After months of waiting for it to come to 4k Blu-Ray, and then a couple more months for the right opportunity to watch it, I’ve finally seen Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One. At nearly three hours long I had to split it up across two days (sorry, Tom Cruise) and I admit sometimes my phone distracted me (sorry, Tom Cruise), but I still have thoughts.
It brings cinematic back to the cinema.
One thing I appreciate about the more recent M:I movies is the film history on display. If you look closely you’ll catch allusions to classics like Casablanca worked in such that only fans will appreciate. And I do mean appreciate, becasue they never take you out of the story. This time we see a little Lawrence of Arabia and a lot of Buster Keaton (specifically The General), but more in the visual cues than themes. While I love knowing that these filmmakers are aware of movies that happened more than two minutes ago, just using the iconography doesn’t give the story the same depth.
Also, John Wick: Chapter 4 already tapped those wells in 2023.
Still, it’s there and much appreciated. There’s a grandness to Dead Reckoning that is increasingly rare in action movies. The sword fight on the bridge in Venice is beautiful and would be totally out of place in most movies. Here, it works. In her Letterboxd review Hannah Long compares the car chase scene to Roman Holiday, and the charming interaction between Ethan Hunt and Grace makes seals it.
At the same time, the nightclub meeting is too reminiscent of the aforementioned John Wick.
So far I’ve written all these words and have yet to mention the story. But do we watch these movies for the stories? There are thematic depths to mine, with a character named Grace who needs some, and a cross being the key that defeats an ultimate evil. There’s Hunt’s self-sacrificial nature, which is impressed upon us in on-the-nose dialog. Robert McKee famously said, “If the scene’s about what the scene’s about, you’re in deep shit.”
Dead Reckoning keeps its shoes clean. Almost.
Yet to be honest, something about this movie felt off on a first viewing. I’m having trouble identifying just what’s causing it. In a way, it’s almost presented as a farewell tour, as even Tom Cruise and company are starting to show their age (Sorry, Tom Cruise). They can still put on a killer show, but we all know the band can’t go on forever. We get some of the greatest hits (we’re fighting on a train again!) and some new stuff to remember them by. Yet we can’t help but sense we’ve been watching this same show for decades.
Well, we have.
None of which makes it any less thrilling in the moment, and thanks to the immortal character of film we can have that moment anytime we want. Some of the visuals are gorgeous, and paired with imaginative action, so I know I will revisit this movie again, just as I have the others in the franchise. Even if it’s heralding the end of an era, what an era it’s been.