


V/H/S/99 harkens back to the final punk rock analog days of VHS while taking one giant leap forward into the hellish new millennium.
#GORO MORTAL KOMBAT MOVIE SERIES#
In V/H/S/99, the follow-up to last year’s hugely successful V/H/S/94 – #HailRaatma – a thirsty teenager’s home video leads to a series of horrifying revelations. Also on the plate is the official trailer for V/H/S/99, which is coming exclusively to Shudder on October 20, 2022! It’s a Bloody Disgusting weekend between the release of Terrifier 2 and the announcement of V/H/S/85. Produced by James Wan, Mortal Kombat hits theaters and HBO Max on April 16. We had to figure out a real reason for him to be in the movie,” Garner adds. You know that he’s expensive, you know that he’s beloved, you know he has to be in the movie, and you can’t just have him come in and just… It’s not like Indiana Jones where he comes in with two knives and you shoot him. It’s just practically, he’s so damn expensive.” It’s not that we don’t love him, it’s not that he’s not hugely important. So you got to use him sparingly, you got to be smart about how you use him. So again, if somebody wants to give me a billion dollars to go make a Goro movie, I’ll make a Goro movie. He’s obviously somebody that I would love to have in every movie. On the subject of Goro, Garner explains, “ He’s extremely integral to the plot. But he wanted to do everything real and feel it, and he loved it.” There’s no CG in the backgrounds when he can help it. “ fought hard for practical whenever he could,” Garner explains. In an interview with producer Todd Garner this week, BD’s Meagan Navarro got some insight into Goro’s return, and the approach to bringing him back to the screen in a new era.
#GORO MORTAL KOMBAT MOVIE MOVIE#
Rather, the 2021 version of Goro will be a computer-generated monster, one of the only major aspects of the movie that was not executed practically by the team. Essentially, Woodruff controlled the character’s lower half, and the puppet served as his upper half.Īll these years later, Goro returns to the big screen (and small screen, via HBO Max) in director Simon McQuoid‘s Mortal Kombat next month, but this time around there’s no puppet or creature suit in sight. Goro’s big screen debut saw the character impressively brought to the screen using a combination of puppetry and a suit that was worn by creature performer/special effects artist Tom Woodruff Jr. Anderson’s Mortal Kombat feature film in 1995.

One of the most memorable monsters from the Mortal Kombat franchise is of course the four-armed Goro, first appearing in the original video game and later making the leap to live-action for Paul W.S.
