the flesh-and-blood crew are better than their seemingly impossible adversaries, thanks to superior intellect, an ability to adapt and the watchful tutelage of good sorcerer Rayden (Christopher Lambert) -- a robed, silver-maned master with a husky, whiskey voice reminiscent of Colleen Dewhurst.
Still, in nine prior competitions, the denizens of Outworld have prevailed. Unlike baseball, it's 10 strikes and you're out in this game; if the nonhuman team prevails again, the populace of Earth becomes enslaved to the evil empire.
With an emphasis on elaborate fights, "Mortal Kombat" owes a tremendous debt to the cinema of Hong Kong. Its mystic pizza of a plot and Kung foolish prattle also hark to the East and sword-and-sorcery fare. Toss in a bit of updated Ray Harryhausen stop-motion effects and one can pretty much see the full ancestry of the piece.
But where others have sunk in the mire of imitation, director Paul Anderson and writer Kevin Droney effect a viable balance between exquisitely choreographed action and ironic visual and verbal counterpoint. After all, the fate of 5 billion-plus rests on the shoulders of three well-toned, muscular misfits.
The very composition of the trio should be a tipoff that the filmmakers are mindful of the situation's innate absurdities. There's a vain martial-arts actor (Linden Ashby) burdened by press reports that he's a fraud; a tough drug task-force leader (Bridgette Wilson) who winds up chained to a pillar in a hopelessly silly dress; and a hero (Robin Shou) who's reluctant despite having been "chosen" to fight in Final Kombat.
Slickly stylish, pic tops its sources of inspiration with lush, crisp production values and exotic Thailand locales. An arsenal of special-effects teams unleashes some dazzling, fun eye-poppers, while the best of the fights have a visceral tension one can almost taste.
Unlike other video-arcade screen translations, including "Street Fighter" and "Double Dragon,""Mortal Kombat" establishes itself as a bigscreen entity and shows the pluck and wit of which franchises are made.
Variety is striving to present the most thorough review database. To report inaccuracies in review credits, please click here. We do not currently list below-the-line credits, although we hope to include them in the future. Please note we may not respond to every suggestion. Your assistance is appreciated.








