✕ ✕
Turning tips into memories
Login
Signup

You have reached the limit of free articles.


To enjoy unlimited access to Culture Whisper sign up for FREE.
Find out more about Culture Whisper

Please fix the following input errors:

  • dummy

Each week, we send newsletters and communication featuring articles, our latest tickets invitations, and exclusive offers.

Occasional information about discounts, special offers and promotions.


OR
LOG IN

OR
  • LOG IN WITH FACEBOOK

Thanks for signing up to Culture Whisper.
Please check your inbox for a confirmation email and click the link to verify your account.



EXPLORE CULTURE WHISPER
✕ ✕
Turning tips into memories
Login
Signup

Please fix the following input errors:

  • dummy
Forgot your username or password?
Don't have an account? Sign Up

OR
  • LOG IN WITH FACEBOOK

If you click «Log in with Facebook» and are not a Culture Whisper user, you agree to our Terms & Conditions and to our Privacy Policy, which includes our Cookie Use

Support Us Login
  • Home
  • Going Out
    • Things to do
    • Food & Drink
    • Theatre
    • Visual Arts
    • Cinema
    • Kids
    • Festival
    • Gigs
    • Dance
    • Classical Music
    • Opera
    • Immersive
    • Talks
  • Staying In
    • TV
    • Books
    • Cook
    • Podcast
    • Design
    • Netflix
  • Life & Style
    • Beauty
    • Fashion
    • Gifting
    • Wellbeing
    • Lifestyle
    • Shopping
    • Jewellery
  • Explore
  • Shopping
  • CW SHOPS
  • Support Us
  • Get Started
  • Tickets
  • CW SHOPS
Get the Best of London Life, Culture and Style
By entering my email I agree to the CultureWhisper Privacy Policy (we won`t share data & you can unsubscribe anytime).
Cinema

Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One review ★★★★★

10 Jul 23 – 10 Jul 24, IN CINEMAS

In Dead Reckoning Part One, Tom Cruise embarks on his penultimate mission as secret agent Ethan Hunt. Also stars Hayley Atwell, Vanessa Kirby and Rebecca Ferguson

By Euan Franklin on 5/7/2023

Tom Cruise and Vanessa Kirby in Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One (Photo: Paramount)
Tom Cruise and Vanessa Kirby in Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One (Photo: Paramount)
Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One review 4 Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One review Euan Franklin
The Mission: Impossible film series is one of the few action-movie franchises that’s worth caring about. Decent time passes between each chapter (the longest being six years), there are no spin-offs (so far) to confuse the plot, and – crucially – the action sequences fire with balletic brilliance. It also has a superhuman advantage: the near-suicidal insanity of Tom Cruise.


Dead Reckoning Part One is Cruise's seventh and penultimate outing as secret agent Ethan Hunt (his first was in 1996), and he's never skimped on the danger. It's baffling to consider the infamous stunts, never mind the number of times he had to repeat them. For now, though, let’s revel in them with the assurance that they haven’t flown him into the grave (yet).



Left to right: Simon Pegg as Benji, Ving Rhames as Luther, Tom Cruise as Ethan and Rebecca Ferguson as Ilsa. Photo: Paramount

Unlike the last few films, you can watch Part One without much prior knowledge. The Syndicate, The Apostles and their genocidal leader Solomon Lane barely play a part here – aside from the beautifully malevolent Vanessa Kirby as the 'White Widow', introduced in Fallout. Instead, this chapter opens with a brand-new threat: an apocalyptic, machine-learning AI called ‘The Entity’, capable of manipulating the truth and, by extension, reality.


This ‘ghost in the machine’ has become sentient, and nations around the world are racing to gain control of the technology. But Ethan Hunt, ever the honourable hero, wants to destroy it.


Although artificial intelligence has recently surpassed mere speculation – spilling into an immediate issue – its extreme relevance in Part One is presciently coincidental (production started in 2020). The film leans into the series' sci-fi aspects more than ever before, but you can’t help but fear the possibilities in the real world.


The Entity holds a dark and divine influence like an algorithmic Beelzebub, pasting together probabilities and formulating the future. It’s ‘an enemy that’s everywhere and nowhere’, inspiring demonic disciples with a rousing, digital growl. Director and co-writer Christopher McQuarrie doesn’t push into the cultish potential far enough, but Part Two could prove a decent chamber for such extremist, technological piety.


The only way to stop The Entity is with the Cruciform Key, split into two parts that need to connect to function. Ethan gathers his usual team of Luther (Ving Rhames), Benji (Simon Pegg), and his sort-of love interest Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson). Marvel favourite Hayley Atwell also joins them as the nervous yet nimble thief Grace, an infinitely enjoyable addition to the IMF crew.



Hayley Atwell as Grace and Tom Cruise as Ethan. Photo: Paramount

In a Vox interview for Fallout, stunt coordinator Wade Eastwood stated that the action sequences are organised to be as practical and ‘character-based’ as possible. It’s not just about brushing with death or an excuse to blow up a car; these scenes reveal personality. That cinematic philosophy fills Part One, and with a wealth of humour too. The funniest example involves Ethan and Grace, handcuffed together, rushing through Rome like an accelerated dodgem in an old Fiat 500.


But it's the near-climactic motorcycle stunt (much publicised) that’ll really have you laughing, out of anxiety rather than comedy, as Ethan/Cruise drives off a cliff and speed-flies towards an unstoppable Orient Express train.


Dead Reckoning Part One doesn’t grip with the same tangible intensity as Fallout, but it’s still an impressively thrilling experience that dissolves a near-three-hour runtime and leaves you gagging for Part Two. At 61, Cruise is looking older but clearly not feeling it.


Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One will be in cinemas on Monday 10 July.




What Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One review
When 10 Jul 23 – 10 Jul 24, IN CINEMAS
Price £determined by cinemas
Website Click here for more information



Most popular

Things to do in London this weekend: 29 September –1 October. Photo: Frieze Sculpture Park
Things to do in London this weekend: 29 September – 1 October
London exhibitions to see this month
Top exhibitions on now in London
Omar Sy in Lupin part 3, Netflix (Photo: Netflix)
What to watch on TV this week

Editor's Picks

Ebla Mari and Dave Turner in The Old Oak (Photo: StudioCanal)
In cinemas this weekend: Ken Loach returns for another bleak but hopeful social drama
Secret Cinema: Wishmas - A Fantastical Christmas Adventure (Photo: Way To Blue)
Secret Cinema: Wishmas – A Fantastical Christmas Adventure
Grace Edwards and Scarlett Johansson in Asteroid City (Photo: Pop. 87 Productions/Focus Features)
Asteroid City review
Rachel McAdams and Abbie Ryder Fortson in Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret (Photo: Lionsgate)
Are You There God? It's Me, Margaret review
Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Harrison Ford in Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (Photo: Disney)
Cannes Film Festival 2023 selection: what we're excited to see
Léa Seydoux and Camille Leban Martins in One Fine Morning (Photo: MUBI)
One Fine Morning movie review
Sign up to CW’s newsletter
By entering my email I agree to the CultureWhisper Privacy Policy (we won`t share data & you can unsubscribe anytime).

Mission Impossible

Tom Cruise

Simon Pegg

Vanessa Kirby

Hayley Atwell

Rebecca Ferguson

Christopher McQuarrie

Action

Cinema

2023

You might like

  • Mission: Impossible — Fallout film review

    Mission: Impossible — Fallout film review ★★★★★

  • Ryan Gosling and Margot Robbie in Barbie (Photo: Warner Bros.)

    Barbie movie review ★★★★★

  • Jeffrey Cirio as the Creature. Still from Asif Kapadia's Creature courtesy of BFI Distribution and English National Ballet

    Akram Khan's Creature, The Film ★★★★★

  • Nan Goldin in All the Beauty and the Bloodshed (Photo: Christelle Randall)

    All the Beauty and the Bloodshed review ★★★★★

  • Gabriel LaBelle in The Fabelmans (Photo: eOne)

    The Fabelmans review ★★★★★



  • The Culture Whisper team
  • Support Us
  • Tickets
  • Contact us
  • Press
  • FAQ
  • Privacy
  • Terms and conditions
  • Cookies
  • Discover
  • Venues
  • Restaurants
  • Stations
  • Boroughs
Sign up to CW’s newsletter
By entering my email I agree to the CultureWhisper Privacy Policy (we won`t share data & you can unsubscribe anytime).
×