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Mortal Kombat was nominated for the Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA Golden Reel Award.It won the BMI Film & TV Awards BMI Film Music Award. [citation needed] The soundtrack went Platinum [2] in less than a year reaching No. 10 on the Billboard 200, [3] and was included in the 2011 Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition as the "most successful video game spin-off soundtrack album". [4]
Techno Syndrome", with its signature scream of "Mortal Kombat!" - taken from the "Mortal Monday" commercial advertising the home console version of the game - has subsequently become famous as "the Mortal Kombat theme song" because of its use in the 1995 film, and remixed versions of the song continue to be associated with the Mortal Kombat ...
Mortal Kombat: Songs Inspired by the Warriors is a compilation album featuring songs inspired by the iconic warriors from the Mortal Kombat game series. The soundtrack coincided with the release of the 2011 installment in the video game series, Mortal Kombat .
Mortal Kombat: Original Motion Picture Score is the instrumental score album released to accompany the Mortal Kombat (1995) film. The music was composed by George S. Clinton with additional guitar work provided by Buckethead and drums by Brain.
Mortal Kombat is an American media franchise centered on a series of fighting video games originally developed by Midway Games in 1992.. The original Mortal Kombat arcade game spawned a franchise consisting of action-adventure games, a comic book series, a card game, films, an animated TV series, and a live-action tour.
Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly called Mortal Kombat "a contentedly empty-headed extended advertisement for the joy of joypads (filmed in cheesily ornate cinema de Hong Kong style)" and too noted how it "is notably free of blood and gore." [27] Stephen Holden of the New York Times said "Mortal Kombat might be described as mythological ...
The song was used as part of the Mortal Kombat commercial for the home systems that announced its single release as well. It was also used in TV commercials for the Mortal Kombat movie and Mortal Kombat: Live Tour, and it was released the same year when the game was released for home consoles. The track has also subsequently become known as ...
The film's director Simon McQuoid met with Wallfisch early on in pre-production even before his involvement confirmed in March 2021, [4] which he described it as an "instant connection", adding that "the music in Mortal Kombat is such a big part of it" on using the pre-existing themes from the video game series.