Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation (DVD REVIEW)
Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation
DVD
Review
by Kam Williams
Latest
Installment of Tom Cruise Action Franchise Arrives on DVD
Rogue
Nation is the fifth installment in the Mission: Impossible franchise
featuring Tom Cruise as the dashing and daring Ethan Hunt. This
episode has everything you'd expect from an action-oriented espionage
thriller: international intrigue, irresistible eye candy and
edge-of-your-seat fight and chase sequences.
Just past
our unflappable protagonist's death-defying airplane stunt in the
picture's opening scene, we find him put out to pasture and retiring
to Europe where he soon disappears from the grid entirely. It seems
that his Impossible Mission Force (IMF) is being disbanded by the
U.S. Senate Oversight Committee at the behest of CIA Director Alan
Hunley (Alec Baldwin), an inept, if well-intentioned bureaucrat.
A
governmental directive for IMF spies to come in from the proverbial
cold gives evil a license to thrive, especially the Syndicate, a
clandestine confederacy of assassins bent on what else but world
domination. Ignoring the orders of his superiors, Ethan instead
recruits former colleagues William (Jeremy Renner), Benji (Simon
Pegg) and Luther (Ving Rhames) for help in toppling the power-hungry
terrorist organization. And the team of veteran sleuths is ably
assisted in that endeavor by Ilsa (Rebecca Ferguson), an inscrutable
double-agent with mysterious motives.
Directed by
Christopher McQuarrie, MI5 is as cerebral and multi-layered as it is
high-octane and visually-captivating. Overplotted to the point of
incomprehension, this is one brainteaser you might be better off not
bothering to decipher. I say, just sit back and soak in the sweeping
panoramas, the IMF team's infectious camaraderie, and wave after wave
of their derring-do, whether by land, sea or air.
Vintage
Cruise comes to the rescue!
Excellent (4
stars)
Rated PG-13
for action, violence and brief partial nudity
Running time: 132 minutes
Distributor: Paramount Home
Entertainment
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