

Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge
Extreme violence. Bad language. And a bloody good time.
After the vicious slaughter of his family by stone-cold mercenary Sub-Zero, Hanzo Hasashi is exiled to the torturous Netherrealm. There, in exchange for his servitude to the sinister Quan Chi, he’s given a chance to avenge his family – and is resurrected as Scorpion, a lost soul bent on revenge. Back on Earthrealm, Lord Raiden gathers a team of elite warriors – Shaolin monk Liu Kang, Special Forces officer Sonya Blade, and action star Johnny Cage – an unlikely band of heroes with one chance to save humanity. To do this, they must defeat Shang Tsung's horde of Outworld gladiators and reign over the Mortal Kombat tournament.
Why watch Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge
Scorpion's origin story hits like a perfectly executed fatality—this isn't just a video game adaptation, it's a revenge tragedy that channels the operatic brutality of Kill Bill filtered through anime sensibilities. Patrick Seitz voices a Hanzo consumed by grief and rage so palpable you'll feel the heat radiating from your screen, and the film earns every moment of his transformation into a hell-spawned avenger.
The 80-minute runtime moves with the precision of a fighting game combo: brutal hand-to-hand sequences punctuated by supernatural spectacle, all rendered in animation that favors visceral detail over spectacle-bloat. Directors never linger on exposition when they can show you a character's soul fracturing in real time. The supporting cast—Joel McHale's wisecracking Johnny Cage, Jennifer Carpenter's steely Sonya Blade—grounds the Outworld madness in human stakes that actually matter.
This is the Mortal Kombat film that understands the franchise's core: personal vengeance wrapped in mythic scale. It respects both the game's lore and the medium's potential for storytelling that live-action blockbusters keep fumbling. You'll be quoting Scorpion's final line for weeks, and the tournament itself unfolds with the kind of narrative momentum that makes you forget you're watching a 90-minute animated side quest.
— The What2Watch desk · US
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The story
After the vicious slaughter of his family by stone-cold mercenary Sub-Zero, Hanzo Hasashi is exiled to the torturous Netherrealm. There, in exchange for his servitude to the sinister Quan Chi, he’s given a chance to avenge his family – and is resurrected as Scorpion, a lost soul bent on revenge. Back on Earthrealm, Lord Raiden gathers a team of elite warriors – Shaolin monk Liu Kang, Special Forces officer Sonya Blade, and action star Johnny Cage – an unlikely band of heroes with one chance to save humanity. To do this, they must defeat Shang Tsung's horde of Outworld gladiators and reign over the Mortal Kombat tournament.
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6.7Reviews & ratings

If you're a fan of the video games, stick to them - the visuals and narrative that they deliver are still at a much higher level of sophistication than 'Mortal Kombat Legacy: Scorpion's Revenge'. - Jake Watt Read Jake's full article... https://www.maketheswitch.com.au/article/review-mortal-kombat-legacy-scorpions-revenge-an-animated-gorefest-for-aggressive-preschoolers
Mortal Kombat Legends: Scorpion's Revenge gets off to a very promising start. I don’t think it’s hyperbole to call the first 10 minutes a blood orgy – I mean, a waterfall ends up literally flowing red with the blood of the dead. This is all great stuff, brutal and uncompromising. Unfortunately, it’s also the best part of the film, after which it doesn’t take long for things to go downhill. The plot goes in autopil…Show more
My favorite Mortal Kombat movie to this day. I loved the story and all the characters. Scorpion was amazingly done and so were other characters like Liu Kang. I loved Shang Tsung and Quan Chi as the villain. I really enjoyed how they managed to tell us the story of Scorpion and his quest for vengeance while also showing off Liu Kang and his development through his dialogue with Raiden and his fight and dialogue with…Show more
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