Ethan Hunt and the IMF Team for Mission Impossible The Final Reckoning
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Movie Review: Mission Impossible- The Final Reckoning

I have been a huge fan of MISSION IMPOSSIBLE films for the entire run of the franchise. ROGUE NATION, the fifth installation in the series is one of my favorite movies of all time. When else can you say that a franchise has multiple sequels that are even better than the original film? But that’s where the good news in this review ends; THE FINAL RECKONING is not a sequel success story. In fact, I think it is the weakest MISSION IMPOSSIBLE film in the entire eight-film collection; yes, I mean worse than MISSION IMPOSSIBLE 2. The plot is weak and confusing and there is a complete lack of an emotional arc, which prevented me from really caring what happens to our favorite IMF team. Of course, I am also infuriated that my favorite character, Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson), is actually dead… a remnant of the seventh film, DEAD RECKONING, that I had hoped would be rectified in this, but sadly it was not.

Picking up after the events of DEAD RECKONING, The Entity, an artificial intelligence program, is causing even more chaos across the world as it begins gaining access to nuclear weapons from every country that has them; the last hold out is the United States. The threat of global annihilation is at The Entity’s fingertips and the U.S. government is debating whether to conduct a first strike on the AI-controlled nuclear weapon inventories before they can be launched; this would cost millions of lives, but could save the world in the long-run. But before an attack is authorized, President Sloane (Angela Basset) gives Ethan (Tom Cruise) and the IMF team a small window of time to try to shut The Entity down once and for all. The team just needs to identify the coordinates of the sunken Russian submarine, the Sevastopol, to gain control of The Entity’s source code, isolate The Entity to prevent it from doing more harm, and not get killed by the other organizations that are also trying to gain control of it in the meantime. Sounds simple, right?

Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt biplane stunt in Mission Impossible Final Reckoning
Courtesy of Paramount

I cannot stress enough how unnecessarily convoluted the plot is in THE FINAL RECKONING. In fact, the plot is so confusing, Cruise’s Ethan takes time in the film (through cringey expositional dialogue and flashbacks) to recap the events of DEAD RECKONING and the mission ahead… to characters that were in the previous film and would already know what is going on. This was clearly being used as an attempted reminder for audience members, but instead it broke the fourth wall and took me out of the film altogether.

It almost feels like THE FINAL RECKONING forgot the main element that made the previous films so successful—the camaraderie of the team. Unlike the other films, much of this one takes place with Ethan on one mission, while the rest of the team is on another. These movies work best when the team is together, working as one unit to ensure the success of the operation; we don’t get that here. Additionally, this film and its predecessor added new team members that are not properly fleshed out and added nothing to the storyline. Why they chose to replace Ilsa Faust, one of the best heroines in cinema history, with the incredibly boring Grace will never make sense to me. This is less a criticism of Hayley Atwell and more a criticism of the script, which left her character severely underwritten. She was also a bit too similar to Cameron Diaz’s character in KNIGHT AND DAY, gasping at most everything Cruise says or does.

Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt scuba diving pressure suit in Mission Impossible Final Reckoning
Courtesy of Paramount

The few bright moments in the film are the stunts, especially the one at the end where Cruise conducts incredible maneuvers while hanging onto a biplane. But in comparison to the other MISSION IMPOSSIBLE films, I was left wanting more; the film honestly felt a little light on the action and heavy on the plot. To me, even the craziest stunts in the franchise have felt outrageous, but still achievable. From scaling the facade of the Burj Khalifa to the motorcycle cliff jump on onto a train, there has always been an element of realness to them that made me think the most impossible moments could still be possible. Not in THE FINAL RECKONING. Without getting into spoilers, there is a water-based stunt that is so outrageous, people in my audience were laughing… and it wasn’t because there was something funny on-screen.

My disappointment in THE FINAL RECKONING, is mostly an unfortunate byproduct of the franchise’s success. Because there have been so many stellar movies, my excitement was incredibly high, which makes it sting more that it didn’t live up to expectations. Adding an almost 3-hour runtime makes the pain that much more acute. I hope this isn’t the final installment of the MISSION IMPOSSIBLE franchise, because I would love to see it go out on a high note. But if this is the final film, we can at least take comfort in the fact that it was a great series of films that has continued to push the envelope of what to expect from practical stunts.

My Review: C

1 thought on “Movie Review: Mission Impossible- The Final Reckoning”

  1. I think as a whole it was a great movie. The basic script was good the special effects were great
    and amazing- and Cruise does most of his own stunts. There were a couple of things off-
    It could of been two and a half hours instead of 3 hrs. Also some of the scenes had writing flaws- the submarine under water parts where he found the device and is trying to get out of there-how did he open the torpedo tube lock? and the captain of sub who picked him up in the middle of the ocean
    told no matter what he would get the bends but when Grace saves him he wakes and feels fine and no time to stray in the pressure unit. And also the last major scene-flying one at the end he gets into the other plane after jumping on the Gabriel’s plane the plane catches fire and the bad guy is forced to jumps says its to bad there is only 1 parachute (his) and when Cruise jumps he happens to have a parachute also. And when he’s falling Cruise parachute catches on fire and burns up but he lands safely and the parachute is as good as new?

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