Warner Bros. and New Line have moved Mortal Kombat II out of its late-October berth to May 15, 2026, positioning the sequel at the start of the summer box-office corridor. The shift was made to sidestep a congested October calendar and to chase a stronger playdate, with the studios pointing to the seasonal advantage after a comparable genre hit flourished in that window; the 2021 reboot’s day-and-date release is a useful contrast as the follow-up aims squarely at theatrical.
The film is finished and has already screened for press, and interest has been strong: the red-band trailer drew more than 106 million views in its first 24 hours, setting a record for that rating tier. Karl Urban joins the franchise as Johnny Cage, while returning cast members include Lewis Tan, Ludi Lin, Jessica McNamee, Mehcad Brooks, Tadanobu Asano, Joe Taslim, and Hiroyuki Sanada; new additions feature Adeline Rudolph as Kitana and Martyn Ford as Shao Kahn. Director Simon McQuoid, back at the helm, has described the sequel’s mandate as bigger in scale and intensity across the board.
The new date lines up the movie against early-summer competitors but gives Warner Bros. a cleaner runway than October’s stacked slate. It also resets expectations for a franchise that relaunched under the studio’s 2021 hybrid strategy, when the previous installment earned $84.4 million worldwide while sharing the stage with a simultaneous streaming release. With Johnny Cage finally stepping into the story and the sequel leaning into fan-favorite characters like Kitana, Jade, Baraka, and Shao Kahn, the summer frame is designed to translate online heat into ticket sales after months of completed postproduction.





















































