The three chosen warriors listen to Lord Rayden's words of wisdom on how to overcome the most dangerous of adversaries.The three chosen warriors listen to Lord Rayden's words of wisdom on how to overcome the most dangerous of adversaries.The three chosen warriors listen to Lord Rayden's words of wisdom on how to overcome the most dangerous of adversaries.
Jeff Bennett
- Johnny Cage
- (voice)
- (as Jeff Glen Bennett)
- …
Jim Cummings
- Shang Tsung
- (voice)
- …
Ron Feinberg
- Raiden
- (voice)
- (as Ron A. Feinberg)
- …
Jennifer Hale
- Sonya Blade
- (voice)
Randy Hamilton
- Liu Kang
- (voice)
Kyle Wyatt
- Mob Leader
- (voice)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Well. With the exception of my picking it up at a garage sale in the early 2000's I most likely would have missed it entirely. I am a huge fan of the game and my 8 year old mind was Blown Away from the live action film. This small piece of MK history is important as it pre-dates MK3, which was the massive change of the series,(as every game since them has been made from it. This film is the missing links from the charactors that we did not fully know about at the time. Plus after the movie they had cheat codes for MK3. That was nice.
Good little cartoon with crummy CGI. Enjoyable for a fan.
I'm still trying to understand what they were thinking when they realize it would be a good idea to publish this. Those changes of graphics modes made my head crash!!
I'm a huge fan of MK saga, since the first video game but this show is really disappointed. More than Annihilation movie!!!
Fight secuences are just awfuls even for the 90s , there were other animated actions shows and movies which had very good movements! They try to impress with 3d animation but it didn't help to much just because the models weren't very good, comparing them with others from other games they lack modeling !!
Maybe it was a kind of experiment but theyd had to keep it for themselves!!
I'm a huge fan of MK saga, since the first video game but this show is really disappointed. More than Annihilation movie!!!
Fight secuences are just awfuls even for the 90s , there were other animated actions shows and movies which had very good movements! They try to impress with 3d animation but it didn't help to much just because the models weren't very good, comparing them with others from other games they lack modeling !!
Maybe it was a kind of experiment but theyd had to keep it for themselves!!
I didn't even know that they had made an animated movie for the "Mortal Kombat" franchise, before now in 2025 as I happened to stumble upon it by random chance. And of course I opted to give it a fair chance. Not that I was harboring any grand expectations as the older "Mortal Kombat" movies were pure cheese.
The storyline was actually fair enough. Nothing outstanding or innovative, nor did writer Kevin Droney bring much of anything new to the franchise.
With "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" being an animated movie, having a good voice cast ensemble is an important thing. And luckily, I would say, the voice acting was actually fair.
But that leads us on to the eyesore that is "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins". The art style, both in the drawn parts and the CGI animated parts. Let's start with the worst of the two; the CGI animated stuff. The CGI animated parts were insanely crappy. It looked like something that was discarded from a PC game in the early 1990s for being too lousy. It was so bad that I was laughing a lot whenever they used the awful CGI. "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" also has ordinary drawn animated art style, however, don't get your hopes or expectations up. It doesn't look good. Again, it looks like something that was discarded from a 1980s animated cartoon series for being too shoddy.
"Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" was abysmal, no doubt about it. And no wonder I had never heard about it, because this animosity deserves to remain buried.
Don't waste 39 minutes of your life on this. Not even if you are a diehard fan of the "Mortal Kombat" games or movies. Trust me, this is just simply not worth the effort.
My rating of director Joseph Francis's 1995 animated eyesore "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" lands on a one out of ten stars.
The storyline was actually fair enough. Nothing outstanding or innovative, nor did writer Kevin Droney bring much of anything new to the franchise.
With "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" being an animated movie, having a good voice cast ensemble is an important thing. And luckily, I would say, the voice acting was actually fair.
But that leads us on to the eyesore that is "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins". The art style, both in the drawn parts and the CGI animated parts. Let's start with the worst of the two; the CGI animated stuff. The CGI animated parts were insanely crappy. It looked like something that was discarded from a PC game in the early 1990s for being too lousy. It was so bad that I was laughing a lot whenever they used the awful CGI. "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" also has ordinary drawn animated art style, however, don't get your hopes or expectations up. It doesn't look good. Again, it looks like something that was discarded from a 1980s animated cartoon series for being too shoddy.
"Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" was abysmal, no doubt about it. And no wonder I had never heard about it, because this animosity deserves to remain buried.
Don't waste 39 minutes of your life on this. Not even if you are a diehard fan of the "Mortal Kombat" games or movies. Trust me, this is just simply not worth the effort.
My rating of director Joseph Francis's 1995 animated eyesore "Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins" lands on a one out of ten stars.
First of all, I'll start by saying that I'm a huge Mortal Kombat fan so I got this thinking it would be pretty good. Well I'll tell ya, this was brutal, well its not so much the story that is bad but the animation and the art. The art is some of the worst I've seen in an animated video and the computer graphics is cheap and the fights repeat the same moves alot. This looked like it was a cheap and lazy attempt to get Mortal Kombat out everywhere and milk the name. The thing that I liked was the Making of Mortal Kombat:The Movie at the end of the video.
Back in the 90's Mortal Kombat was everywhere. The video game was incredibly popular, the movie is considered one of the best video game adaptations out there and the theme song by the Utah Saints was pretty kick ass. So what do you do when you own the rights to it? Make a cartoon tie in of course that came out after the first Mortal Kombat movie, before the second Mortal Kombat movie and takes place before the first Mortal Kombat movie. How does that work?
This was the brainchild of Lawrence Kasanoff and his production company "Threshold Entertainment". He's the one responsible for all TV and movie versions of Mortal Kombat included the live action tour. He's also the one responsible for the terrible movie "Foodfight!" and when you see some of the crappy CGI in this cartoon you'll start to understand the problems.
The story itself is pretty basic. We're introduced to Sonya, Liu Kang, Johnny Cage and Raiden heading to Outworld for the Mortal Kombat tournament. Along the way we're introduced to other characters in both 2D and 3D animation and neither one is very good. This was at that point in the 90's when people tried to combine the two because it was cheaper than having to animate by hand. But it's far from seamless and there's a real disconnect between the two styles. Then there are the crappy 3D scenes that look like they were done at minimal cost using blocky characters who don't move very well and don't change facial expressions just like in "Foodfight!". Seems like Lawrence never actually learned from his mistakes.
The 2D animations are just as bad with the same repeated cycles, characters that don't move, other characters that are just repeated over and over again and a strange beveled effect that just shows even more how the two styles don't mix well.
It's thankfully very short and if you've seen the original movie... there's nothing really new here. They talk a bit about Goro and his brother but that's about it.
This is really just a cheap cash grab made by people who don't understand how to do animation and based on later works never learned how to do it properly. If you want something better, and by this I mean better in a technical sense, watch "Defenders of the Realm". It's awful but compared to this it's like it was made by Disney.
This was the brainchild of Lawrence Kasanoff and his production company "Threshold Entertainment". He's the one responsible for all TV and movie versions of Mortal Kombat included the live action tour. He's also the one responsible for the terrible movie "Foodfight!" and when you see some of the crappy CGI in this cartoon you'll start to understand the problems.
The story itself is pretty basic. We're introduced to Sonya, Liu Kang, Johnny Cage and Raiden heading to Outworld for the Mortal Kombat tournament. Along the way we're introduced to other characters in both 2D and 3D animation and neither one is very good. This was at that point in the 90's when people tried to combine the two because it was cheaper than having to animate by hand. But it's far from seamless and there's a real disconnect between the two styles. Then there are the crappy 3D scenes that look like they were done at minimal cost using blocky characters who don't move very well and don't change facial expressions just like in "Foodfight!". Seems like Lawrence never actually learned from his mistakes.
The 2D animations are just as bad with the same repeated cycles, characters that don't move, other characters that are just repeated over and over again and a strange beveled effect that just shows even more how the two styles don't mix well.
It's thankfully very short and if you've seen the original movie... there's nothing really new here. They talk a bit about Goro and his brother but that's about it.
This is really just a cheap cash grab made by people who don't understand how to do animation and based on later works never learned how to do it properly. If you want something better, and by this I mean better in a technical sense, watch "Defenders of the Realm". It's awful but compared to this it's like it was made by Disney.
Did you know
- TriviaThe Great Kung Lao mentioned in the flashback is the Kung Lao with the razor-rimmed hat, even though in the games, The Great Kung Lao, and the Kung Lao with the razor-rimmed hat are 2 different characters
- Quotes
Johnny Cage: In all my movies the bad guys sneak up behind me. You think these guys would try something new, huh?
Liu Kang: Maybe if we ignore them, they'll go away.
Johnny Cage: Then again, maybe not.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Mortal Kombat: Behind the Dragon (1995)
- SoundtracksTechno Syndrome (Mortal Kombat)
Written by Olivier Adams (as Oliver Adams)
Performed by The Immortals
Courtesy of Acclaim Entertainment and Virgin Records
(P) 1993 Vernon Yard Recordings,
A Division of Virgin Records America, Inc.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Mortal Kombat: The Animated Video - El viaje ha comenzado
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 39m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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