Mortal Kombat: Legacy
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Mortal Kombat: Legacy | |
---|---|
Genre | Action/martial arts |
Created by | Ed Boon John Tobias Kevin Tancharoen Oren Uziel |
Developed by | Kevin Tancharoen Oren Uziel |
Written by | Kevin Tancharoen Todd Helbing Aaron Helbing |
Starring | Michael Jai White Jeri Ryan Darren Shahlavi Matt Mullins Sam Tjhia Jolene Tran Ryan Robbins Ian Anthony Dale Kevan Ohtsji Shane Warren Jones Peter Shinkoda |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 9 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producers | Kevin Tancharoen Todd Helbing Aaron Helbing Lance Sloane Tim Carter |
Running time | 9-12 minutes |
Production companies | NetherRealm Studios Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment Warner Premiere Digital |
Original release | |
Network | YouTube Machinima.com |
Release | April 11 July 24, 2011 | –
Mortal Kombat: Legacy is an American web series anthology adaptation of the fictional universe of the Mortal Kombat video game franchise that debuted on Machinima.com's YouTube channel on April 11, 2011.[1]
The show's premise originated with director Kevin Tancharoen's short film entitled Mortal Kombat: Rebirth, portraying the original game's story in a realistic way, a concept he eventually submitted to Warner Bros. Seeking the green-light from the studio for production on a re-imagined Mortal Kombat film.[2] Warner Bros. declined to back the film, despite the attention and positive fan reception,[3][4] but Tancharoen did receive the go-ahead to shoot the web series.[5]
Mortal Kombat: Legacy takes place before the events of the original game and tells the background stories of several characters from the franchise, culminating in their reasons for participating in the upcoming tenth Mortal Kombat tournament, on which the first game was based. The episodes in the anthology web series are non-linear with minimal continuity, and each devoted to the story of a specific character or characters.
Characters
- Michael Jai White as Jackson "Jax" Briggs – Major in the Deacon City police department and Sonya's loyal partner.
- Jeri Ryan as Sonya Blade – Lieutenant in the Deacon City police department and Jax's partner.
- Tahmoh Penikett as Kurtis Stryker – Lieutenant in the Deacon City police department alongside Jax and Sonya.
- Darren Shahlavi as Kano – Notorious career criminal and head of the Black Dragon crime cartel.
- Matt Mullins as Johnny Cage – Former Power Rangers alumnus struggling to maintain his fame after a string of controversies.
- Samantha Tjhia as Kitana – Former princess of Edenia, daughter of King Jerrod and Queen Sindel, raised as an assassin by Emperor Shao Kahn.
- Jolene Tran as Mileena – A half-Edinian half-Tarkatan clone of Kitana, trained as Kahn's loyal assassin.
- Aleks Paunovic as Shao Kahn – Emperor of the Outworld realm and adoptive father to Kitana and Mileena.
- Beatrice Ilg as Queen Sindel – The former queen of Edenia, wife of King Jerrod and mother of Princess Kitana.
- Kirby Morrow as King Jerrod – Former King of Edenia, father to Kitana and husband to Sindel.
- Fraser Aitcheson as Baraka – General of Outworld's Tarkatan warriors, under Shao Kahn's rule.
- Ryan Robbins as Raiden - God of Thunder and Protector of Earthrealm.
- Ian Anthony Dale as Hanzo Hasashi/Scorpion – General of the Japanese Shirai Ryu clan of ninjas, opposed to the Lin Kuei.
- Kevan Ohtsji as Bi Han/Sub-Zero – Ninja for the Lin Kuei clan of ninjas, opposed to the Shirai Ryu.
- Shane Warren Jones as Cyrax – Loyal ninja assassin for the Lin Kuei who reluctantly undergoes automation into a cybernetic warrior.
- Peter Shinkoda as Sektor – Loyal ninja assassin for the Lin Kuei who willingly undergoes automation into a cybernetic warrior.
- Johnson Phan as Shang Tsung – Sorcerer serving Outworld Emperor Shao Kahn.
- Michael Rogers as Quan Chi – A sorcerer allied to Shang Tsung on the side of the Netherrealm.
Non-game characters
- Victor Lucas as himself – Host of The Electric Playground.
- Ed Boon as Ed Goodman – TV producer.
- Tracy Spiridakos as Blue – Manic depressive mental patient who befriends Raiden.
- Peter Hall as Dr. Gadsen – Psychiatrist who attempts to treat Raiden.
- Shane Warren Jones as Hydro – Loyal cybernetic ninja assassin for the Lin Kuei.
- Colin Foo as Lin Kuei Grand Master – Current head of the Chinese Lin Kuei ninja clan.
- Serge Houde as The Doctor – Surgeon and head of the Lin Kuei's Cyber Initiative.
Episodes
Production
Conception
On June 8, 2010, Mortal Kombat: Rebirth surfaced on YouTube amid confusion about its origins and intentions.[6] Written, directed and edited by Kevin Tancharoen with friends and colleagues donating time, the short film was made without studio involvement on a $7,500 budget, filmed over a weekend, and completed in two months to show Warner Bros. Tancharoen's vision of a re-imagined Mortal Kombat film.[7] Before submitting it to Warner Bros., he intended to privately upload the short to YouTube to gauge the response of a colleague, but he accidentally made it available to the general public, who quickly voiced an overwhelmingly positive response.[8]
With the favorable fan reception, Tancharoen met with Warner Bros. executives, who stopped short of green-lighting a motion picture, but agreed to fund a web series based on the Mortal Kombat franchise.[9] The final step was convincing Ed Boon, co-creator of the franchise and current executive producer at NetherRealm Studios, who just produced the latest video game installment, to agree to the series. Boon was impressed with Mortal Kombat: Rebirth[10] but not entirely sold on Tancharoen's re-imagined vision.[11] After he met with Tancharoen, Boon was surprised by his enthusiasm for the franchise and quickly came on board.[8]
Development
Mortal Kombat: Legacy is produced by Warner Bros. Digital Distribution, Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and Warner Premiere. Kevin Tancharoen, Lance Sloane and Tim Carter serve as producers. It consists of nine 8-12 minute episodes, each written by Tancharoen and Spartacus: Blood and Sand writers Todd Helbing and Aaron Helbing, with Tancharoen directing. Larnell Stovall, who worked with Tancharoen on Rebirth, is the stunt coordinator. The series was filmed in Vancouver in February and March, with Tancharoen tweeting daily updates of their progress.[12][13][14] Post-production began in March[15] and continues alongside release.[16] Visual effects are being handled by Goldtooth Creative Agency.
When Kevin Tancharoen made Mortal Kombat: Rebirth in 2010, he took the traditional Mortal Kombat story, which was for 20 years based in a supernatural world, and re-told it based on a real-world scenarios. The characters remained, the basic plot of a tournament remained, but most mystical elements like alternate realms, sorcery and the back stories of characters such as Baraka and Reptile were adjusted to fit the new realistic universe. This "new take" on the franchise is what prompted Ed Boon to remark that Rebirth "probably crosses the line" in terms of re-imagining.[17] Warner Bros., however, were receptive to the new style.[18] For Legacy, Tancharoen teamed up with Boon, Warner Bros. and NetherRealm Studios and promised fans the web series would be true to the franchise, including the mystical and supernatural elements famous to Mortal Kombat.[19] The small budget forced some stories to be set in a realistic world to avoid the high costs of creating a fantasy world with visual effects. Of Boon's involvement, Tancharoen said he "was instrumental in this show adhering to the canon of the series" but that he allowed Tancharoen to include his own ideas.[18]
The first two episodes are based mostly in a true-to-life universe. Episode three follows suit, but ends with the first hint of supernatural themes when Shang Tsung appears to freeze time to converse with Johnny Cage. Episodes 4 and 5 reveal the most in the issue of Tancharoen's stylistic approach to the real-world/mysticism debate. Baraka is portrayed true to his original back story from the video games and ideas such as sorcery and multiple realms are fleshed out. Criticism has been leveled at the production team for abandoning the original real-world approach of Rebirth for Legacy, despite Tancharoen continuously stating that the supernatural elements of Mortal Kombat would be included in the series. In an IGN interview on May 16, 2011, Tancharoen explained that some stories could be told in his realistic Rebirth approach but that other stories were too grounded in the supernatural to be converted to real-world portrayal.[18] The release of Episode 6 includes a note from Tancharoen himself, written to the fans before the episode begins: "The following episode represents my different take on the Mortal Kombat universe. I think it combines the perfect amount of gritty realism mixed with a hint of mysticism. I hope you guys enjoy it."
Casting
Michael Jai White, Jeri Ryan, Matt Mullins and Ian Anthony Dale reprise their roles from Mortal Kombat: Rebirth as Jax, Sonya Blade, Johnny Cage and Scorpion respectively.[20] Michael Jai White was offered the role of Jax in the 1995 film Mortal Kombat and the 1997 film, Mortal Kombat: Annihilation, but accepted the lead part in Spawn instead, being replaced by Lynn "Red" Williams.[21] Johnson Phan and Fraser Aitcheson replace James Lew and Lateef Crowder to portray Shang Tsung and Baraka respectively. Kano is played by Darren Shahlavi,[22] Tahmoh Penikett plays Kurtis Stryker and Sam Tjhia plays Kitana.[23] Episode 4 revealed Aleks Paunovic as Shao Kahn, Jolene Tran as Mileena, Kirby Morrow as King Jerrod and Beatrice Ilg as Sindel. The characters of Sub-Zero (Kevan Ohtsji), Sektor (Peter Shinkoda) and Cyrax (Shane Warren Jones) were revealed in the first official trailer released April 11, 2011.[24] Ryan Robbins was revealed as Raiden[25] and Michael Rogers was revealed to be playing Quan Chi in the credits of Episode 7. Ed Boon makes a cameo appearance in Episode 3 about Johnny Cage, playing Ed Goodman, a TV producer who has previously worked with Cage.[26]
Season 2
On April 9, 2011, Tancharoen revealed to Hadoken.net that both Liu Kang and Kung Lao would appear in a potential second season.[27] In a May 10, 2011 interview with Tancharoen, Movieweb revealed that Kabal and Goro are also planned for Season 2.[27] Goro's brother, Durak, has been rumored to appear in the series.[28][29] Stunt coordinator Larnell Stovall also expressed interest in including Kenshi and Nightwolf in the second season.[30]
On July 15, 2012, IGN revealed an exclusive video made by director Kevin Tancharoen directed at fans announcing Season 2, adding that all of the scripts were done.[31] The director also confirmed more fight scenes and improved special effects in the upcoming season to focus on the actual Mortal Kombat tournament of the original game, in response to the fans who were let down by the setup of the first season. Characters for this season confirmed in the video were as follows: Kano, Liu Kang, Raiden, Johnny Cage, Scorpion, Sub-Zero, Sonya, Kung Lao, Kitana, Mileena, Jax, Baraka, Stryker, Shang Tsung, Quan Chi, Ermac and Kenshi. Kevin also stated on Twitter that Season 2 would not affect his development of the feature film.[32] On August 21, Tancharoen revealed he is still to cast the new characters for the season and that his treatment of Liu Kang's character will be a surprise.[33]
On December 3, 2012, it was announced that the second season of the series had begun production in Los Angeles[34] with the first footage to be debuted worldwide on February 17, 2013 at the Streamy Awards.[35] The cast will feature Harry Shum, Jr. as Kuai Liang (Sub-Zero's younger brother), Casper Van Dien replacing Matt Mullins as Johnny Cage, Brian Tee as Liu Kang, Mark Dacascos as Kung Lao, Ian Anthony Dale returning as Scorpion, Darren Shahlavi returning as Kano, and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa reprising his role as Shang Tsung from the first feature film, unrelated to the continuity of Tancharoen's series.[36] It has also been revealed that Tahmoh Penikett has been replaced by Eric Jacobus to play Kurtis Stryker, Michelle Lee will replace Jolene Tran as Mileena. Jeri Ryan and Michael Jai White will not be returning;[37][38] their replacements unknown. Dan Southworth confirmed on Twitter that he has a role, though his character is unknown.[39]
Season 2 was co-written by Tancharoen, Josh Baizer and Marshall Johnson, will be directed by Tancharoen, and will continue to be broadcast exclusively on Machinima's YouTube channel.[40] Bandito Brothers replace Goldtooth Creative to handle visual effects.[41]
Release
On April 7, 2011, a scene from the series was released on Machinima's YouTube channel as a teaser trailer. The short clip revealed the title of the series to be Mortal Kombat: Legacy.[22] On April 11, 2011, the first official trailer debuted.[42] It comprised clips from all nine episodes of the series, confirming characters Sub-Zero, Sektor and Cyrax, and revealed the story to concern the motivations of several characters before the beginning of the tournament portrayed in the first Mortal Kombat video game.
Tancharoen confirmed the first episode's premiere to occur before the release of the latest installment of the video game.[43] On April 11, 2011, the first full episode of the series was released on Machinima.com and on YouTube,[44] with episode 2 airing one day before the video game's release. After episode 2 was released, it was quickly pulled down and replaced with a censored version that eliminated some of the more gratuitous violence and imagery. Episode 3 was released beginning with the censored version, muting profanities. On April 29, both episodes were released in their uncensored format. Episode 4 was released without censorship. Tancharoen later explained that the censorship was required by YouTube after an overwhelming amount of inappropriate "flags".[18] An agreement was reached between the studio and YouTube that any episodes requiring censorship will be released with offending material removed, with the uncensored versions released several days later requiring age confirmation.
In several tweets on June 4, 2011, Tancharoen stated that the final episode would not be released along the usual pattern of midnight, Tuesday morning, but will premiere some time during the 2011 Comic Con event to be held between July 21–24, 2011.[45][46] On July 7, 2011, Shock Till You Drop received an image teasing the final episode of the series with characters Cyrax and Sektor, and explained that the episode is being "fine-tuned" before it debuts during the Mortal Kombat: Legacy Comic-Con panel on Thursday, 21 July between 2-3pm.[47] The episode was officially released on Machinima.com's YouTube channel on the 24th of July.
Reception
The first episode became YouTube's most viewed video for that week, notching up 5.5 million views, whereas Tancharoen's short, also considered a success, received only 2.1 million in total on the official account.[48] President of Warner Bros. Digital Distribution Thomas Gewecke expressed excitement about the first episode and its prospects for future adaptations, saying, "it's an incredibly powerful, strong and well done piece of filmmaking. It's a reinterpretation of the franchise in live-action form that we'd like to explore as different concepts and see what approach works best."[49] Episode two aired with considerably less attention, possessing only a quarter of views when compared with the first episode. The release of the fifth episode garnered only 424,000 views in the first 24 hours.[27] One day after the release of episode five, the total views for the entire series to date surpassed 30,000,000.[50]
IGN adjudged Legacy the "most elegantly produced web series", giving particular mention to episode one for "effective action sequences and some great cinematography"[51] It looked favorably upon episode 4 for the first use of "extraordinarily effective" animation and "poetic" voice over narration, the removal of censorship, the "fascinating character lore and dazzling fantasy [and] a beautifully crafted land of Outworld".[52] Episode five was praised for the score, the injection of character and story, the editing and "quite great" visual effects.[53] CraveOnline praised the animation style used in episode four, saying Mileena's emerging heritage and the Tarkatan invasion were the episode's best parts.[54] G4TV praised the third episode in the series for its shift towards character development, while not at the expense of the action set forth by the first two episodes. It "allowed the series to broaden its horizons a bit" by creating a likeable Johnny Cage, commenting, he "finally lets loose and makes you appreciate the character in a whole new way".[55] Houston Press also joined in the praise of the series' devotion to character development upon the release of Raiden's episode. While the martial arts took a backseat, the drama of Raiden's "christlike" story was well executed, giving audiences a reason to identify with his character in a way the franchise has never been able to do.[56] The Escapist called the Scorpion and Sub-Zero-themed episode 7 "one of the best episodes" in the series, lending an emotional weight to the most famous tale in the franchise.[57]
The series has also received its fair share of criticism, led by the very same agencies who have praised it. CraveOnline was not pleased with the new Johnny Cage, rating the episode a 4 out of 10, claiming Mullins' Johnny Cage "doesn't quite have the right look, a good delivery or impressive martial arts moves".[58] IGN noted of episode one that the "production values don't seem quite as tight and concise as [Rebirth]" in addition to light story and "flat" editing and performances.[51]
By far the most criticized have been episodes four and five for their shift away from the realistic style of Rebirth and the first few episodes, to the "traditional mythology well known to longtime Kombat fans". Tancharoen also acknowledged the audience split that the "Kitana & Mileena" episodes created, stating theirs was a story that could not be told in a realistic environment, and that Warner Bros. "wanted to make sure this web series tied into some of the story lines of the Mortal Kombat canon."[18] Unlike for episode four, IGN criticized the use of animation this time, stating it cost the episode its energy and created a glut of continuity errors. Cheaper makeup, costume effects and set design due to budgetary constraints, and a short running time were among the other gripes.[52] Upon the release of the Raiden-themed episode six, Houston Press suggested that Tancharoen was forced to steer episodes four and five into the traditional Mortal Kombat mystique by Warner Bros. to test how fans would react. Episode six, according to the reviewer, was the studio allowing Tancharoen to return to his own style, finally delivering "cinematic greatness" and "the best [episode] he's done so far. Possibly even better than the original Mortal Kombat: Rebirth".[56] Film School Rejects bemoaned the series' expectation that its viewers are knowledgeable about the franchise's history, explaining that without previous knowledge of the games, the viewer is left with too many unanswered questions that may never be answered.[59]
DVD and Blu-ray release
Tancharoen revealed plans are in place for an uncensored[18] DVD and Blu-ray release. On August 10, 2011, Warner Premiere has revealed a Blu-ray release date of November 8, with no mention of a DVD release date. Special features will include "Mortal Kombat Legacy: Fights", a feature exploring how fatalities and extreme violence aid in Mortal Kombat storytelling, "Mortal Kombat Legacy: Fan Made", a feature with Tancharoen explaining his interest in the franchise, as well as documentaries "Mortal Kombat Legacy: Expanding the Netherrealm", "Mortal Kombat: Mysticism" and "Mortal Kombat: Gear", covering the franchise universe, the powers of its characters and the weapons they use, respectively.[60]
Feature film
On September 29, 2011, it was reported that New Line Cinema, sister studio to Warner Bros., has hired Tancharoen to direct a new feature-length movie based on the franchise. Oren Uziel, who wrote the original short film, Mortal Kombat: Rebirth, but was not involved in Mortal Kombat: Legacy, is returning to pen the story, while no actors, nor other crew have been confirmed. Story details known state that the film will not be an extension of the game, nor of Legacy.[61]
New Line President Toby Emmerich said that the success of the video games combined with Tancharoen's vision means, "You don't have to squint too hard to see how it might make a good movie", while Tancharoen says discussions have only concerned an R-rating, with darker, brutally real martial arts.[62] Tancharoen had discussions at the 2011 Comic Con with Uziel and Mortal Kombat creator Ed Boon and to expect an origin story in the style of Rebirth and Legacy as opposed to the traditional Mortal Kombat mythology.[63] He said, "I've always been a fan of properties like Batman where you can expand the universe in different directions. Mortal Kombat is big enough that you can allow for multiple different kinds of storytelling."[64] But as for its continuity with the web series, Tancharoen said "you won't have to have seen all ten episodes previously - or have played the videogame - to understand the movie."[64] Shooting was expected to begin in March 2012, but this has not been confirmed.[63] The film will have a budget up to $100 million and a release date of 2013, coordinated with the next installment of the video game series being produced by the same studios. On December 4, 2012, Michael Jai White tweeted that he would not be appearing in Season 2 of Legacy, but would be returning to do the film.[65]
References
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{{cite web}}
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: Text "16 Jan 2011 22:01" ignored (help) - ^ Boon, E. (June 11, 2010) "A million people asked me what I thought of the MK Rebirth video. Personally I thought it was awesome. Super high production quality!" Twitter.com
- ^ Boon, E. (June 11, 2010) "Its TOTALLY different & probably crosses the line. But as a "re-imagining" and as a film piece on its own, u can't deny its well put 2gether" Twitter.com
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- ^ Tancharoen, K. (February 26, 2011) "Guess who we're filming today. #mortalkombat. http://moby.to/gz5ffo" Twitter.com
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- ^ Tanch, K. (March 21, 2011) "FYI. The man himself-Ed Boon makes a cameo in the next episode about Johnny Cage! @noobde #mortalkombatlegacy" Twitter.com
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- ^ Tanch, K. (July 15, 2012) http://twitter.com/KTANCH/status/224207780230336512 "Mortal Kombat: Legacy Season 2 does not affect the movie."] Twitter.com
- ^ Tanch, K. (August 21, 2012) http://twitter.com/KTANCH/status/238111395688902657 " Liu Kang is NOT what you expect in season 2. You will be surprised. Now to figure out casting. "] Twitter.com
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- ^ Jai White, M. (December 04, 2012) https://twitter.com/MichaelJaiWhite/status/276166228572258304?p=p] " I'm coming back to do the Mortal Kombat movie but not the web series. "] Twitter.com
- ^ Southworth, D. (December 03, 2012) https://twitter.com/dan_southworth/status/275786304254509056 " Whoooo!! Fighting all day on MKL2! Damn that was an epic battle!! I need some sushi, but while I'm waitin... "] Twitter.com
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- ^ Tancharoen, K. (June 4, 2010) "Good News: we will premiere the new episode at Comic Con!!!!" Twitter.com
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- ^ a b "Mortal Kombat: Legacy Coming To The Big Screen". The Fan Carpet. 2011-10-01. Retrieved 2011-10-02.
- ^ "Tweet by @MichaelJaiWhite". Twitter.
I'm coming back to do the Mortal Kombat movie but not the web series.
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External links
- Mortal Kombat: Legacy at IMDb
- Mortal Kombat: Legacy at Machinima.com's YouTube channel
- Mortal Kombat: Legacy at the Mortal Kombat wiki