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In Mission:Impossible: The Final Reckoning, Tom Cruise plays IMF agent Ethan Hunt, who must work quickly to eliminate the Entity, a renegade AI that could cause nuclear war. aboard order to locate the device with the Entity's code, which is concealed aboard a sunken Russian submarine in the Arctic, Ethan teams up with Luther (Ving Rhames), Benji (Simon Pegg), and Grace (Hayley Atwell) while hiding in London with the key. They face a group of individuals who want to destroy the entire world as well as Gabriel (Esai Morales), the Entity's human ally. They travel from London to the Arctic and then to Africa as part of the expedition. Every decision Ethan has made in the past has brought him to the brink of preserving humanity.
By doing feats like hanging off an aeroplane and venturing to the deepest ocean depths, Tom Cruise takes action to wild new levels. With the breathtaking airborne chase and the flawlessly timed parallel running sequences, the final thirty minutes are an absolute rush. The way the action in the movie is filmed gives you value for your money, and the sights are amazing.
The melancholy is lightened by a few occasional humorous moments, either involving Benji and Paris or Ethan and Grace. The emotional impact of Ethan's last assignment is powerful, and the cast's chemistry feels genuine. The stakes feel extremely high towards the conclusion when the Entity's horrifying power becomes apparent. For making a movie this big, director Christopher McQuarrie deserves praise.
The picture had a slow start, with a hefty and talkative first half. The narrative becomes uninteresting for thirty minutes, leaving you restless. The threat posed by the Entity doesn't truly reach you until early in the movie. You start to sense the suspense near the conclusion. Despite its audacity, the underwater submarine sequence lacks the excitement you might anticipate. The overuse of flashbacks to earlier missions drags down the action by serving as a reminder of Ethan's past.
Also, there are moments when the background music seems excessively loud. That being said, it also improves a few moments. Finally, you must believe in the fantastic plot. Many scenes may be hard to believe for those who rely on reason and good fortune.
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