Over the weekend I was pleased to continue with Spy Movie Sunday and my trek through the Mission: Impossible series. Up next was Rogue Nation, which I still think is less fun than Ghost Protocol while still being the superior movie. If you’ve seen the recent trailer for the next installment, you can’t help but notice how it has a classic Hollywood feel. (Hitchcock allusions in M:I 1 aside) that started here.
The team goes to Casablanca. Ethan Hunt has an impossible attraction to Ilsa. They don’t even try to hide it.
More than that, Rogue Nation feels like an old movie. Yes, it also feels very contemporary and the franchise formula is set. But a classic film lover will appreciate the nods to The Man Who Knew Too Much, It Takes a Thief, and, of course, Casablanca. Even if you’ve never seen those movies, by paying homage to the greats the filmmakers tap into a sort of cultural resonance. Taking what’s old and making it new requires a deft hand.
I appreciate that the seams aren’t quite so obvious.
When I wrote about Ghost Protocol I mentioned how nothing comes easily. The stakes get raised in every challenge, every, single time. It’s a good technique and it works very well in that movie. However, if they’d done it so blatantly a second time it would be distracting. When the stakes are raised in Rogue Nation it’s done a little differently. It’s not simply making things harder for the sake of making them harder, but because the objective changes halfway through or immediately after.
Consider the big, underwater set piece.
Ethan has to hold his breath for three minutes while he swims into a liquid cooled computer and swap out some computer disks. A new challenge is presented by an agitator arm spinning around right at the level of the disk drive, but Hunt handles it. Until he gets swatted. The identical disks get mixed up, and the objective shifts to retrieving the disks and selecting the right one at random. Depending on luck rather than skill feels very different. Naturally, he chooses correctly, but now he’s out of oxygen and the new objective is survival.
Spoiler: Ilsa saves him.
Ilsa Faust is the female Ethan Hunt. The mystery of his wife was resolved in the last film, but doesn’t our hero deserve love? A perfect match? But while she’s every bit the operator, Ilsa Faust is a rare thing in an action movie: a feminine action heroine. She’s gorgeous (that yellow dress!), never shows up the men, and she fights differently because (trigger warning!) women are built differently.
That’s why men like them. And real people like truth, even in their fantasy.
Seeing a woman who is equal but different is a good thing, and something the franchise has flirted with in the past. This time they really commit to it. But by holding up a mirror to Hunt we can’t help but notice something. (Actually, this was brought to my attention by a YouTube video comparing Hunt with James Bond.) For all of the charisma Cruise brings to his character, Ethan Hunt doesn’t have much depth. We know Bond’s favorite drink, his hobbies, his taste. Ethan Hunt doesn’t exist away from work.
I have no problem with this, actually.
Bond started as a literary character. Ethan Hunt’s roots are in episodic stories, from the TV series from which the movies draw their name, and going back to the pulp adventures that were cranked out in old adventure magazines. He’s not a lesser character, simply a different type of character. We want to see what he can do, not who he is. It’s all the movies promise us, and they fulfill their obligation.