The love object in question is played by Michelle Monaghan, but there’s zero chemistry there.
He (they) often seems more like a superhuman automaton than a flesh-and-blood person capable of emotional entanglements.
FILM MISSION IMPOSSIBLE 5 MOVIE
It’s a bit of a strange choice especially since Hunt (not to mention the inscrutable movie star who plays him) was always a bit of a cipher when it came to his backstory. And what it is, is a deeply personal rescue operation for Ethan Hunt. Then again, you could also argue that Abrams overcompensated here-that MI: III really could have used a little more spectacle. Abrams has always been a believer in character over spectacle, which is something this outing sorely needed after the baroque indulgence of Woo’s M:I 2. But Abrams, in his first big-budget movie assignment, got more right than wrong in this solid installment. Abrams, the director of MI: III, feels like a whiplash-inducing game of Hollywood Mad Libs.
Going from Brian De Palma to John Woo to J.J. the long-haired Cruise’s ludicrous meet-cute with Thandie Newton in a skidding high-speed car chase pas de deux), you couldn’t help walk out of the theater starved for some substance beyond the film’s tapioca villain (Dougray Scott) and its equally so-what plot about… stock options? Still, Cruise’s rock-climbing finger-nail hang from Utah’s Dead Horse Point during the opening credits remains a vertigo-inducing thrill. And while in some movies it can be, here it’s most definitely not.
FILM MISSION IMPOSSIBLE 5 SERIES
Coming four years after Brian De Palma’s series kick-off, M:I 2 is all flashy, slo-mo razzle dazzle. His operatic-bordering-on-corny-melodrama sensibility may have worked like double-fisted gangbusters when partnered with Chow Yun-Fat (see A Better Tomorrow, The Killer, and Hard Boiled), but something often got lost when it came to satisfying the commercial imperatives of big-studio American filmmaking. Woo and Hollywood were always a weird fit. Hell, Woo even managed to make a better movie with a medium talent like Jean-Claude Van Damme (1993’s Hard Target) than he did here with Cruise. This actually kills me to write because I absolutely fucking adore John Woo, but I think even the revered Hong Kong action auteur would cop to the fact that M:I 2 was not his finest hour behind the camera. So without further throat-clearing, here’s our definitive ranking of the six M:I films, from worst to best…. But you could say, it’s our mission and we chose to accept it. Which makes ranking the Mission: Impossible films no easy challenge. But they’re also different enough (thematically, stylistically, narratively) to keep us coming back for more. Sure, you could argue that each chapter in the IMF Cinematic Universe is, in a way, kind of the same. But if the M:I movies were only about Cruise risking his life for our popcorn amusement, the sensational saga would never have made it as far as it has. Thanks to its similarly ageless star, Tom Cruise as IMF ringleader Ethan Hunt, and his sweet tooth for old-school death-wish show-stopping stunts, the series seems hellbent on upping the ante like a deranged gambler with each subsequent installment. Since then, it has matured into the rare-maybe the only-long-running blockbuster franchise that actually seems to get better and better as it goes on and on. The first Mission: Impossible hit theaters exactly 25 years ago.