Super-spy Ethan Hunt has retired from active duty to trains new IMF agents. But he is called back into action to confront the toughest villain he’s ever faced – Owen Davian, an international weapons and information provider with no remorse and no conscience. Hunt assembles his team: his old friend Luther Strickell, transportation expert Declan, and background operative Zhen. They are to rescue one of his very own trainees, Lindsey who was kidnapped while on a surveillance detail of Davian. It soon becomes evident that Davian is well-protected, well-connected, and downright malicious. This forces Hunt to extend his journey back into the field in order to rescue his wife, Julia, and uncover IMF double agents in the process.
Jeffrey Jacob “J. J.” Abrams (born June 27, 1966) is an American film and television producer, screenwriter, director, actor, composer, and founder of Bad Robot Productions.
A prominent writer/producer of Hollywood features who later went on to make a name for himself as the creator of such popular small-screen hits as Felicity and Alias, J.J. Abrams has managed the rare feat of finding success in the all-too-often mutually exclusive worlds of both film and television. It was at the age of eight that the wide-eyed youth first discovered his love of film while on a Hollywood studio tour with his grandfather, and when the pair returned home, Abrams convinced his father to let him try his hand at filmmaking with the family’s Super-8 camera. During the following decade, the young auteur grew increasingly comfortable behind the camera, and he continued to turn out his impressive amateur films at an exhausting rate. Later attending New York’s Sarah Lawrence College… read more
Really hated the ending of this movie, it had too much of a made for TV vibe to it.
No, no, no, that's the wrong way to look at it. It's honestly a near-post-modern action film. Really, it's one of the best pop action movies of the last 10 years. Seriously. The ending of that movie, with all the over-the-top happiness, is really just self-awareness. Throughout the entire story, the movie just winks at the audience. Those are smart details, not stupid ones. It gives you the intensity of a typical "Mission: Impossible" action movie but then playfully undermines it will self-referential comedy. Seriously, watch it again. You'll see it in a different way.
At the opening of the film we see Cruise powerless, we don't know when or where but we see a man who is always in control utterly afraid. I think this might be the best of the franchise for a number of reasons. One Cruise and Hoffman put up in damn good work, with a nod to Crudup. This is the most human we have seen Ethan and he actually has an arc. The set pieces are all great, love the windmill chase. Dark for PG13
Certainly the best of the first three mainly due to a story that works by humanizing the Ethan Hunt character and providing a nemesis played to perfection by Philip Seymour Hoffman. Good supporting turns by Monaghan, Russell and Crudup but truly anchored by Cruise who is at his best here. Some interesting story and editing choices by Abrams with a proloque that really grabs one by the throat.