Last month, Tekken series producer Katsuhiro Harada publicly denouncing the Japanese film, calling it “terrible” on Twitter. That didn’t stop Anchor Bay Films from announcing that it has acquired the distribution rights to release the film in the US, Australia, and New Zealand.The film “will be released widely in the United States” next year, with Anchor Bay planning both theatrical and home video launches. No time frame was announced for Australia and New Zealand.
The Tekken film had been in the works since 2002, when production company Crystal Sky picked up the rights to it for a reported $60 million. After a lengthy hiatus, the project resurfaced in 2007, with director Dwight Little (Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid, Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home) taking control. The film is centred around the doomed protagonist Jin.
The film features a number of familiar faces, including Cary-Hiroyuki Takagawa (who played Shang Tsung in the original Mortal Kombat) and Lateef Crowder (who played Baraka in the recent Mortal Kombat: Rebirth short). It also stars Gary Daniel, who has no apparent connection to Mortal Kombat but did star as Kenshiro in the live-action film based on the similarly violent Fist of the North Star.
The history of video game movie adaptations has had a rough time, with Resident Evil and the original Mortal Kombat movie being exceptions. Check out the trailer below to see if this film is something worth watching, I would personally Katsuhiro Harada based on the footage.
William
Looking forward to Mortal Kombat Rebirth more… fighting film of the decade probably… this not so much. This is like The fast and the furious tokyo drift to The Fast and the Furious, basically the same just way shittier
Apocacrux
I agree with you 100%