Caught
the latest instalment of the Mission Impossible movie series at a cinema in
Melbourne. With new death defying stunts
and editing, this is without and doubt the most impossible one of the series. There
is so much action in it that it was just exhausting watching Cruize do all his
stunts. In a good way. Did I mention he is 56 ?
This
is only the second MI movie I have watched in a cinema. The first one was MI2,
back when John Woo's style of slow motion action-choreography was all the rage.
For fallout, they have chosen very fast, sometimes sped-up action, in bright
lights. Its nice to see every director bring his own style to the franchise,
but of course, in the MI series, it is not the director who is the star. It is
the star himself.
Mission
Impossible: Fallout is a testament to the miracle that is Tom Cruise Cruise is
among Hollywood's last surviving superstars. And yet look at what this man is
willing to endure to entertain us. He jumps from helicopters, fights hand to
hand and rides bikes against the traffic without a helmet. Side note: The last
one is not really an unbelievable stunt because it is very common in India. I
have done it occasionally, on short stretches. :) The movie also features a now
staple sequence of the famous Tom Cruize run, where he covers miles in a few minutes,
running through cars and jumping from buildings. But sadly, there was no
wire-drop sequence. That climax which involves sticking bombs helicopters and
snowy mountain clips is so suspenseful.
But
what kept distracting me constantly was watching Tom do the stunts. I remember speaking
multiple times to myself that he is actually doing it himself ! I could visualize
the protective wires from which he dangled, and how certain sequences were sped
up to make it seem impossible. It sometimes annoying how these thoughts creep
up, distracting one from watching the scenes on screen.
There's
also Henry Cavill showing us that he can do more than just be Superman. I hear
they had to digitally remove his moustache from his scenes in Justice League,
and that might have contributed to that movies debacle. Its good to see that his
acting and his moustache was justified in Fallout.
Fallout
also has a lot of emotionally relevant scenes, where Ethan’s personal life from
the previous movies is woven into the narrative. I felt and found it too…what’s
the term…filmy. Having grown up on diet of rubbish Bollywood action movies, I
could not digest it a big budget Hollywood production. What, the villain wants revenge,
so he brings Hunt’s ex-wife to the location of the final bombing? So that he can
personally destroy Hunt emotionally ? Bah!
Humbug!!. I found Luther’s exposition particularly cheesy, the one where he says
Hunt only cared about two women in his life. Oh yeah ? What about Nyah from the
second movie, who he definitely falls for ? The point of that storyline was to remind the
audience that Hunt was still human, and has his own problems, balancing personal
and professional life. But, it was way to cheesy. Tom really cannot play such emotional
scenes so close to the camera.
Also,
is Hunt and his team the only member’s of the IMF ? We have seen six movies so
far, and Hunt was disavowed in half of them. In the last 3, there was no other
agent or team sent on a mission. They need to address the question of how big
of an organization the IMF really is.
And
why was Alec Baldwin’s character killed ? Such a fine actor.
And
the final sequence of the movie is in Kashmir, India ? But there is not even a
single India/Pakistani character/actor anywhere in the entire movie. All those
scenes were shot in New Zealand, because they could not get permission to shoot
in India.
Also,
that scene from the trailer where he ramps a truck into another truck on what
appears as an Indian road, that’s not in the movie. Minor offence.
At
times the dialogues in the movie reminded me of my experiences from my own
profession! Hunt improvises a lot, like we do in software projects, hehe. Wink,
wink. When he says “I am working on it”, or “yet to figure that out”, I felt it
was just how an Indian software company executes projects :)
Fallout
deserves praise in every department. Its nice to see a franchise still holding
strong, adding something new , while still retaining what made the original
such a hit.
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