Went to an IMAX screening and that much was basically worth it for the Goro parts (picture and sound...he had a presence albeit too brief imo) but not much else.
Overall for a quick rating I'd give it a 3/5. Maybe 3.5 if we use half points but that's pushing it. The whole thing basically felt like a setup for the inevitable sequel, and oddly more like one of the more recent Terminator movies than an MK movie, barring the fight scenes and mystical stuff. It had higher high's than the original and lower low's.
To briefly compare it to the original, it felt more like an MK movie should feel in terms of presentation, but surprisingly lacking in the thematic relevance, setting, pacing, and charm. What made the original work regardless of gory violence or lack thereof was the fact it revolved around, well, an actual tournament, and on Shang Tsung's island no less. It felt incredibly focused and consistent next to this, which felt like it was constantly trying to find its footing while juggling too many pots on the stove; starting very slowly and then blitzing through the action between all these different characters towards the second half. It's understandable why they took things in a new, more "grounded" direction to try and differentiate from the original, but then that gets offset by a slew of whacky mystical stuff around the next corner, literally going from character-to-character in regards to Earthrealm's chosen finding their "inner strength".
Cole...I get why they used a surrogate character as a vehicle to drive a big chunk of plot, and he seemed to have tried as best he could, but unless one is completely unfamiliar with the series, it's easy to see why he simply falls flat. They kinda shoehorned his existence into the lore as a neutral, "grounded" character *just because*, which might've been intentional to again tie into the main hook for the potential sequel in the final shot.
Kano had a few good chuckle-worthy quips, and oddly enough also showed the most acting range of the entire runtime during a build-up to a special...let's say "discovery". Bi-Han and Hanzo basically serve as the stalwart bookends for all the jumbled messiness in between, carrying the bulk of thematic stuff and serving it well. Shang Tsung while looking appropriately evil is merely just "there" to serve as a paper thin villain next to how Tagawa managed to breathe life into the character.
I really liked some of the bigger moments, but as a movie...at least after an initial viewing, the original still felt like it had a more distinct vision, tone and pacing from start to finish. This new one certainly had more in terms of content and characters but as a result too often felt like it was checking off boxes, whether for fan service or just having too much on its plate for one film. Considering how expansive, convoluted, whacky and sometimes insane the storyline is for this IP though, I kind of expected it. My hope is that if there is a sequel, it will feel more cohesive and put better use to the concept of less being more in terms of what it's attempting to say.