#Will There Be A Sequel To Mortal Kombat? Here’s What We Know

“#Will There Be A Sequel To Mortal Kombat? Here’s What We Know”
Which brings us to the topic at hand: are we getting a sequel? Per Wikipedia, the movie did well, grossing “$83.6 million worldwide and [becoming] a streaming hit for HBO Max, being its most-successful film launch to-date.” But the film also cost $55 million to make, and $83.6 against a $55 million budget isn’t exactly a smash-hit. Of course, there are other things to take into consideration here. Namely, the pandemic.
The folks involved with the movie certainly hoped for a sequel. The way the film ends — setting up both the tournament to come, and the arrival of character of Johnny Cage — practically screams “SEQUEL, PLEASE!” On top of that, Joe Taslim, who plays Sub-Zero in the movie, revealed he signed on for four films, adding: “If this one’s successful, maybe we do more.”
Director Simon McQuoid said:
“Sequels are a bit tricky because you can’t totally ignore them, because that wouldn’t be a smart move, but none of us used the ‘s-word.’ We’d never talk about it in any depth whatsoever because we feel like we have to put all our energy into this film. That being said, if the fans want another one, that’s not for us to decide; that’s for the fans to decide. Then, we need a couple of joiner pieces that we know can lead us somewhere because there’s a treasure trove of stuff that’s just sitting there.”
Greg Russo, who co-wrote the script, added even more fuel to the fire, revealing plans for a full trilogy:
“Movie one, we were always kind of setting this up as — well I was setting it up, it’s basically in my head — I always saw [movie one] as pre-tournament, then [movie two is] hopefully tournament, then [movie three is] post-tournament. So the idea was that this was going to be a pre-tournament movie that would hopefully sow the seeds for the tournament, the final.”
And producer Todd Garner said:
“Our goal and our prayer is that this movie does well enough and we’ve set it up enough and is satisfying enough for both the fans and people who don’t know anything about Mortal Kombat, that they’re gonna allow us at some point to sit with [game creators] Ed [Boon] and John [Tobias] and all the Warner Brothers execs and put a big whiteboard up like Kevin Feige did and map out the universe, and map out years and years of this. That’s my prayer.”
Yet despite all these hopes and dreams, there’s been zero word on a sequel. Usually, with big IP titles like this, studios greenlight a sequel sooner rather than later. Announcing a sequel is a go is a studio’s way of showing confidence in their product. That’s why so many blockbusters have sequel announcements before they even open, or at least on the Monday following opening weekend. “Mortal Kombat” had neither, which seems to suggest Warner Bros. isn’t keen for a sequel. That could change, of course. But at this point, I think another reboot — perhaps in a few years — is more likely than a sequel.
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