Director: Christopher McQuarrie
Cast: Tom Cruise, Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Henry Czerny, Angela Bassett, Esai Morales, Pom Klementieff, Mariela Garriga, Pasha D. Lychnikoff
Running Time: 170 min.
By Paul Bramhall
It’s been almost 30 years since the original Mission: Impossible hit the screens in 1996, and over the course of 8 movies producer and star Tom Cruise has made it his defining statement on action cinema – loud, adrenaline pumping, minimum CGI, and perhaps most importantly of all, watched in a cinema. As the last bonafide star of a generation, the kind whose name itself is capable of selling movie tickets, it’s undeniably bittersweet that Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning arrives as the final instalment of the franchise, not least because, there’s no one waiting in the wings who does what Cruise does. Aged 62 at the time of its release, it’s understandable that he’s chosen to call it a day when it comes to the death-defying stunts that have come to define the M:I series, and while quitting at the top of your game is admirable, there’s a certain sadness around not having another entry to look forward to.
M:I: TFR (as I’ll refer to it from here on in) is the first entry in the franchise that’s a direct continuation of the last, with 2023’s Mission: Impossible: Dead Reckoning Part One (as a sidenote, the sequel was originally intended to have the obvious Dead Reckoning Part Two title, but was later dropped) introducing us to the Entity, a rogue A.I. program that’s infiltrated cyberspace. The sequel picks up with Cruise and his team on the run from various different factions (including their own government), with their possession of a key capable of accessing the Entity’s source code making them the only one’s capable of purging it from the world’s nuclear weapon systems that it’s started to infiltrate. Or more specifically – Ethan Hunt is the only one capable of stopping it.
Any series that’s spanned 30 years and across 8 different entries is going to have a certain weight on its shoulders when it comes to wrapping things up, and with a 170-minute runtime, the first hour of M:I: TFR feels overwhelmingly self-serious and heavy handed in a way the series has never felt before. The world is portrayed as being on the verge of post-apocalyptic chaos, and in an opening voiceover to Cruise spoken by Angela Bassett as the U.S. president (introduced in 2018’s Mission: Impossible – Fallout), he’s propelled to almost mythical status as a highlight reel from the previous entries plays across the screen. Reminders that Cruise is the only person capable of saving the world are littered throughout, as if to constantly hammer home the point that it’s humanity itself that’s on the brink of all out annihilation this time (because the scenes of nuclear bombs being detonated all over the globe aren’t enough), and it all feels a little much.
Arguably a case of not knowing how big of an impact some of the seemingly smaller ingredients of the franchise have until they’re gone, the almost complete absence of humor from much of M:I: TFR makes it the dourest entry of the series. However considering the threat at hand it could also be seen as an understandable choice to dial the humor back, with the occasional one-liners that are thrown in there not always hitting the mark, mainly down to everything surrounding them being so poker faced. The perfect example being at one point Hayley Atwell (Ant-Man) tells Cruise she “likes the long hair”, a line that doubles up as an acknowledgement of his change in appearance from the last entry (Dead Reckoning Part One and The Final Reckoning were originally intended to be filmed back to back, but the COVID-19 pandemic ultimately delayed the shooting of the latter). Unlike Cruise’s hair though, the line falls flat.
Like every M:I entry since 2015’s Rogue Nation, it’s Christopher McQuarrie who both penned the script and sat in the director’s chair, having become Cruise’s go to filmmaker since 2012’s Jack Reacher, and there’s a feeling that the sheer scale of the threat has proven to be a tricky beast to balance onscreen. The constant end of days talk by senior government officials and military higher ups begins to feel ham-fisted, and while the connections made to previous entries (particularly Mission: Impossible III) are smart, the point in the plot they’re introduced only makes them feel like more exposition. Thankfully it’s not all doom and gloom, with the return of a character from the original 1996 Mission: Impossible (who I won’t mention so as not to spoil it) being a stroke of genius, and one that provides M:I: TFR with a surprising amount of heart.
It’s not only the returning cast members who offer up some of the best moments in the latest entry, with a handful of new faces also being welcome additions to the mix. Tramell Tillman (Barron’s Cove) plays the commander of the U.S. submarine Cruise ends up on as if he’s just stepped out of a 1980’s action movie, and somehow it works perfectly, as does Katy O’Brian (Twisters) as a fellow crew member who feels inspired by Vasquez from the 1986 classic Aliens. Fans of DTV action will also no doubt get a kick out of seeing Scott Adkins regular Lee Charles (Accident Man) as a bulking lackey that Cruise has to face off against, even if most of it takes place offscreen.
Indeed despite the lack of any real narrative thrust during the first hour, a crime that can’t be taken lightly when you look at the pacing of any other entry, once Cruise’s trusted team – now consisting of returning members Simon Pegg (Hot Fuzz), Greg Tarzan Davis (Top Gun: Maverick), and Pom Klementieff (The Killer’s Game) – spring into action against a group of Russian militants, M:I: TFR finally finds its groove. It’s immediately followed by Cruise undertaking a deep-sea dive to retrieve the source code, and despite my reservations around underwater action scenes (even the one in Rogue Nation didn’t offer up that many thrills), this time it hits the mark. An impeccably put together sequence consisting purely of Cruise underwater and containing almost no dialogue for several minutes, it’s a classic example of cinema being a visual medium, allowing the visuals alone to tell the story. I was on the edge of my seat the whole time.
It’s the kind of sequence that earns enough goodwill to forgive the drudgery of the first hour, and injects a sense of urgency into the narrative that had so far been missing. The ace up M:I: TFR’s sleeve is of course its aerial finale, that sees Cruise in pursuit of villain Esai Morales (Master Gardener) in, or rather by hanging off, a biplane. The biggest mistake McQuarrie has made with the entries he’s helmed in the M:I franchise remains the opening 10 minutes of his debut with Rogue Nation, when the best stunt of the entire movie – Cruise hanging onto the side of a cargo plane – was framed as a superfluous throwaway pre-credit’s scene. The lack of investment the audience had in the scene (topped off with a decidedly underwhelming final action sequence) felt like it was a wasted opportunity, so almost as if McQuarrie realised the error of his ways, here he re-visits the same setup, this time making it the finale.
If M:I: TFR does mark the last time for Cruise to do one of these death-defying stunts, then he’s definitely put through the wringer, as regardless of how many safety wires have been erased in post-production, the fact is he’s hanging onto a plane for dear life, often through some particularly hairy manoeuvres. As a way to send off the franchise on a high note (quite literally), the sequence achieves its aim with aplomb. Could the more cynical amongst us say it’s essentially a rehash of the finale from 2018’s Fallout , just with biplanes instead of helicopters? Sure, but then that’s like being a fan of kung-fu cinema, and complaining because you watched two of them and they both finished with fight scenes. The fact that the sequence was filmed for real and without any greenscreen offers up a timely reminder that, no matter how good CGI becomes, there’s a tangible difference when you see it done for real.
While M:I: TFR feels like it tries a little too hard to play things serious and place Ethan Hunt as the saviour of the world, in doing so sacrificing some of the key elements that make the M:I franchise so much fun, luckily it still delivers where it counts, offering up a spectacle that no other cinematic series comes close to. Cruise’s thoughts on A.I. are clear, and can perhaps be taken as a metaphor for how he feels about cinema – technology may mean the possibilities are endless, but how many of them will actually be done for real and not in front of a greenscreen? In Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning the message is that nothing can beat the real thing, and when you see Cruise dangling from the wing of a plane several thousand feet up in the air, it’s hard to disagree.
Paul Bramhall’s Rating: 7/10
I just finished watching Mission Impossible 8, and I liked it a lot. I was looking forward to reading about your observations afterwards.
I think we’re in agreement for a lot of things, and I wanted to respectfully share some counterpoints. As far as Ethan Hunt being the “savior of the world,” I think that aspect was handled with tact and what would have been terrible is if he was the only one doing the heavy lifting, but the series has made it pretty clear than Ethan can’t do this alone and I feel like everyone else on the team was portrayed as invaluable.
Characters that are portrayed as a film’s savior can sometimes come across as egotistical and self serving, especially when they act like no one else can save the world. While there’s a lot that can be said about Tom Cruise and egos, it didn’t feel like Ethan Hunt thought that he was better than anyone else.
While I suppose there wasn’t much in the way of traditional humor, I did find humor in the audacity of how scenes are portrayed such as when Grace is horrified at what Ethan is doing to Gabriel’s henchmen and its up to us to use our imaginations. I laughed during several action moments because I enjoyed seeing Ethan cheat death or some poor bastard getting his comeuppance.
While i loved the connection to the first movie that you referred to, I thought that should have been the only one as the other felt un-needed with no real payoff.
Unlike John Wick 4, I felt like Mission Impossible 8 knew how to use its 3 hour runtime and detailed the plot to a point where I always couldn’t wait to see what happens next. I’m also glad that Ethan vs Gabriel Part 2 was much more exciting after the previous movie gave them such a lackluster fight.
I can see how there’s a sadness in witnessing an end of an era, but I’m glad it involved a much deserved ride off into the sunset.
Even with lowered expectations coming into this, MI8 is a massive disappointment. I really need to know how much coke was Mcquarrie and cruise were on when they were in the editing room and thought….yes this is cinema. And the crazy thing is this is the creative team that made MI5 and MI6 the high point of the franchise.
The first hour is just dumb. We’ve moved from spy thriller to scifi apocalypse now. The entity is Skynet. Governments have/are fallen and been infiltrated with Skynet true beleivers. Ethan Hunt is John Conner and must save humanity and stop skynet…sorry the Nemesis before the nukes go off. Ok so Im watching Terminator 3 again. If this wasn’t derivative enough Ethan puts on Professor X’s Cerebro and talks to Skynet itself which brough back bad memories of Terminator 4.
And then we get to the submarine sequence. Its being praised as being on the best sequences in the whole franchise…….really? I did have a chuckle though when Ethan dies and is ressurected, doubling down on the nonsense that he is the “one”.
At one point they even try to lampshade how dumb this all is when the CIA guy says wow ethan what a great team you’ve put together here. By this point in the movie though I just wanted it to end and what should have been an emotional farewell to his team at Trafalgar Square, instead I was thinking, didn’t you just meet these people a few months ago for the first time….except Benji.
Easily the worst MI elevating MI2 to the second worst spot. At least that one has cool Cruise hair and awesome slomo shots of riding motobikes through explosions while a dove flies past
Valid comparison to Skynet, I never thought about that while I was watching it (although that could be because the Entity deals in misinformation, while Skynet felt like more of a physical presence through the Terminators and its heavy machinery). Much like you I groaned at the “true believers” bit, and glad it turned out to be something that was ultimately only mentioned in passing, it’s been a while since the whole doomsday cult trope has been done well onscreen.
Anyone who thinks the submarine sequence is the best in the whole franchise must have (a) never have seen any of the other entries and (b) stopped watching after the sequence finished. Interesting that you rate ‘Rogue Nation’ as a “high point” of the franchise, this one’s actually on the lower end of the scale for me. I think it was just poorly structured, with the front loading of the the hanging onto the cargo plane stunt as a pre-credits sequence which had no real connection to the main plot, leaving everything that came after it struggling to compare in terms of scale and adrenaline.
If MI8 was a Chinese movie, everyone would complain that it was commie propaganda. Outside of a Michael Bay movie, its been a while since i’ve seen so much glazing for the military. Its common knowledge after MI7 “failed” to make enough cash cos of Barbenheimer, MI8 was retooled. Maybe the original version would have been a better send off for the franchise.
As for Rogue Nation, I’d agree they peaked early stuntwise but theres many memorable smaller set peices and Rebecca Ferguson as Ilsa was a breath of fresh air. They truly did her dirty when she was killed off in such a crap way in MI7.
As a cinephile my favourite is DePalma’s tightly wound Hitchcokian innocent man on the run first movie. But as superior popcorn entertainment where Ethan has a great team around him, Rogue Nation/Fallout are my faves.
People think the submarine sequence was the best? I liked it a lot, but I’m not going to put it above the rest of the movie. I felt like 90% of the scenes were important and made me look forward to what would happen next.
It is true that the airplane stunt in Rogue Nation was the best in that film, and should have been saved for the end, but I was still excited for the opera house sequence and the underwater section. For that one in particular, I took deep breaths before Ethan went under to see if I could hold my breath for as long as he could. It made the sequence more exciting for me.