Mission: Impossible

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wait which he

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Sunday, 29 July 2018 23:08 (seven years ago)

Sorry, Ethan. Renner has been consumed with guilt throughout the film and when he eventually manages to confess his culpability, Ethan's just like, "did you actually see a body?" *grin*

Number None, Sunday, 29 July 2018 23:16 (seven years ago)

the same line a guilty murderer uses tbf

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Sunday, 29 July 2018 23:18 (seven years ago)

remember when an Alec Baldwin bit part/cameo was a cool thing for a movie to have? It actually kinda felt that way again. Maybe it was the sharp haircut.

antisocal (rip van wanko), Monday, 30 July 2018 00:06 (seven years ago)

it was the six gun draw

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Monday, 30 July 2018 00:08 (seven years ago)

I really did enjoy Baldwin, and I’m a noted hater of late

mh, Monday, 30 July 2018 00:52 (seven years ago)

Nick Pinkerton finds these films "consistent"

If Hunt is in many respects the perfect Tom Cruise role, it is due to the sense of monomaniacal absorption in the job that is built into these films, in which – excepting Woo’s endearing but slightly off-brand second movie – spy games are an around-the-clock occupation that leaves little time for cocktails and bounding between boudoirs.

This suits an actor who can and will do most everything for a scene – including hold his breath for six minutes underwater – but for the life of him cannot project a naturally laid-back air, much as the relentless pitch of the movies seems to be in synch with our uptight, always-on-the-clock age. (In capturing something uniquely contemporary, these frantic films are only outdone as a franchise by the Resident Evil series and its vision of a corporate-sponsored apocalypse.)

“Running in movies since 1981,” reads the bio, possibly intern-penned, for Cruise’s otherwise quite humourless Twitter account – but this gets at something essential about the actor’s scrambling screen presence, which combines Apollonian grace under pressure with hell-bent-for-leather sprinter speed.

http://bfi.org.uk/news-opinion/sight-sound-magazine/features/tom-cruise-mission-impossible-franchise

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 30 July 2018 14:12 (seven years ago)

Stanley Kubrick was a genius because he was able to make Tom Cruise look truly stressed by not allowing him to run at any point during the filming of Eyes Wide Shut

mh, Monday, 30 July 2018 14:39 (seven years ago)

that sure is some thoughts about tom cruise

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Monday, 30 July 2018 14:43 (seven years ago)

Sorry "Hunt is the living manifestation of destiny," the actual most ridiculous line in the Mission: Impossible series is II's "We just rolled up a snowball and tossed it into hell. Now lets see what chance it has."

— Matt Prigge (@mattprigge) July 30, 2018

a Mets fan who gave up on everything in the mid '80s (Dr Morbius), Monday, 30 July 2018 17:41 (seven years ago)

I liked this a LOT more than the previous, probably because it took more tonal risks (both way more ridiculous and a little more grave). This is the first time I've had a use for Cavill.

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 01:27 (seven years ago)

I can't rule out that my lowered expectations or the 5$ price tag were factors in said enjoyment

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 01:33 (seven years ago)

"We just rolled up a snowball and tossed it into hell. Now lets see what chance it has."

2’s dialogue is almost all incredible garbage

princess of hell (BradNelson), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 01:33 (seven years ago)

i watched all of these for the first time recently and without a doubt 2 is the worst movie i have seen in at least 20 years

j., Wednesday, 1 August 2018 02:25 (seven years ago)

idg what's wrong with the snowball line. "Let's see what happens" may have worked better from a logical standpoint than "let's see what chance it has" but it gets the point across

antisocal (rip van wanko), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 02:29 (seven years ago)

Re watching MI3 - JJ has a knack for the big climactic beats (incl Russell's tender farewell "thank you") and a love for the gadgets (the auto retracting tactical gear!) but yeah too much of it is strictly functional.

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 04:10 (seven years ago)

It reminded me of every most JJ movie in that it has good individual scenes but builds up to stuff that doesn’t pay off. The “anti-god”’discussion early on and PSH’s scenes suggests something more ominous than the perfunctory gun battle that forms the climax. I do like the scene w Cruise telling his fiancé what IMF stands for and her reaction. There’s a good ridiculous long take of his continuous running.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Wednesday, 1 August 2018 04:17 (seven years ago)

De Palma’s holds up so much better than I remembered. Lots of plays on illusion and perception throughout. I recalled the train thing at the end as a 90’s too cgi set piece but the sense of speed is really potent and transcends in a way lots of blockbuster set pieces don’t.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Wednesday, 1 August 2018 04:20 (seven years ago)

The first JJ Star Trek still probably his best executed movie and even that's just...fine

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 04:21 (seven years ago)

Agreed. Definitely the best thing he’s done imo.

Nerdstrom Poindexter, Wednesday, 1 August 2018 04:27 (seven years ago)

i think its good, not fine, but yeah agreed on him otherwise

depalmas mi is vvg, the vibe is pretty unique, the lower-key stunts and chases are in the (here it comes again) ronin vein and everything else is like a better bond

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Wednesday, 1 August 2018 10:37 (seven years ago)

whats different about the beliefs of every movie hero as proxy?

that cruise's beliefs are scientology as opposed to apple pie/individualism/liberal humanism?

― dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac)

eg using actual slave labour to build his (let's say) 12th and 13th homes IRL makes it a little hard to buy him as a paragon of decency in movies imo

16, 35, DCP, Go! (sic), Thursday, 2 August 2018 19:39 (seven years ago)

There’s a good ridiculous long take of his continuous running.

― Nerdstrom Poindexter, Tuesday, July 31, 2018 9:17 PM (two days ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

this is the best scene in 3

princess of hell (BradNelson), Thursday, 2 August 2018 19:46 (seven years ago)

having just watched it this is absolutely otm, also liked Hunt being literally dead during the dispatching of the actual big bad

I'm not especially distracted by Cruise's evilness because most movie stars are irredeemable for the wealth-hoarding alone

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Thursday, 2 August 2018 19:48 (seven years ago)

wow another smaug take from the left

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Thursday, 2 August 2018 19:52 (seven years ago)

Harrison Ford is especially evil, being both a wealth hoarder and a nerf herder

sassysquatch (rip van wanko), Thursday, 2 August 2018 20:05 (seven years ago)

Running in movies since 1981

ok this is pretty funny

i enjoyed this in a does-exactly-what-it-says-on-the-tin sorta way

gbx, Friday, 3 August 2018 23:37 (seven years ago)

I took the day off work today. So I went to see this in the middle of the day. It was fine! Should’ve been Armie Hammer ‘steada Henry Cavill. I also went to the library.

devops mom (silby), Friday, 3 August 2018 23:40 (seven years ago)

I can't really see Hammer pulling off being as physically imposing (though it would have made the "I prefer a hammer" line a howler)

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Saturday, 4 August 2018 16:25 (seven years ago)

but hammer is like 6ft 4 and absolutely physically dominated cavill in man from uncle!

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Saturday, 4 August 2018 17:09 (seven years ago)

yeah i think he would be a great hardman. he’s like 8ft tall basically

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 4 August 2018 18:04 (seven years ago)

cavill's phsys

ryan, Saturday, 4 August 2018 19:13 (seven years ago)

oops.

cavill's physique was slightly distracting because i kept thinking "when does this character have time to go to the gym 2 hours a day and down protein shakes constantly..."

ryan, Saturday, 4 August 2018 19:14 (seven years ago)

yeah he is just a slab

gbx, Saturday, 4 August 2018 19:34 (seven years ago)

when he whipped off his jacket in the early restroom scene I was like, well, guess this just became boxing club

mh, Saturday, 4 August 2018 20:03 (seven years ago)

when you see Cavill in this & Man From Uncle it is like he’s not even the same bummed out dude that was playing Superman

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Saturday, 4 August 2018 21:03 (seven years ago)

he missed his moustache

wayne trotsky (Simon H.), Saturday, 4 August 2018 21:24 (seven years ago)

I don't remember much about the first five films, though I do remember liking the last two a lot. Yet I hated almost every interminable minute of this one, which felt like B-list Jackie Chan boilerplate. They could have showed the reels out of order, for all it mattered.

Lots of stuff I didn't like this time around, but for some reason more than all the others I was struck by how ridiculous (in an already ridiculous series) it is that literally everyone in this film is a well-dressed model/superhero ninja ... *except* for the two deus ex people that Hunt hangs around with.

xpost Scanning the most recent bits of this thread, yeah, I was also struck by how huge Cavill must be. Haven't seen the Superman movies, but every once in a while in this film they shoot him so that he looks only modestly massive next to Cruise. *pauses post to look up his height.* Huh, he's only 6'1? I guess Cruise is pretty short, but this guy must be all muscle.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 8 August 2018 20:51 (seven years ago)

some actors stand on platforms, Tom insists on forced perspective shots and makes everyone else stand in a hole

mh, Thursday, 9 August 2018 00:28 (seven years ago)

everybody needs to watch the end of the mission Impossible b-roll where cruise is congratulating everyone, it is really the distilled essence of something that i can't quite identify. it is so rock-hard pure, so irreducibly cruise, yet lacks any of the boyish tenderness that those of us who like him in these movies still see in his performances. it's like he's become the ice-man!

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 9 August 2018 01:38 (seven years ago)

I love reading stories of him being super cool to cast mates. Who was the one dude? Jake Johnson, who was in The Mummy? Yeah, him: https://www.thrillist.com/entertainment/nation/jake-johnson-the-mummy-interview-spoilers

Here’s a story that is very anti-Hollywood, but very Tom. He wanted me to work out with him and get in shape for the movie. People have told me in the past, including New Girl, that I need to lose weight and stay in shape. But they don’t tell me how. It’s like, "Hey tubbo, fit into these slacks!" Tom said, "I really want you fit for this movie." I literally thought I was going to have to call Max Greenfield to do Crossfit. But Tom said, "You’ll be training with me and my trainers. If you want I’ll put you on a food plan with my chef. The food is great." And the food was great.

He (also) said I could use his gym whenever I wanted. One day I go to work to work out and one of the (assistant directors) goes, "You can’t go in right now because Tom is working out." I thought, "That sucks, I got here an hour early to get this in, but he’s Tom Cruise." After, when we were shooting later that day, he said, "What happened to you? I thought you said you were going to work out this morning?" I told him I was told not to bother him and he got really pissed. He said, "Let me make something crystal clear: I don’t care what anybody on the crew says to you, they don’t know what I’m saying to you. And I’m saying to you that you are always welcome. I don’t care what I’m doing in there. You’re my castmate. Come in." He’s the best.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 August 2018 02:11 (seven years ago)

yeah l liked that story too

Squeaky Fromage (VegemiteGrrl), Thursday, 9 August 2018 02:37 (seven years ago)

that's cool but if Tom told his castmate that he could use the gym whenever he wanted he should have maybe given the relevant people the heads up that's what was going on

"I'm the president! use air force 1 whenever you want! later!"

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 9 August 2018 03:12 (seven years ago)

he just makes his young male co stars work out.

he was the same with jerry o connell iirc

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 August 2018 07:17 (seven years ago)

Maybe he is relatively lonely/isolated and likes the company. I hear a lot of stories of Cruise hanging with cast members on set or during filming, but not a lot of stories (lately) of his personal life, when the Cruise Machine goes on lockdown. Do you think his workout buddies - or anyone - hangs out with him off-set? For such a tabloid target, Cruise has mastered the art of disappearing, or maybe people just don't talk about it. Here are a couple of more good stories printed on Vulture:

Before Jonathan Lipnicki, there was another kid set to steal the show on the Jerry Maguire set. He spent a few weeks filming, but after a certain point, he “ran out of gas,” Cameron Crowe told Deadline, and wanted to leave the production. The role was recast — Lipnicki stepped in — but Crowe got a call from the mother of the boy who almost took the role. “Weeks later, the mother of the first kid calls the office. I got on the phone and she says, ‘Will you please tell Tom Cruise thank you for the way he has kept in touch with my son, sent him letters and gifts, and just let him know all is well?’ I thought, wow, I had no idea Tom Cruise was doing that,” he said. Crowe continued:

“She said, ‘It really helped my son. He’s over it now, he’s fine, and Tom did a beautiful job helping him transition back to his life.’ I went to Tom, later, and said, you quietly helped this kid through what could have been a terrible transition. Thank you, but why did you never tell any of us? Tom said, ‘I just didn’t want that first actor to go to the movies, look at the screen and think he’d failed. I wanted him to love movies, his entire life.’ That is the quiet way Tom Cruise conducts his professional life.”

During the filming of Jerry Maguire, Cuba Gooding Sr. impolitely inquired about Tom Cruise’s sexuality. “He gave Tom Cruise a hug and said, ‘I love you, man. Now seriously, are you gay or not?’” Gooding Jr. recalled, years later. “I almost fainted. And thought, Please, lord, let me disappear.” Cruise was so chill dealing with the prying parent: “Tom just laughed and said ‘No,’” his co-star reported.

During rehearsals for A Few Good Men, Kevin Pollock noticed Tom Cruise making notes in his script with a ridiculously huge pen. At first, they joked about it. Then, Cruise convinced Pollock to try writing with it. “It’s like an angel wing floating on a cloud. It was a magical pen,” Pollock recalled to the Chive. Even Demi Moore agreed the pen was a total joy to use. When Pollock learned the pen cost $500, he was crestfallen. Later, Cruise’s assistant showed up with a gift: the luxury writing utensil itself. When Pollock admitted to his co-star that he hadn’t used the pen because he felt it deserved a special spot on his mantle, Cruise bought him a second $500 pen — one for the mantle, and one for Pollock’s pocket.

As Bill Hader and Tom Cruise were in Los Angeles filming promos for the 2010 MTV Movie Awards, word reached the set that a car bomb had just gone off in Times Square. Hader was a new dad at the time, concerned about his wife and infant daughter in New York. Cruise noticed Hader’s concern, and asked when he’d get to go home to check on them. Hader wasn’t due back to the city for two more days, and so, Tom Cruise took over the set and got Bill Hader home by 8 a.m. the next morning. As Hader recalled:

“He thinks for a second. ‘No,’ he says. ‘We’ll get you home tonight.’ And in that moment, Tom Cruise, as Les Grossman, in a karate gi, began to direct all my coverage,” Hader recalled. “All my footage, all my close-ups. Boom! We do three perfect takes. Boom, boom, boom. Everyone’s chest-butting each other, some people are chest-butting themselves, people are going insane.” Two days’ worth of work, Hader said, “and he got it done in 45 minutes.” Then Katie Holmes came up to him and handed him a piece of paper with his new flight information. “You’re on the red eye tonight,” she told him. “I’m like, ‘What?!’” Hader said. Because Cruise got him out of work and on a plane that night, he was able to surprise his wife and daughter by 7:45 the next morning and check in on them in person. “So that’s what it’s like to work with Tom Cruise,” Hader said.

There are a few more good ones. http://www.vulture.com/2018/08/19-unsettlingly-nice-tom-cruise-stories.html

Obviously he has a team of assistants and stuff to help him give gifts and do good deeds, but he sounds pretty consistent (including real life acts of heroism). He's generous, he listens, he pays attention to details. For all I know these are all just facets of being the human incarnate of an intergalactic God, but who knows?

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 August 2018 12:17 (seven years ago)

i hate to say it but i think hes just mimicking keanu

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 August 2018 12:20 (seven years ago)

Keanu seems amazingly generous to his Matrix FX and stunt guys, but I guess I haven't heard too many other Keanu stories.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 9 August 2018 12:25 (seven years ago)

theres millions it like chuck norris memes at this stage

dele alli my bookmarks (darraghmac), Thursday, 9 August 2018 12:32 (seven years ago)

Cruise is 100% on at all times. When he sleeps, he probably drops to the ground for six hours, immediately jumping out of his hibernation cube upon waking.

mh, Thursday, 9 August 2018 14:13 (seven years ago)


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