EXCLUSIVE: Lewis Tan is set to join Emma Roberts in About Fate. Thomas Mann is also on board. The film was written by Tiffany Paulsen and will be directed by Marius Weisberg.
23.04.2021 - 02:07 / variety.com
Peter Debruge Chief Film CriticIt was the gore as much as the gameplay that made the original “Mortal Kombat” such a success at the arcade, and while the 1995 New Line movie broke the curse on video game adaptations — following such bombs as “Street Fighter” and “Super Mario Bros.” earlier that decade — the film version did so by turning the koncept into a slick but kitschy action spectacular.
While heavily indebted to Hong Kong cinema, the fluke hit (which made a whopping $122 million) hasn’t
.EXCLUSIVE: Lewis Tan is set to join Emma Roberts in About Fate. Thomas Mann is also on board. The film was written by Tiffany Paulsen and will be directed by Marius Weisberg.
Mortal Kombat star Josh Lawson has revealed who the biggest game nerd in the cast is.The new film adaptation of the video game classic was released last month, and speaking to NME, the actor admitted that co-star Joe Taslim, who plays Bi-Han/Sub-Zero, knew more than anyone else about the franchise.“I think easily it was Joe,” Lawson (who portrays Kano) replied when asked about the biggest video game and Mortal Kombat nerd among the ensemble.“Joe Taslim legitimately knows everything about Mortal
Mortal Kombat stars Lewis Tan and Mehcad Brooks have explained how Rage Against The Machine influenced their characters.The actors, who play Cole Young and Jax respectively, opened up to NME about the band’s impact on the new movie.When NME asked the actors who their characters would be if they were a rock or pop star, Brooks first said: “Jax would have to be a mix of Lil Nas X and DMX.“I say that because Lil Nas X has this inner strength, that no matter what happens on the outside he’s like, ‘I
Mortal Kombat, now in theaters and streaming on , he plays a MMA fighter named Cole Young who goes toe-to-toe with the villainous Sub-Zero (Joe Taslim) while uncovering answers about his heritage. It was an important role for Tan, a British born actor who is half-Chinese and half-white.
Japanese anime blockbuster Demon Slayer the Movie: Mugen Train edged out video game adaptation Mortal Kombat at the weekend box office, according to Sunday estimates. Demon Slayer grossed $6.4 million from 1,925 theaters for an impressive 10-day domestic total of $34.1 million for Aniplex and Funimation, and north of $450 million globally.
HBO Max and in theaters at the same time, and it will be live on the streaming platform for 31 days after initial release.stars Lewis Tan and is the first adaptation of the iconic franchise since 1995. From the looks of the trailer, the movie should be an epic time, so whether you want to watch the fatalities from the comfort of your couch, or venture out to a movie theater — if they are open near you — we've got you covered.
wore a pair of the earrings during a visit to Barry Island last summer, and again for a festive visit to Cardiff Castle at the end of last year. The Alia Hoops are demi-fine and coated in 2.
New Line Cinema and Threshold Entertainment released Paul Anderson’s “Mortal Kombat” back in 1995, three years after the same-named video game caused a stir verging on moral panic for allowing players to indulge in shocking violence.
NEW YORK -- The weekend at movie theaters featured something not seen for a while: a genuine box-office battle.Warner Bros.' “Mortal Kombat” reboot and the Japanese anime film “Demon Slayer: Mugen Train” both vied for the top spot at the North American box office, with “Mortal Kombat” narrowly edging “Demon Slayer." The R-rated “Mortal Kombat” earned an estimated $22.5 million, according to studio estimates, while Funimation's “Demon Slayer” grossed $19.5 million.The two releases fueled the best
Some Mortal Kombat fans have questions!
Mortal Kombat video game franchise is missing from the new film, as spotted by eagle-eyed viewers.Some of those who have watched the film adaptation of the same name on HBO Max in the US have noticed the word is misrepresented in the subtitles.During a tense exchange between two characters, the word “fatality” is spoken but the subtitles read: “Kang speaking foreign language.”One viewer didn’t appear to mind the slip-up, writing on Twitter: “the best part of Mortal Kombat, which we watched on
Jax (Mehcad Brooks) had his metal arms, Sub-Zero (Joe Taslim) had his deadly freezing abilities, Sonya Blade (Jessica McNamee) had her iconic pink energy blasts. All the pieces were there, and there were definitely clear winners.
fans will have plenty of opportunities to shout, «FINISH THEM!» throughout the movie — and in this R-rated adaptation, the fatalities are as gruesomely insane as you'd hope — but the last thing anyone will want when the credits roll is for this saga to be finished.
Mortal Kombat” video-game franchise offered a legion of characters for the filmmakers behind the new movie adaptation to choose from. “Mortal Kombat” uses only a small fraction of the game’s super-powered ninjas, brutal assassins and four-armed monsters, but even that was probably enough to tax the celebrity trailer supply in Australia, where the film was shot. In this reboot of the movie franchise that has been dormant since 1997’s “Mortal Kombat: Annihilation,” an MMA fighter (Lewis Tan)
Jazz Tangcay Artisans EditorAs 12-time Oscar nominee Diane Warren is in the midst of preparations for the 93rd Academy Awards, she has also found time to release her latest songwriting project, “Somehow You Do,” sung by Reba McEntire.The song is in the Warren tradition of movie-based ballads. “Somehow You Do” is taken from the upcoming film, “Four Good Days,” starring Glenn Close and Mila Kunis, out April 30.In the film, Kunis plays Molly, an addict who shows no signs of recovery.
A quarter-century has passed since Hollywood first adapted the arcade classic Mortal Kombat, with a film that launched newcomer Paul W.S. Anderson into his career making bad but extremely profitable movies full of CG mayhem (and a side career flummoxing those casual moviegoers who confuse him with two similarly named but slightly more brilliant auteurs).
The first death in the “Mortal Kombat” reboot occurs less than three minutes in, which is actually pretty coy. This is a movie, after all, based on a video game where the point is bloody violence.A katana slices a man vertically in half, triggering a burst of controlled murders.
Nomadland,” Frances McDormand never once slices open a four-armed Hulk so his innards spill out onto the pavement. In “Mortal Kombat,” that’s one of the less gratuitous scenes.