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Film Review: Mission:Impossible - Fallout

Like James Bond, Mission Impossible is cinematic comfort eating.

July 18, 2018 08:39
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1 min read

The Mission: Impossible series is America’s Bond. The two globe-trotting spy-fi series are only separated by the fact that the Mission Impossible series are at least notionally ensemble affairs, with a four-or-five strong team attempting to thwart the global terror plot/implausibly well-resourced supervillain/delete as appropriate.

But of course in all the Mission: Impossible films Tom Cruise is front and centre, carrying the franchise with his engaging screen presence, persistent star power and reckless willingness to undertake much of his own stunt work.

This time around, those qualities are pressed into service against a plot to use three stolen balls of Russian plutonium to (at first) destroy Jerusalem, Mecca and Rome with nuclear fire and (later) something worse.

Like Bond, Mission Impossible is cinematic comfort eating. You always know more or less what you’re getting, and as long as you liked the other films you’re going to love this one. All the elements are in place – non-stop action, cunning twists based around very convincing masks, and endless cliff-hangers.