Arab Times

Cruise brings ‘Tom factor’ to ‘Fallout’

‘Action is very character-based’

-

TBy Jill Serjeant

he “Mission: Impossible” movie franchise has become synonymous with daring stunts where lead actor Tom Cruise climbs the highest building in the world or hangs off the side of a speeding plane.

“Mission: Impossible — Fallout,” which started its global rollout on Wednesday, sees Cruise become the first actor on camera to perform a HALO (high altitude, low opening) skydive from 25,000 feet.

Reuters spoke with the film’s stunt coordinato­r, Wade Eastwood, who has also worked on the James Bond and Jack Reacher movies, about how stunts are devised and what drives Cruise, 56, to perform them himself.

The following excerpts are edited for length and clarity.

Question: Who comes up with the ideas for “Mission: Impossible” stunts?

Answer: We get an outline (for the movie), then I will try and come up with the style, and it’s really Chris (McQuarrie, director), Tom and I who will sit down and hash out a bunch of ideas. The big difference between ‘Mission: Impossible’ and other movies is that all the action is very character-based. Tom is playing a character who isn’t superhuman. Q: What kind of training do you put Cruise through? A: I lay out a training schedule — this is how much driving we have to do, this many sessions on a bike, and he will adhere to it 100 percent. And then I will push his training harder and harder. The harder you push, the more the training is grueling — he will suffer but he will never quit. We employ some of the world’s best to take Tom to the next level. You are trying to teach someone to get as close to that world class level as you can, not in 20 years but in two months.

Q: How much training was there for the HALO stunt?

A: We built the largest outdoor wind tunnel in the world. In lunch breaks, if Tom had an hour between scenes, we’d just run down to the wind tunnel. I did 500 hours in the wind tunnel working out the moves. We came up with a helmet that didn’t have an ugly oxygen attachment to the nose and mouth and that would work for real. We did 150 jumps in Abu Dhabi and 102 different takes to make it perfect. Q: What other stunts will audiences see? A: There’s a helicopter stunt in New Zealand. It’s the biggest helicopter sequence ever shot — 30 helicopter­s in the air. There’s a mountainee­ring sequence in Norway. That was pretty hairy, hanging off the side of the rock and dropping, freezing snow everywhere. There’s a big car and motorcycle chase in Paris and with a truck and a boat.

Q: Has Cruise ever turned down a stunt because it’s too dangerous?

A: “No. He would have been one of the best stunt men in the world if he wasn’t an actor, for sure. With stunt men and women it doesn’t matter how your face looks. But with Tom, he is also playing a character, so he has to jump out and act the character while trying to be a profession­al. That’s the challenge that to me stands him above the rest.

Q: How many actors insist on doing so many of their own stunts?

A: It’s quite rare. There are a few actors who are quite athletic, who do a lot of their own stuff. Hugh Jackman is a mega athlete. Tom is a very physical person. He never approaches it from an egotistica­l point of view. He approaches it very much as “it’s cool for the character and the story and I’ll have a lot of fun training and getting to do this cool stuff.”

Q: What sets the “Mission: Impossible” franchise apart from other stunt-heavy movies?

A: The Tom factor. Tom is just an energy ball. He lifts you up, he lifts the crew up, he makes everyone want to make a great movie. You just feed off his energy.

Our mission — and we decided to accept it — is to rank from least to best all six of the “Mission: Impossible” thrillers toplined by Tom Cruise as Impossible Missions Force agent Ethan Hunt. 6. Mission: Impossible III (2006) The pitch: When he isn’t busy wooing, and eventually wedding, Julia Meade (Michelle Monaghan), a nurse who knows nothing about his spy-guy activities, Ethan

LOS ANGELES:

Sony’s “Hotel Transylvan­ia 3: Summer Vacation” will be given a release in Chinese theaters in August, normally a time of year reserved for local movies.

The animated family comedy has been given an Aug 17 release slot by China’s industry regulators.

The decision means that the Hunt leads his IMF team in pursuit of a MacGuffini­sh device (known as “Rabbit’s Foot”) coveted by arms dealer Owen Davian (Philip Seymour Hoffman).

The rundown: Despite the game efforts of director J.J. Abrams to humanize Ethan by supplying a civilian romantic interest — and showing he’s not so ruthless that he’d make good on his threat to drop an uncooperat­ive bad guy out of an airplane — the threepeat is a curiously bland spectacle that is nothing more (or, to be fair, less) than the sum of its sporadical­ly exciting action set pieces. Not surprising­ly, it is the lowest-grossing entry in the entire franchise (so far). The score: 2-1/2 out of 5 stars. 5. Mission: Impossible (1996) The pitch: After IMF chief Jim Phelps (Jon Voight) dies in the line of duty — yeah, right — special agent Ethan Hunt must assume command of a mission to keep a list of deep-cover CIA operatives from being sold by an IMF mole.

The rundown: More than a few fans of the original “Mission: Impossible” television series were positively furious when Brian De Palma’s big-screen, franchises­pawning reboot turned Phelps (played on TV by Peter Graves) into a traitor. No, really. Twenty-two years later, however, the most unsettling thing about the movie is the quaintly retro look of formerly cuttingedg­e technology (note the floppy discs and portentous references to “The Internet”). On the other hand, some things never look dated: Hunt’s wire-supported drop into a high-security CIA vault remains one of the most suspensefu­l (and frequently imitated) heist sequences in all of movie history. And there’s still something richly amusing about the shameless flirting between Tom Cruise’s boyish Hunt and Vanessa Redgrave’s bemused arms dealer. The score: 3 out of 5 stars. 4. Mission: Impossible II (2000) The pitch: Ethan Hunt convinces beautiful thief Nyah Nordoff-Hall (Thandie Newton) to renew her affair with IMF turncoat Sean Ambrose (Dougray Scott) in order to retrieve vials of an artificial­ly created virus. Complicati­ons arise when Hunt falls for Nyah — and she is infected with the virus.

Continued on Page 16

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait