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Tom Cruise stars as Ethan Hunt, a secret agent framed for the deaths of his espionage team. Fleeing from government assassins, breaking into the CIA's most impenetrable vault, clinging to the roof of a speeding bullet train, Hunt races like a burning fuse to stay one step ahead of his pursuers... and draw one step closer to discovering the shocking truth. (official distributor synopsis)

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Reviews (9)

kaylin 

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English Trick-wise, it was really good for its time and probably a hit back then, but I can't help but feel that after almost twenty years, it doesn't impress me as much anymore. The original series still seems a bit more interesting and imaginative to me. As I said, in terms of tricks, this is excellent and the scene in the tunnel is just action-packed and cool, but it's just not the same anymore. I guess I would have to be a child again to appreciate it like that. The last - fourth - movie was also cool, but just more modern and faster. ()

3DD!3 

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English Looking back on it, De Palma filmed certainly the darkest and most convoluted Mission: Impossible. The entire infiltration of Langley was ingeniously filmed. You can’t tell me that the scene with the balancing Cruise didn’t make an impression on you. The stifling silence and tension can be cut with a knife. The final revelation of the conspiracy when Hunt slowly pieces together fragments of “what we didn’t see in Prague" is nicely filmed too. Complete satisfaction is spoiled by the slight difficulty I found in orientating myself in the story. The first M:I wasn’t as mediocre as they say. ()

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Marigold 

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English This feels like an American response to the Bond films. The story is profiled as a typical spy plot full of intrigue and false identities. The action initially stays quite grounded, only to turn into something amusingly unrealistic and crazy at the end. As Ethan Hunt, Tom Cruise really only acts with his face; otherwise, his agent, created as an indifferent hanger for nice rags in the shape of a good guy, is directly archetypal. With his style, Brian DePalma oscillates between a thrilling spy film and an adrenaline action film. However, it cannot be said that M:I has a strong style, a strong charge, or a moment of surprise. It seems to me that even the main twist fizzles out due to bad timing. Compared to the Bond films, it's really quite soulless, but still fun. ()

J*A*S*M 

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English I’m between three and four stars, but thanks to several scenes where the tension is almost like out of a text-book (the gymnastics in the CIA vault, the gymnastics on the train), I will go for a more generous rating. That said, the script is quite messy; by the end, at least, it’s clear who was good and who was bad, but during the story, who’s playing what wasn’t very clear. The opening part in Prague was nice. ()

lamps 

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English I can’t really say that Mission: Impossible disappointed me much. It’s indeed very original, brisk and boasts two brilliant scenes, one of which in particular has become a cult-classic, and I can't count the number of times filmmakers have parodied it. The rest, however, felt somehow unexploited, artificially packed into a wannabe spectacular whole, which can be quite relaxing the first time, but I probably wouldn't go for it a second time. Besides, I have never found Tom Cruise very likeable, which also showed a lot, and if he had switched roles with the incomparable Jean Reno, I would have enjoyed this film a lot more immediately. If the whole story was on a comparable level to those two great scenes, it would be awesome, but as it is, it's just an over-hyped bubble and a rather bland work by De Palma's standards. 70% ()

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