In an era of declining box office receipts and regurgitated intellectual properties featuring race- and gender-swapped protagonists to appeal to “modern audiences,” it seems the only surefire way to make a smash hit is to attach Tom Cruise to the project. Last summer’s smash blockbuster was Top Gun: Maverick (2022); one year later, it’s Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023).
Unwieldy title aside, Dead Reckoning Part One is an excellent film. Cruise returns to portray super spy Ethan Hunt, the most resourceful asset of the mysterious Impossible Mission Force (IMF). What makes the flick so compelling, and not just another rehash of past M:I films, is its antagonist: a powerful Artificial Intelligence (AI) called “The Entity,” an enemy that is “everywhere… and nowhere.”
Dead Reckoning Part One is one of those films that is too byzantine to summarize neatly, but when you’re in the theater (and you should see this flick on the big screen), the plot makes perfect sense. If anything, the film indulges in something that plagues too many movies: characters explaining what is going on in an expository scene, even though we can clearly see what is happening. Part of the fun of movies is that they tell by showing, not the other way around. A wife should be asking her husband, “What is going on,” not have a character tell her.
That quibble aside, suffice it to say that Dead Reckoning Part One is a globetrotting adventure with all sorts of duplicity and double-crosses, as well as unlikely alliances. The Entity rests beneath the Bering Sea on a wrecked Russian submarine, loudly (intentionally) infiltrating the intelligence databases of agencies all over the world. It can predict the billions of outcomes of events seamlessly, so can effortlessly manipulate events to increase the likelihood of achieving its desired outcome.
Naturally, every intelligence agency in the world wants to access and control The Entity for their own purposes. Unfortunately, accessing The Entity requires a cruciform key in two halves. When the halves come together, they make a complete key, which can access The Entity’s hardware. As such, the first half of Dead Reckoning Part One involves all the major players—the CIA/US government, other nations, Ethan Hunt, shadowy arms dealers, Gabrielle (Hunt’s arch nemesis, a “fanatic” who is working for The Entity)—trying to obtain the two halves of the cruciform key.
While all the governments, terrorist organizations, etc., want The Entity for its power over “truth”—defined in the film as access to all of the world’s intelligence data, as well as access to any digital device in the world—and its insanely vast computing power, Hunt (as a bit of a stand-in for us, the audience) wants the key so he can destroy The Entity, because (as a young CIA agent says to his commander later in the film) “no person should have that power.”
What begins is a game of cat-and-mouse between Ethan and his IMF buddies; the CIA/US government; Gabrielle and The Entity; and an international arms dealer (not to mention every other country in the world). Hunt and his allies must outwit every human player and an artificial intelligence with nearly omniscient predictive powers. The Entity can manipulate any digital device in a number of ways: creating false images; erasing certain people from security footage; mimicking voices in earpieces; etc. The Entity uses our very reliance on digital gadgetry against us, causing the various factions to resort to analog forms of communication, like short-wave radios and old-school television signals. The CIA even sets up an entire safe room of massive cathode-ray tube televisions getting information from an ancient, Cold War-era satellite.
The key—both in halves and as a whole—changes hands several time thanks to an unlikely ally in Grace, a skilled pickpocket who finds herself in way over her head. Grace is a great example of how to write a “strong female character,” in that she is not automatically good at everything. She is a skilled thief, but is clearly out of her depth in high-speed car chases and the like. Grace is smooth and competent, but she clearly needs Ethan Hunt’s expertise in tight situations. Over the course of the film, she grows more confident, as the events of the flicks—including a runaway train!—force her to adapt. Ethan Hunt learns from her, too, but the film does not belittle him to make Grace look better, which seems to be the case with so many modern films.
Hunt, of course, is getting on in years, and while he’s still incredibly skilled, he’s growing weary, and even questioning his own abilities. The stunts in the film are insane, and knowing that Tom Cruise does many of his own stunts makes them even more impressive: the cat is sixty-one-years old. There’s one scene in which Hunt drives a motorcycle off a rocky outcropping, and then must parachute onto a rapidly moving target; apparently, Cruise did this take multiple times. How much of it is Hollywood magic versus reality is unclear, but he did drive a motorcycle off a cliff. Whoa!
That’s also what makes this film so good—you can feel Cruise’s dedication to his craft in every scene. The guy sincerely loves making movies, and he doesn’t cut any corners.
Dead Reckoning Part One is not perfect, of course. It’s a very long film, clocking in at 163 minutes, or two hours, forty-three minutes (2h43m). I felt it in the theater (as did my bladder—gulp!). At roughly the two hour, twenty minute (2h20m) mark, I was thinking, “Okay, we should be finishing about now.” The trend for these massive blockbusters seems to be to make films longer and longer, and I lament the slow death of the ninety-minute feature. Dead Reckoning Part One could have been about twenty or thirty minutes shorter—and we still have a Part Two coming at some point!
That said, the movie rarely dragged. There was one point about halfway through where I found myself wondering how much longer we had, but that passed quickly. When I left the theater, it felt just about right, and I was surprised how quickly the three hours passed.
One reason the movie clips along is because there is nearly nonstop action, punctuated only occasionally with expository scenes. The action doesn’t get exhausting, though, like in a Marvel movie, where there’s so much CGI foolishness going on, it all becomes incomprehensible (Transformers films suffer from this same effect). The action scenes use CGI and special effects very sparingly, and most of the action involves real stunts. For example, there is a long car chase sequence that uses actual vehicles (including a tiny little Fiat 500), and it’s super fun and compelling.
“Compelling” is a great word for this film. So rarely do I experience genuine suspense or fear for the main characters in a film. Of course Ethan Hunt is going to live—right? Even with that knowledge, I genuinely feared for his safety throughout the film, and some of the stunts and close-calls made me tense up in my seat. When was the last time you watched a flick that had that effect on you?
Further, the premise—a super powerful AI that can manipulate the “truth” and wreak havoc across the globe—is all-too-compelling. Twenty years ago, it would have seemed like a hacky sci-fi premise; now, it seems chillingly real. All of those tech advocates loudly trumpeting the glorious future of artificial intelligence had better watch this movie and think about what they’re championing long and hard. It’s serendipitous that Dead Reckoning Part One released the same month as Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer (2023), which poses the question, “just because we can do something, does it mean we should do it?” In a digital world, an out-of-control super-AI could do a great deal of damage, and has more fewer checks on its power than the countries wielding nuclear weapons. Maybe we should turn it off, yeah?
So, I’ll close with a reiteration of my advice early in this review: see Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One in the theater—now. Don’t miss it. It’s the best film of the summer.

You’ll forgive me for not reading this yet. I’d like to watch the film and don’t want to know too much about it. I’ll come back and read once we’ve seen it.
Thanks anyway. 👍
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I totally understand. I tried to keep it as spoiler-free as possible, but, yes—see the movie first. It is amazing.
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I really enjoyed Maverick. The traditionalist in me prefers the first movie but the follow up was brilliant, made better when you find out the actors are in real fighter planes. Cruise flies the small plane at the end for real. I had no idea before watching it that he was a qualified pilot.
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He does many of his stunts in M:I-DR, too.
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Best movie of the summer – Sound of Freedom. See it in theaters; bring friends and family; spread the word everywhere.
I have no interest in Mission Impossible – I never even cared for the original tv series, lol. (1966, in case you wondered, lol). But do you know what I connected with? “One reason the movie clips along is because there is nearly nonstop action, punctuated only occasionally with expository scenes.” For me, that sentence explains the difference between The Walking Dead and Fear the Walking Dead. The first is all action; the second is talk, talk, talk, boring talk, even more boring talk – “oh, look; a zombie” – talk, talk, talk, boring talk, even more boring talk. Lol!
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We started watching Fear the Walking Dead a while ago and loved the slow build up. The only reason we stopped watching it was because we got The West Wing and Stranger Things but we’ll definitely go back to it.
We found out last week that the last season of The Walking Dead is out on DVD so we can pick that up this week. I just hope it fulfils what has been a good run.
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I was surprised to learn that TWD was still going. It’s one of those I failed to watch during its prime, but I remember when it dominated the water cooler Zeitgeist.
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I stayed with Fear TWD because I’m a huge fan of Morgan Jones (Lenny James), who finally makes his debut in season three, I think it was. A big surprise to me was the acting chops of Ruben Blades! What a talent. He was never anything more than the occasional character actor but FearTWD blows the top off that – the man can act! His scenes are always riveting.
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Audre, I saw _Sound of Freedom_ last night. I’ll be writing a review for next Monday. But I agree: it is a must-see film, and the most important film of the summer, if not this century.
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Port – all 11 seasons of TWD is on Netflix now. The 11th season is the final season.
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Thanks, Audre! I probably have just enough summer break left to binge watch the entire series (but, to be clear, I probably *won’t* do that, haha).
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Audre, one of my draws for Fear the Walking Dead was the New Zealand actor Cliff Curtis. I first saw him in Whale Rider, a gorgeous drama filmed in his native country. His daughter in that film who was Oscar nominated for her performance, Keisha Castle-Hughes, popped up in The Walking Dead in the episodes where Beth is stuck in that hospital.
It’s like 6 degrees of Kevin Bacon. 😉
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I’m going to have to check out _Whale Rider_. For now, however, I must write this _Sound of Freedom_ review while it’s still fresh in my mind.
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Looking forward to it. I had a look and it sounds gritty. It’s also not made by the Hollywood clique so it’ll be worth a look.
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Yes, it’s a must-see. I just finished my review. I tried to keep it as spoiler-free as possible. There is so much in there to cover; get ready for a long one. It’s not quite Pontian in length, but it’s thorough.
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How wild is that???
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Lenny James is a good actor. As one of ours, we’ve seen him in a few things, including the excellent Guy Ritchie gangster flick, Snatch. You wouldn’t like it – way too much swearing, but it works because of the type of film it is.
We have a decent British contingent in The Walking Dead, including Andrew Lincoln whose main black mark is Love, Actually but he redeems himself as Rick Grimes. The actor who plays J is also English but we’ve only seen him in a crappy horror movie. David Morrissey, who played the governor, is from the same city as Lord of Misrule, and Samantha Morton (Alpha) has been in everything, including another Cruise film, Minority Report.
Yes, I think we Brits excel in The Walking Dead.
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39 – suspected that David Morrissey was English but your revelation about Alpha darn near knocked me off my chair!!!! I had no flippin’ idea!!!
The casting of TWD was absolutely brilliant! I can’t imagine it with any other actors. Yes – the English should take a bow – or 10!
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Check out Samantha Morton. She’s been in loads of types of film and TV, blockbusters, independent, all sorts but like a lot of English actors, she’s choosy. She was also born a couple of hours away from where I grew up, in Nottingham.
Weird though – she’s been in so many things, I often forget that she’s just a year older than me!
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And she’s beautiful! What a face! I should have known from her skin that she’s English – y’all got the best skin in the world!!!
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Bald is beautiful. 👩🦲
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Laughing!
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