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Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation review

Cruise and company keep Mission Impossible revved up in Rogue Nation

“Ethan Hunt is a gambler, and one day, his luck will run out, and thousands of people will pay the price. Who will be the villain then?”

When Syndicate super villain Solomon Lane slithers these words out of his serpentine lips, my first instinct is to scoff. Of course Ethan Hunt will never become the villain. He’s Tom Cruise realized in all of his action hero glory. There’s no chance that the moral worm will ever turn for this legendary IMF operative.

And then the words of another pop culture good-guy-gone-rogue come to mind: “You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.”

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My brain starts to mirror Ethan Hunt’s during the iconic scene in the first Mission: Impossible movie, when he pieces together that his friend and mentor Jim Phelps is the man who betrayed and killed his fellow IMF agents. I remember that Phelps himself was the heart and moral compass of Mission: Impossible for decades before the movies ever came along. I recall the uproar from fans of the series, when Jon Voight’s Phelps was revealed to be the first film’s true villain, shattering a hero’s legacy.

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Image used with permission by copyright holder

I realize it’s not impossible that Ethan Hunt could one day follow suit, and that realization leads to two more: (1) Wow, Evil Ethan could be cool! (2) Wow, even if it never happens, I really hope Mission: Impossible lives long enough for Evil Ethan to even become a possibility.

One of these days, it’s entirely possible that this franchise will go the way of Harvey Dent, transforming itself from a bright beacon for modern action blockbusters to something disfigured and unrecognizable and awful to behold. That day has not arrived, certainly not with Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation. It’s the fifth film in the series, and it’s as riveting as any that have come before.

Directed by Christopher McQuarrie, who previously teamed up with Cruise on Jack Reacher for Paramount, Rogue Nation sees Ethan on the trail of a group called the Syndicate — rogue operatives with all the training and ability of the Impossible Mission Force, and without any of the moral boundaries. Ethan’s pursuit of these villains is like challenging a cheetah to a footrace: ill-advised, with an impossible chance for success. Then again, “impossible” has a different definition for a guy like Ethan Hunt.

Ilsa Faust is the best new addition to the Mission: Impossible universe since… well, Ethan Hunt, honestly.

It helps that Cruise’s veteran spy has some of his most reliable players along for the ride. Simon Pegg returns as Benji Dunn, the closest thing Ethan has to a best friend, boasting a more pivotal role here than either of his past two Mission: Impossible appearances; he provides the usual comic relief, but a surprising amount of heart, too. Ving Rhames, the only person not named Tom Cruise to appear in every single Mission: Impossible, wouldn’t miss Rogue Nation for the world, bringing old-school weight to the proceedings as hacker Luther Stickell. Jeremy Renner is the holdover from Ghost Protocol, returning in a more bureaucratic role than last time. He’s fine, I guess? Every time he appeared on screen, I couldn’t help but wonder how much more enjoyable his role would be if occupied by Paula Patton’s Jane Carter, but alas. Renner is my biggest gripe toward all of Rogue Nation, by the way, which should tell you a lot.

But it’s the new players that make Rogue Nation remarkable. Alec Baldwin is perfectly Baldwinian as CIA suit Alan Hunley, another addition to the great pantheon of Mission: Impossible’s noble douches, like Eugene Kittridge. Sean Harris is skin-crawlingly creepy as Syndicate leader Solomon Lane, seemingly ahead of Hunt at every single turn. Both men are fantastic, but both men, and everyone else in the film, pale in comparison to the true secret weapon: Rebecca Ferguson, the Golden Globe-nominated actress who climbs to the tippy-top of Rogue Nation and sinks her knives right in, without any sign of letting go.

Even if Mission: Impossible is Tom Cruise’s franchise, Rogue Nation is Ferguson’s movie. She plays Ilsa Faust, a Syndicate operative with a whole lot more going on than what meets the eye — a notion that’s immediately apparent from her very first scene, and firmly in place throughout the rest of her screen time. Cool and cunning, and capable of killing you with a look just as easily as she could with her hands, Ilsa Faust is the best new addition to the Mission: Impossible universe since… well, Ethan Hunt, honestly. Somebody get Ferguson her own action movie franchise, stat.

The best part about Faust is that you never quite know where she stands, which speaks to the heart of what makes Rogue Nation such a success: You never quite know where the movie stands. It’s a twisting and turning narrative in the spirit of Brian De Palma’s Mission: Impossible, albeit not nearly as complicated. Still, Rogue Nation is as close to a grounded spy thriller as we’ve seen from these movies since the De Palma original. Yes, there are still crazy Cruise stunts throughout the movie, but the biggest one — the airplane sequence you’ve seen in trailers and posters — departs the runway immediately, leaving us on the tarmac with a quieter movie that becomes so much more intense due to the subdued sound.

Let’s not split hairs: Rogue Nation is as strong as the Mission: Impossible movies have ever been.

There are motorcycle chases, there are hold-your-breath heists, and that strap-yourself-to-an-airplane stunt is nothing short of insane. But there’s also the opera scene, hushed and heart-pounding, easily the strongest sequence in the entire movie, and a contender for best sequence in the entire Mission: Impossible series. There’s Ethan and Ilsa running through the streets of London in the dead of night, silenced bullets piercing brick walls, panicked footsteps hurriedly echoing throughout the sleeping city. There’s Ethan, blindsided and furious, pounding his hands against unbreakable glass as gas fills his lungs, finally inching toward the classic definition of the word “impossible.” It’s not all cloak-and-dagger all the time, but Rogue Nation manages to marry the espionage spirit of Mission: Impossible to the smart blockbuster beats of Mission: Impossible III in a way that Ghost Protocol didn’t quite pull off — and that’s less a knock against the great Ghost Protocol than it is a big thumbs up for Rogue Nation.

As for Tom Cruise? It should come as no surprise to anyone who watched Cruise wage a lip-syncing war against Jimmy Fallon a few nights ago that the man still has it, and then some. Lane’s comments about Ethan Hunt as a gambler apply to Cruise himself, of course, given the death-defying stunts the Hollywood icon still puts himself through as a 53-year-old man. But he’s not gambling when it comes to Mission: Impossible as a franchise. For my money, Rogue Nation lands just a notch below M:I-3 because I’m such an Alias dork, and two notches below the original because it’s such a classic. But the space between notches is almost negligible, a game of splitting hairs.

So, let’s not split hairs: Rogue Nation is as strong as the Mission: Impossible movies have ever been, and that’s saying something, given that this is a film franchise just one year shy of its 20th anniversary. With all due respect to Solomon Lane and Harvey Dent, I don’t think anyone will be rooting against Ethan Hunt anytime soon.

Josh Wigler
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Josh Wigler is a freelance entertainment reporter who has been published by Comic Book Resources, Comics Alliance…
The best action scenes in the Mission: Impossible movies, ranked
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Since it first arrived on the big screen in 1996, the Mission: Impossible film franchise has thrilled audiences with increasingly ambitious practical stunts. Star and producer Tom Cruise won’t be satisfied until he’s shown gravity who’s boss once and for all, diving off of increasingly high platforms at increasingly deadly speeds. The daredevil feats have become such essential parts of the Mission: Impossible films and their marketing that one could almost forget the stories that these stunts are meant to service.
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7. Stealing the Rabbit’s Foot (Mission: Impossible III)
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Mission: Impossible III gets a bit of a bad rap for its efforts to ground the series in something approaching reality, and it can definitely be argued that director J.J. Abrams’ more TV-style aesthetic was an overcorrection from John Woo’s unrestrained bombast. We’ll stand behind M:I-3’s more human and emotional characterization of Ethan Hunt, the romance subplot, and of course, the outstanding performance of Phillip Seymour Hoffman as the villain, but we do have to admit that the choice to essentially skip this movie’s main heist sequence is pretty disappointing.
In the second act of M:I-3, Ethan’s wife Julia (Michelle Monaghan) has been kidnapped by terrorist Owen Davian (Hoffman), who promises to kill her unless Hunt retrieves the mysterious “Rabbit’s Foot” weapon from a secure facility in Shanghai. Hunt goes rogue and, with the help of his team, plans a daring swing between two skyscrapers, using a third, taller building as a fulcrum.
However, while we see Ethan’s leap and his tricky landing on the roof of the facility, we don’t follow him inside for the rest of the heist. Instead, we remain with his teammates Zhen (Maggie Q) and Gorley (Jonathan Rhys Meyers) as they wait to hear whether or not he’s acquired the Rabbits Foot. We only catch up with Ethan once the mission has gone sideways, and Zhen, Gorley, and trusty tech wizard Luther Stickell (Ving Rhames) participate in a wild, shaky-cam car chase away from the building’s facility. It’s a cute subversion of the franchise’s usual structure and it allows the plot to continue at an even clip, but for the purposes of this list, we can’t put it anywhere but dead last.

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It's been five years since the release of Mission: Impossible - Fallout, but the latest film in the series has finally arrived. Tom Cruise and director Christopher McQuarrie have reunited for the new sequel, Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part 1, and this is a story that has finally given Ethan Hunt (Cruise) a foe that he can't easily dispatch. The Entity is something that Ethan has never had to contend with before, and it will push him and his team to their limits.

Mission: Impossible regulars Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, and Rebecca Ferguson are all back as Luther Stickell, Benji Dunn, and Ilsa Faust, respectively. Vanessa Kirby also reprises her role from Fallout as the White Widow, Alanna Mitsopolis. And for the first time since the original Mission: Impossible film in 1996, Henry Czerny has returned as IMF director Eugene Kittridge.

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Nearly three years ago, director Christopher McQuarrie started filming Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part 1, and it's been a long journey to get this sequel on the big screen. Franchise star Tom Cruise has been headlining the Mission: Impossible films since 1996 with increasingly risky stunts and over-the-top action that has kept audiences coming back for more. But Dead Reckoning Part 1 takes things to another level with a story that is too big for a single movie.

By most accounts, Dead Reckoning's two-movie adventure will mark the end of Cruise's Ethan Hunt and his time in the Impossible Mission Force. When the ending comes around for Part 1, Ethan's team has been forever changed, and even bigger challenges lie ahead in Part 2. If you need help making sense of it all, then you've come to the right place because we're about to dive in. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to keep reading, preferably after you've already seen Dead Reckoning Part 1.

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