Thursday, 21 May 2026

REVIEW: Mortal Kombat II (2026 Film) - Starring Karl Urban


Review by Jon Donnis

Picking up the threads from the 2021 instalment, this sequel leans fully into the tournament chaos, throwing Earthrealm’s champions into a darker, louder, and more unashamedly video game version of interdimensional war. At its centre is Johnny Cage, a washed-up martial arts actor pulled into Raiden’s desperate defence of Earthrealm, and Karl Urban gives the role a wry, self-aware edge that helps hold the film together even when everything else is flying fists and fractured alliances.


The strongest part of the film is its action. The combat sequences land with impact, staged with a clarity and aggression that suits the source material. There is a rough, physical energy to the fights that feels intentionally old school, closer in spirit to 1990s martial arts cinema than modern glossy fantasy action. That choice works in its favour. The film never tries to sand down the brutality, and fans of the games will find plenty of familiar moves, characters, and finishing blows brought to life with a willingness to go as far as the material demands.


There is also a clear sense of fun running through the whole thing. Mortal Kombat II never takes itself too seriously, and that balance of gore and humour gives it a strange but effective rhythm. Johnny Cage’s presence adds levity without undermining the stakes, while the wider ensemble cast keeps the energy moving even when the story threatens to become overloaded. For fans of the franchise, the sheer density of characters and references will feel like a reward in itself, with more fighters and deeper cuts from the lore than any previous film in the series.


Visually and tonally, it embraces its identity fully. It is loud, bloody, and deliberately a bit rough around the edges, like a studio production that has decided polish is less important than personality. That aesthetic choice will not appeal to everyone, but it gives the film a distinctive texture that sets it apart from more restrained modern action releases.


That said, it is not without problems. The pacing is uneven, with stretches that feel slightly stretched out before snapping back into intensity. At around an hour and forty five minutes, it still manages to feel longer in places, particularly when the narrative shifts between multiple factions and betrayals. The story itself is dense, occasionally overstuffed, and can lose momentum as it juggles too many character arcs at once.


It is also very clearly a film that will divide opinion depending on familiarity with the source material. Fans of the games and the genre are likely to embrace its excess, while mainstream critics who are less invested in the franchise may find it noisy and chaotic. It does not make much effort to soften its edges or explain itself to newcomers, and that will inevitably narrow its appeal. (Basically ignore the mainstream critics, for what do they know).


Even so, the overall experience lands firmly on the positive side. Mortal Kombat II understands its identity, embraces its brutality, and commits fully to being a spectacle-driven martial arts fantasy. It is gory, it is playful, and it looks and feels like a throwback in the best possible way. Despite its uneven pacing, it delivers enough energy and entertainment to justify its existence.


On balance, it is a strong sequel that knows exactly what its audience wants and delivers it with conviction. A solid 8.5 out of 10.

Out In Cinemas Now!