Mortal Kombat Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

64 =
Based upon 7 Critic Reviews
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Los Angeles Times | Kevin ThomasAdd Critic to Favorites

A martial arts action-adventure with wondrous special effects and witty production design, it effectively combines supernatural terror, a mythical slay-the-dragon, save-the-princess odyssey and even a spiritual quest for self-knowledge. [21 Aug 1995 Pg. F3]Read the full review

Variety | Leonard KladyAdd Critic to Favorites

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.Read the full review

The New York Times | Stephen HoldenAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie's extensive martial arts sequences, in which combatants bounce off each other doing triple handsprings, suggest a slightly more earthbound version of the aerial ballets in Hong Kong action-adventure films.Read the full review

Washington Post | Richard HarringtonAdd Critic to Favorites

A mix of martial-arts and special-effects magic, the film serves its nonstop confrontations either straight up or with a twist (as when they involve Kombatants with special powers, like Sub-Zero, Reptile and Scorpion).Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Lisa SchwarzbaumAdd Critic to Favorites

And although director Paul Anderson treats the story with appropriate deadpan respect, there are enough sparks of humor (particularly generated by Linden Ashby as a shallow martial-arts actor who worries that he's a fake, with good reason) to amuse the adults accompanying the 10-year-old boys in the audience.Read the full review

San Francisco Chronicle | Laura EvensonAdd Critic to Favorites

Mortal Kombat the movie has everything a teenage boy could want: snakes that jut out of a villain's palms, acrobatic kung- fu fighting and a couple of battling babes. Everything, that is, but an interesting plot, decent dialogue and compelling actingRead the full review

USA Today | Susan WloszczynaAdd Critic to Favorites

Just like the popular (and more graphically violent) video game it's spun from, kung-fooy and kartoony Kombat shoves plot and personality aside to focus on action cloaked in mystic mumbo-jumbo and gloomy mock-gothic graphics. [21 Aug 1995 Pg. 03.D]Read the full review

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