• Xenforo Cloud has upgraded us to version 2.3.6. Please report any issues you experience.

Mission: Impossible: Rogue Nation - Part 1

Rate the Movie

  • 10

  • 9

  • 8

  • 7

  • 6

  • 5

  • 4

  • 3

  • 2

  • 1


Results are only viewable after voting.
Also, if they make a 6th Mission Impossible, I want Anthony Hopkins, Laurence Fishburne, and Alec Baldwin all together on the IMF board. Imagine a supporting cast like that.


Don't forget Henry Czerny dammit! One of Canada's greatest character actors! :argh:
 
Just watched the second film. Not as bad as people make it out to be. Just boring and not very engaging. Very different feel from the first film.
 
This trailer was attached to my screening of Furious 7 in IMAX and it was glorious. Great crowd reactions to the plane scene as well. I had chills once again during it :funny::up:
 
IMAX Rebecca Ferguson must have been nice too. :oldrazz:
 
Just watched the second film. Not as bad as people make it out to be. Just boring and not very engaging. Very different feel from the first film.

Great. You managed to change my mind about it so much.
 
I remember enjoying the hell out of that movie in theaters. My opinion about it overall has definitely gone down a bit as I got older but it's still a fun flick to me. I always loved Dougray's jab at Cruise in the movie about him smiling all the damn time. That always felt like a breaking the 4th wall moment almost :funny:

The final sequence from Cruise escaping the compound to fighting on the beach has always been one of the most badass action scenes ever to me though. When he puts those sunglasses on I still grin because that's when s**t gets real. :funny: But granted, it's not really Mission: Impossible from that point. But I still enjoyed it.

I'm planning to make a .gif of all the movies together but it'll take some time and I'm still putting the ideas together first. :up:
 
Last edited:
https://www.yahoo.com/movies/tom-cruise-rogue-nation-mcquarrie-117871637837.html

Tom Cruise has never shirked from a scary physical challenge when it comes to the Mission: Impossible series. “I remember when I did the CIA sequence in [the first] Mission: Impossible — they said ‘You can never top that’!” laughs Cruise. For 2011′s Ghost Protocol, Cruise, as IMF agent Ethan Hunt, dangled from the tallest building in the world, and in this summer’s sequel Rogue Nation, he straps himself to the side of an airborne plane, something he described as “the most dangerous thing I’ve ever done.” (For an in-depth look at the sequence, check out the first part of our interview with Cruise here.) But there’s more to Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation than those high-altitude adventures. Cruise, along with director Chris McQuarrie, gave us the lowdown on the title, the new cast, the plot and a stunt that was even scarier than the plane scene.

What does the title Rogue Nation mean?
McQuarrie: “It refers not to the IMF, but to the enemy in this movie. They’re comprised entirely of foreign agents who have, for whatever reason, withdrawn from the service and come together as a coalition and come together to fight against the system that created them. The anti-IMF.”

Cruise is excited about an underwater scene


Cruise:
“We have something I’ve always wanted to do: an underwater sequence without cuts. The kind of training I had to do for that was pretty intense. I’ve done a lot of underwater scenes, but I’ve never done one [like this] that will get the audience to lean forward and have a visceral reaction.”

There’s also a very dangerous motorbike scene

Cruise: “It was physically the most grueling sequence. We’re going at very high speed with Simon Pegg as my passenger, drifting through very narrow streets with cameras on [the bike]. I’m not wearing a helmet or pads, and at one point I’m highsiding a guy. It was hairy, actually.”
McQuarrie: “That’s part of a much larger sequence that takes place in Morocco. We built camera equipment for this movie specifically to shoot this sequence. It’s stuff that’s never been done before.

Alec Baldwin’s CIA boss hates the IMF

Cruise: “Alec Baldwin is the head of the CIA. There’s always been a bit of conflict between the CIA and the IMF, and Alec in this is really dropping the hammer and looking at the things the IMF has done.”

McQuarrie:
“Alec Baldwin absorbs the IMF into the CIA, so Jeremy Renner and Simon Pegg are now working for the CIA. Ethan Hunt is out there somewhere; no one knows where he is. [Alec] wants to bring Ethan Hunt in to make him answer for all the previous things he’s done in those movies. Alec perceives them as crimes and he’s determined to bring him in. Unfortunately he can’t find him!”

British actor Sean Harris’ villain is ‘lethal’


Cruise:
“Sean Harris is incredibly enigmatic and very powerful on screen. He’s as powerful a villain as we’ve had in Mission: Impossible. It really is a chess match between him and Ethan. The guy is very charming, intelligent, but lethal. It’s delicious.”

The tone of Rogue Nation is similar to Ghost Protocol
McQuarrie: “I had worked on Ghost Protocol with Tom. [McQuarrie had worked on the script.] We found a sort of tone that we loved and really wanted to preserve that over into this movie. I was determined to do something lighter and more fun, but then this villain evolved, the story evolved, and our team evolved and took it into a different direction.”

Rogue Nation
will pay tribute to other M:I films


McQuarrie:
“I asked myself what can I do to celebrate all those elements of the franchise; a signature sequence the way [original Mission: Impossible director] Brian De Palma did, a villain the way [Mission: Impossible III director] J.J. Abrams did, the stunts the way [Ghost Protocol director] Brad Bird did. You’ll see references to all those films throughout the movie. There’s [also] a real Easter egg for anyone who notices it — it’s almost a reverse of something from one of the earlier movies.”
 
Surprisingly, no mention of MI:2 at the end of the interview there. :hehe:
 
Cruise is excited about an underwater scene

Cruise:
“We have something I’ve always wanted to do: an underwater sequence without cuts. The kind of training I had to do for that was pretty intense. I’ve done a lot of underwater scenes, but I’ve never done one [like this] that will get the audience to lean forward and have a visceral reaction.”
I'm looking forward to getting a glimpse at this, I am guessing the scene begins when Ethan jumps into that whirlpool.


Rogue Nation
will pay tribute to other M:I films


McQuarrie:
“I asked myself what can I do to celebrate all those elements of the franchise; a signature sequence the way [original Mission: Impossible director] Brian De Palma did, a villain the way [Mission: Impossible III director] J.J. Abrams did, the stunts the way [Ghost Protocol director] Brad Bird did. You’ll see references to all those films throughout the movie. There’s [also] a real Easter egg for anyone who notices it — it’s almost a reverse of something from one of the earlier movies.”

Does he mean the title sequence with the classic theme or the train action sequence?
 
Sounds like this film is a "greatest hits" of sorts.
 
MI6 in early stages of development.

http://www.tracking-board.com/tb-ex...king+Board+|+Hollywood's+Insider+Information)

With the franchise’s fifth installment, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, set to bow this July, Paramount, Bad Robot and Skydance Productions are already in motion on a sixth installment tentatively titled MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 6. Tom Cruise, David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and J.J. Abrams are returning to produce, with Don Granger and Matt Grimm set to serve as executive producers. Elizabeth Raposo will oversee development on the action sequel.
 
It sucks Jonathan Rhys Meyers relapsed. Would of been nice to see him back even for a cameo appearance.
 
Who would you like to see direct the sixth? Doug Liman or James Mangold with their previous connections to Cruise or bring in someone like Michelle MacLaren who did great work directing episodes of Breaking Bad, The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones? Hopefully by the time they're ready to move forward with MI6, she will have directed a film since she walked away from Wonder Woman.

Definitely seeing Rogue Nation in D-Box seats.
 
James Mangold is directing Wolverine 3 so I'm not sure that he would be available unless MI6 shoots in 2017 and comes out in 2018.
 
Who would you like to see direct the sixth? Doug Liman or James Mangold with their previous connections to Cruise or bring in someone like Michelle MacLaren who did great work directing episodes of Breaking Bad, The Walking Dead and Game of Thrones? Hopefully by the time they're ready to move forward with MI6, she will have directed a film since she walked away from Wonder Woman.

Definitely seeing Rogue Nation in D-Box seats.
Kathryn Bigelow
 
Whoa. Poor guy's in trouble. :csad:

His fly's open, he's wearing his jacket inside out, and he's drinking vodka in public.

1wpQyni.jpg


gbwerF0.jpg


qS5fVQL.jpg
 
Aww, I don't think we need to have the photo's in the thread. It's morbid. :(
 
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "afb8e5d7348ab9e99f73cba908f10802"