The film opens in ancient China, where warlord Qin Shi Huang (Jet Li) does the whole “unify the land through fear and violence” thing, because subtle leadership is apparently for cowards. Obsessed with cheating death, he sends sorceress Zi Yuan (Michelle Yeoh) and his loyal General Ming Guo (Russell Wong) off to find the secret of immortality. Naturally, they fall in love, because nothing says “mission success” like betraying your tyrannical boss. Qin responds like any emotionally stable ruler would, executing Ming and wounding Yuan out of spite, prompting her to curse him and his army into becoming the world’s angriest pottery exhibit.
Simply put, you don’t cross Michelle Yeoh.
Cut to 1946, where Alex O’Connell (Luke Ford), who has somehow aged into a man only slightly younger than his own parents, discovers the Dragon Emperor’s tomb alongside his professor, Roger Wilson (David Calder). They get attacked by a mysterious woman, because this franchise runs on ambushes, the way cars run on fuel, but still manage to haul the sarcophagus to Shanghai. Meanwhile, Rick (Brendan Fraser) and Evelyn (Maria Bello) are dragged out of semi-retirement by the British government to retrieve the Eye of Shangri-La, a mystical MacGuffin that does whatever the plot needs it to do at any given moment. The family reunion in Shanghai reveals that Wilson is working with General Yang (Anthony Chau-Sang Wong), who believes resurrecting an ancient tyrant is the best way to stabilize post-war China, a plan that definitely won’t backfire spectacularly.
Hey, look, more bad guys!
The Emperor is revived, immediately kills Wilson for being expendable, and sets off on his quest for ultimate power. The O’Connells attempt to stop him, joined by Lin (Isabella Leong), the dagger-wielding guardian who apparently spent centuries waiting for the exact worst possible moment to intervene. Their journey leads them to the Himalayas, because no Mummy movie is complete without a sudden change in geography that makes you wonder if someone spun a globe and pointed. Along the way, they enlist the help of yetis, because why not? While the Emperor gains increasingly ridiculous powers, including shapeshifting into a three-headed dragon, because why stop at one bad idea when you can stack them?
If you need to get rid of a three-headed dragon, call Godzilla.
Things escalate toward Shangri-La, where Zi Yuan has been hanging out for centuries, apparently guarding magical waters and not asking many questions about her life choices. Rick gets mortally wounded, only to be healed by the same mystical waters the villain is chasing, because tension is optional. The Emperor becomes even more powerful, kidnaps Lin, and resurrects his Terracotta Army for world domination, because, well, that’s a thing villains do. The final battle at the Great Wall involves undead armies, sacrificial magic, and a lot of CGI chaos, culminating in Rick and Alex defeating the Emperor with the conveniently magical dagger, restoring peace and ensuring Jonathan (John Hannah) can wander off to Peru for what the film hopes you’ll interpret as a cheeky sequel tease rather than a cry for help.
“We may have to wait a couple of decades for a sequel.”
Stray Observations:
- Lin carries the only dagger that can kill the Emperor and spends centuries…not using it. Guard duty apparently forbids basic problem-solving.
- The mystical rules governing immortality, resurrection, and elemental powers feel like they were written on a napkin five minutes before filming.
- The age gap between Rick, Evy, and Alex makes the family dynamic feel like a math problem no one checked.
- The villains need a special device to locate Shangri-La, so the heroes…don’t destroy it. Explosives are used strictly for dramatic avalanches.
- The Emperor can control the five elements, transform into a dragon, and become a giant ogre, but still struggles against a couple of archaeologists and their adult son.
- Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh share minimal screen combat, which feels like hiring two master chefs and asking them to microwave leftovers.
- The yetis fight like they’re auditioning for a sports broadcast rather than defending a sacred realm?
There is silly, and there is a yeti signalling a field goal kind of silly.
After going through numerous script changes and hoping lightning might strike a third time, the production found itself without Stephen Sommers, who wisely stepped away, noting that the first two films had already come together and that third entries are notoriously difficult. Translation: he saw the iceberg and chose not to be on the ship. Universal handed the reins to Rob Cohen, a director whose filmography suggests competence without personality, and that’s exactly what he delivers. The result is a film that feels assembled rather than crafted, ticking off action beats without any sense of rhythm, pacing, or soul. The third time wasn’t the charm; it was the moment the franchise forgot why it worked in the first place.
Character first, spectacle second.
The writing, courtesy of Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, operates under the baffling assumption that more equals better. More mythology, more powers, more locations, more characters, more noise. What it lacks is coherence. The original film balanced horror, humour, and romance with surprising finesse; this one just hurls plot points at the screen and hopes you’re too distracted to notice none of them stick. It’s cinematic sleight of hand, except the magician keeps dropping the cards.
Note:
Cohen dares to show us the beautifully verdant valley of Shangri-La,
but doesn’t let us or the characters actually go there. That’s just
cruel.
On the visual effects front, Rhythm & Hues Studios and Digital Domain do what they can, but there’s only so much polish you can apply to a fundamentally misguided concept. The CGI isn’t offensively bad across the board, but it rarely convinces. When it leans into spectacle, like the Emperor’s various transformations or the yeti brawl, it crosses into unintentional comedy. It’s not the outright disaster of the Scorpion King, but that’s less a compliment and more a reminder that the bar was already buried underground.
So, yeah, this is a definite step up from the Scorpion King.
The cast is…problematic. Brendan Fraser and John Hannah return, doing their best to recapture the charm that once defined the series, though even they seem aware they’re fighting a losing battle. Maria Bello steps in as Evelyn, replacing Rachel Weisz, who declined to return, reportedly uninterested in playing the mother of a twenty-one-year-old, which is fair because the film barely understands that dynamic itself. Oded Fehr also opted out, unhappy with the removal of the Imhotep element, a decision that strips the film of its most compelling villain archetype. Jet Li and Michelle Yeoh bring undeniable presence, but the film squanders them, reducing two legendary performers to underwritten roles and missed opportunities.
“Michelle, let’s run off and star in a better movie.”
In conclusion, The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor feels less like a continuation and more like a contractual obligation stretched to feature length. Everything that once made the series engaging, the chemistry, the wit, the sense of adventure, has been replaced with generic action and overcooked spectacle. Watching it, you can practically hear the gears grinding as the film tries to convince you it’s still fun, still exciting, still worth your time. It isn’t. It’s a reminder that franchises don’t die with dignity, they just keep going until someone finally pulls the plug, and even then, they’re probably eyeing a reboot.













































