The Citizen (Gauteng)

This one ticks all the boxes

CRUISE IS BACK: HIS SPECIAL AGENT CHARACTER HAS MATURED AND GAINED GRAVITAS

- Peter Feldman

McQuarrie redefines Ethan Hunt and what makes him tick.

Mission Impossible: Fallout

Cast: Tom Cruise, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Henry Cavill, Sean Harris, Alec Baldwin, Angela Bassett, Ving Rhames

Director: Christophe­r McQuarrie Classifica­tion: 13LV

Tom Cruise scorches the screen in his sixth Mission Impossible assignment, delivering the goods in another high-octane yarn. His ridiculous stunts, which have become a hallmark of the franchise, are even more impressive in this edge-of-your-seat production.

Director Christophe­r McQuarrie allows Cruise full reign as special agent Ethan Hunt who, with his IMF team of experts, have a simple mission. They must recover three plutonium cores before a notorious arms dealer named John Lark and a terrorist organisati­on known as the Apostles can use them to target the Vatican, Jerusalem, and Mecca in a single coordinate­d attack. But he fails miserably. His next step is to try and recover these cores, but he’s up against some bad people as the film hops from London to Paris and to Kashmir, with the adrenalin levels increasing at every turn.

The narrative dips and dives and becomes a tad convoluted at times, with characters changing their allegiance and their faces at every opportunit­y. But it succeeds, especially when watching it in 3D format at an Imax cinema.

This Mission Impossible unveils fresh vistas even though Hunt is still adept at climbing sheer rock faces, driving highspeed motorcycle­s and dodging exploding helicopter­s.

The scenery has never been more spectacula­r, whether it’s the backdrop to him standing atop the chimney of the Tate Modern with all of London at his feet or parachutin­g onto the glass roof of Paris’ Grand Palais. As a character, Hunt has matured and achieved gravitas.

What was once considered to be a sort of James Bond rip-off franchise, just another stunt-driven save-the-world bonanza, is no longer and Mission Impossible: Fallout ticks all the boxes.

One villain we’ve seen before is Sean Harris as Lane, who made it his mission to eliminate the IMF in Rogue Nation. He has been captured but still has a trick or two up his dirty sleeve. References to the past emerge; Hunt’s marriage (Michelle Monaghan) to a woman whom he is no longer with, and there’s an extension of that sexy spy-who-loved-me dynamic from the last movie involving the lovely MI6 agent, Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson).

Henry Cavill is CIA assassin August Walker who forms an uneasy alliance with Hunt, Alec Baldwin is Hunt’s IMF boss and Angela Bassett plays CIA director Erica Sloan who holds many cards.

Hunt’s devoted IMF team of Luther (Ving Rhames) and Benji (Simon Pegg) also return with a vengeance and produce more than a few wry moments.

A fascinatin­g aspect of this production is that when you thought you knew who Ethan Hunt was, McQuarrie redefines the character and what makes him tick. All in all, this is a superb example of an action movie at its best and a hero figure who keeps on giving.

 ??  ?? HERO FIGURE WHO KEEPS ON GIVING. Left to right: Henry Cavill, left, Tom Cruise, centre, Frederick Schmidt and Vanessa Kirby, right.
HERO FIGURE WHO KEEPS ON GIVING. Left to right: Henry Cavill, left, Tom Cruise, centre, Frederick Schmidt and Vanessa Kirby, right.
 ??  ?? ACTION AT ITS BEST. Left to right: Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt and Henry Cavill as August Walker in Mission impossible: Fallout from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.
ACTION AT ITS BEST. Left to right: Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt and Henry Cavill as August Walker in Mission impossible: Fallout from Paramount Pictures and Skydance.

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