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Review

Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One: Tom Cruise still rocks the cinema

Luca Fontana
12/7/2023
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

Anyone who thought Tom Cruise would run out of steam by the seventh Mission: Impossible film is mistaken. Because Dead Reckoning Part One has what it takes to be the action event of the year.

Let me start off by saying that my review contains no spoilers. Any information stated here is featured in trailers that have already been released.


Tom Cruise hasn’t had enough of Mission: Impossible yet. Not even after 27 years. Cruise hasn’t completed his opus magnum yet. Dead Reckoning, the seventh instalment in the franchise that made him an action star in 1996, is only Part One too. The second half hits theatres next summer. It won’t only conclude Dead Reckoning, but the entire film series. According to the marketing at least.

What’s Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One all about?

It’s been almost three decades since Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) sold his soul to the IMF – the Impossible Mission Force. Their members are sworn to complete seemingly impossible missions. IMF agents also have to live and die in the shadows, for those close to them and those they’ll never meet. Hunt took this oath when his back was against the wall. Since then, he’s saved the world more than once. But never from an enemy like this: the so-called Entity.

The Entity isn’t human, but an AI. Everywhere and nowhere. Godless, stateless and amoral. Its plan? Who knows? Its next steps? Unknown. What’s clear is that it’s powerful enough to destroy humanity. But whoever is able to control it also holds the key to an entirely new world order. Thus, the world’s superpowers are engaged not only in a race against their own destruction, but also in a race for ultimate control.

Only one man can complete the mission – should he choose to accept it – to destroy the Entity altogether: Ethan Hunt.

The Entity: is a robot apocalypse coming?

No, the end of days hasn’t broken out yet. At least not everywhere. That much science fiction wouldn’t have suited Mission: Impossible anyway. After all, the series has always been characterised by its down-to-earth character – as down-to-earth as perfect face masks, drug lords with super viruses or terrorists with nuclear explosives can be. And yet, an AI pulling the strings in the background is daring. Especially for Mission Impossible.

«What, this thing is sentient!?» a leader of a secret organisation asks. «Yes, and it manipulates information in a way that could put the truth as we know it in jeopardy,» responds someone else.

I almost laugh out loud. But it gets even better.

«The Entity has hacked all security systems. The CIA. The FBI. The European Central Bank. Everything.» – «And what did it do?» – «Nothing, just left traces that were obviously meant to be found. It wanted to…» – «…send us a message: I’ll be back.»

Sentences that say everything and nothing. Absurd! Not that Mission: Impossible was ever nominated for an Oscar in the Best Screenplay category. But I don’t remember the other Mission: Impossible films being this asinine. I was almost taken out of the film by this brief opening exchange, introducing the super-threat in a completely ridiculous way. Fortunately, Mission: Impossible has more to offer than that. Above all, a Tom Cruise in top shape.

Stunt man: Tom Cruise

Tom Cruise does his own stunts. Still. What used to be one of those behind-the-scenes throwaway sentences in DVD extras has become his trademark. Yes, almost his gimmick. And definitely the marketing go-to for all his Mission: Impossible films. Sometimes to a ridiculous extent: IMAX trailers of his stunts were released before there was even a trailer for the film itself.

The hype is real.

As a viewer, I can’t help but dig my fingernails deep into the theatre seat with anxiety.

Breathtaking action thanks to a proven director

Crazy chases through the most beautiful European cities? Check. Daring motorbike stunts? Yep. Fistfights amid claustrophobic sets? Also included. Tracking shots of Tom Cruise sprinting? Would it even be a Mission: Impossible movie without them?

This is exactly what Cruise and McQuarrie understood, and it’s what puts Dead Reckoning ahead of most current action films. Only the John Wick series is really comparable, albeit more brutal.

Verdict: one of the best action movies of the year

Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie are still a proven team in their third Mission: Impossible film together. Especially when it comes to the action. Or the increasingly radical stunts.

Is Dead Reckoning the best film in the series? No. This title goes to Fallout, the direct predecessor. Fallout is perfect in almost every respect. From insane stunts to casting Henry Cavill and the breakneck pace of the film. Dead Reckoning, on the other hand, lacks a quality script. The mysterious Entity in particular, an interesting AI concept, is ultimately implemented with plenty of platitudes. I’d have expected more cleverness.

In addition, there’s suddenly this antagonist, Gabriel (Esai Morales). We viewers are told right away that he’s incredibly important to Ethan, as he’s the main reason Ethan had to join the IMF. This even goes so far that Gabriel’s face alone triggers something like post-traumatic stress in Ethan. After seven films. Out of nowhere. Right. A new character was simply crowbarred in afterwards. This seems far too contrived.

Still, this doesn’t change my overall positive impression. Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning: Part One namely scores with its ensemble cast. The visuals are wonderfully varied and the action fantastically staged. This is what event cinema has to feel like.


Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning: Part One hits theatres on 13 July, 2023. Runtime: 163 minutes. Age rating: 12.

Header image: Paramount Pictures

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I'm an outdoorsy guy and enjoy sports that push me to the limit – now that’s what I call comfort zone! But I'm also about curling up in an armchair with books about ugly intrigue and sinister kingkillers. Being an avid cinema-goer, I’ve been known to rave about film scores for hours on end. I’ve always wanted to say: «I am Groot.» 


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