Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation: Difference between revisions
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Outside North America, the film opened in 40 overseas markets including 135 IMAX theaters on July 31, 2015 in big markets such the United Kingdom, Mexico and Australia.<ref name="Tracking"/> It grossed $64.5 million in its opening weekend and went No. 1 in 33 markets and IMAX contributed $4.1 million of its international opening.<ref name="OverseasOpening"/> Revenues from its second weekend increased by 0.5% to $65 million. It added 18 new markets including India, Japan, Russia and opened at No. 1 in 17 of the 18 markets with the exception of Japan where it was behind ''[[Jurassic World]]''.<ref name="Overseas2ndOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-fantastic-four-ant-man-international-box-office-results-1201496065/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Flies Higher In 2nd Frame With $65M; ‘Fantastic Four’ No. 2 With $33.1M Bow – Intl Box Office Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 10, 2015|accessdate=August 11, 2015}}</ref> Overall, it opened at No. 1 in 55 of the 63 territories it has been released in and had the biggest opening weekend ever for the franchise in 46 markets and Cruise's best opening in 40 markets.<ref name="OverseasOpening"/><ref name="Overseas2ndOpening"/><ref name="Overseas4thweekend" /> It topped the box office outside of North America for three consecutive weekends before being overtaken by Paramount's own ''[[Terminator Genisys]]'' in its fourth weekend.<ref name="Overseas3rdOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-fantastic-four-brothers-the-man-from-uncle-international-box-office-results-1201499958/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Revs Up $46M More; ‘Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ Spies $12M; ‘Brothers’ Shows Muscle – Intl B.O. Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 16, 2015|accessdate=August 17, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Overseas4thweekend">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/international-box-office-terminator-genisys-china-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-minions-inside-out-hitman-agent-47-uncle-results-1201503912/|title=‘Terminator’ Back To No. 1 As China Re-Opens; ‘M:I5’ Adds $25M; ‘Hitman’ Contracts $8.5M – Intl B.O. Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 23, 2015|accessdate=August 14, 2015}}</ref> |
Outside North America, the film opened in 40 overseas markets including 135 IMAX theaters on July 31, 2015 in big markets such the United Kingdom, Mexico and Australia.<ref name="Tracking"/> It grossed $64.5 million in its opening weekend and went No. 1 in 33 markets and IMAX contributed $4.1 million of its international opening.<ref name="OverseasOpening"/> Revenues from its second weekend increased by 0.5% to $65 million. It added 18 new markets including India, Japan, Russia and opened at No. 1 in 17 of the 18 markets with the exception of Japan where it was behind ''[[Jurassic World]]''.<ref name="Overseas2ndOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-fantastic-four-ant-man-international-box-office-results-1201496065/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Flies Higher In 2nd Frame With $65M; ‘Fantastic Four’ No. 2 With $33.1M Bow – Intl Box Office Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 10, 2015|accessdate=August 11, 2015}}</ref> Overall, it opened at No. 1 in 55 of the 63 territories it has been released in and had the biggest opening weekend ever for the franchise in 46 markets and Cruise's best opening in 40 markets.<ref name="OverseasOpening"/><ref name="Overseas2ndOpening"/><ref name="Overseas4thweekend" /> It topped the box office outside of North America for three consecutive weekends before being overtaken by Paramount's own ''[[Terminator Genisys]]'' in its fourth weekend.<ref name="Overseas3rdOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-fantastic-four-brothers-the-man-from-uncle-international-box-office-results-1201499958/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Revs Up $46M More; ‘Man From U.N.C.L.E.’ Spies $12M; ‘Brothers’ Shows Muscle – Intl B.O. Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 16, 2015|accessdate=August 17, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Overseas4thweekend">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/international-box-office-terminator-genisys-china-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-minions-inside-out-hitman-agent-47-uncle-results-1201503912/|title=‘Terminator’ Back To No. 1 As China Re-Opens; ‘M:I5’ Adds $25M; ‘Hitman’ Contracts $8.5M – Intl B.O. Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 23, 2015|accessdate=August 14, 2015}}</ref> |
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It had the biggest opening for the franchise in the U.K., Ireland and Malta ($8.3 million), France ($7 million), India ($6.5 million), Japan ($6.1 million), Russia and the CIS ($5.3 million), Mexico ($5 million), the Middle East ($4.7; including $2.5 million from UAE alone), Taiwan ($5.1 million), Australia ($3.8 million), Germany ($3.2 million) and Brazil ($3.1 million).<ref name="OverseasOpening"/><ref name="Overseas2ndOpening"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-becomes-814437|title=''Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation'' Becomes Paramount's Top Opener in India|author=Nyay Bhushan|work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|publisher=([[Prometheus Global Media]])|date=August 11, 2015|accessdate=August 11, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Overseas3rdOpening"/> In South Korea, where the franchise has been a hit it opened to $16.95 million (49% above ''Ghost Protocol''), which is the second biggest-opening ever for Paramount, behind ''[[Transformers: Dark of the Moon]]''; Cruise's biggest ever opening; the best for the Mission franchise; and the second biggest opening for a Western film of 2015.<ref name="Overseas1">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-international-box-office-results-tom-cruise-1201488338/|title=''Mission: Impossible'' Takes Off To $26.4M Overseas; Sets Records For Tom Cruise|first=Nancy |last=Tartaglione|publisher=Deadline.com]] (Penske Media Corporation)|date=August 1, 2015|accessdate=August 2, 2015}}</ref><ref name="OverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/international-box-office-results-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-minions-ant-man-pixels-monster-hunt-bajrangi-bhaijaan-1201489609/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Puts Cruise In Control At $64.5M Offshore; Sets Career & ‘M:I’ Franchise Bests – Intl Box Office Final|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 3, 2015|accessdate=August 4, 2015}}</ref> It added $8.1 and $3.7 million in its second and third weekend for a total of $41.1 million making South Korea the film's current highest market followed by Japan ($36.1 million), the United Kingdom ($31.2 million), France ($18.4 million) and Germany ($12.4 million).<ref name="5thOverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/terminator-genisys-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-straight-outta-compton-hitman-international-box-office-results-1201510404/|title=‘Terminator’, ‘Mission: Impossible’ Each Cruise Past $300M; ‘Compton’ Tops In UK, Germany – Intl Box Office Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 30, 2015|accessdate=August 31, 2015}}</ref><ref name="6thOverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/09/terminator-genisys-hitman-agent-47-straight-outta-compton-transporter-international-box-office-results-1201516578/|title=‘Terminator’, ‘Hitman’ Lead Sluggish Frame; ‘Compton’ Tops 5 Markets – International Box Office|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=September 6, 2015|accessdate=September 7, 2015}}</ref> In China, ''Rogue Nation'' earned $18.5 million on its opening day of September 8 (including $1.4 million from midnight screenings), which is the country's biggest opening for a Hollywood 2D film, the second biggest for any 2D film in China (only behind the $22.2 million debut of local 2D film ''Pancake Man''), and the fifth-biggest opening for any film.<ref name="ChinaOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/09/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-china-box-office-1201518121/|title=‘Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation’ Opens To $18.5M In China; Sets 2D Record|author=Nancy Tartaglione|publisher=[[Deadline.com]] ([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=September 8, 2015|accessdate=September 9, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.forbes.com/sites/robcain/2015/09/09/mission-impossible-takes-no-prisoners-in-18-2-million-china-opening-day/|title='Mission Impossible' Takes No Prisoners In $18.2 Million China Opening Day|author=Rob Cain|work=[[Forbes]]|date=September 9, 2015|accessdate=September 12, 2015}}</ref> ''Rogue Nation'' is projected to make 70% of its worldwide gross abroad.<ref name="OpeningDay"/> |
It had the biggest opening for the franchise in the U.K., Ireland and Malta ($8.3 million), France ($7 million), India ($6.5 million), Japan ($6.1 million), Russia and the CIS ($5.3 million), Mexico ($5 million), the Middle East ($4.7; including $2.5 million from UAE alone), Taiwan ($5.1 million), Australia ($3.8 million), Germany ($3.2 million) and Brazil ($3.1 million).<ref name="OverseasOpening"/><ref name="Overseas2ndOpening"/><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-becomes-814437|title=''Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation'' Becomes Paramount's Top Opener in India|author=Nyay Bhushan|work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|publisher=([[Prometheus Global Media]])|date=August 11, 2015|accessdate=August 11, 2015}}</ref><ref name="Overseas3rdOpening"/> In South Korea, where the franchise has been a hit it opened to $16.95 million (49% above ''Ghost Protocol''), which is the second biggest-opening ever for Paramount, behind ''[[Transformers: Dark of the Moon]]''; Cruise's biggest ever opening; the best for the Mission franchise; and the second biggest opening for a Western film of 2015.<ref name="Overseas1">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-international-box-office-results-tom-cruise-1201488338/|title=''Mission: Impossible'' Takes Off To $26.4M Overseas; Sets Records For Tom Cruise|first=Nancy |last=Tartaglione|publisher=Deadline.com]] (Penske Media Corporation)|date=August 1, 2015|accessdate=August 2, 2015}}</ref><ref name="OverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/international-box-office-results-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-minions-ant-man-pixels-monster-hunt-bajrangi-bhaijaan-1201489609/|title=‘Rogue Nation’ Puts Cruise In Control At $64.5M Offshore; Sets Career & ‘M:I’ Franchise Bests – Intl Box Office Final|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 3, 2015|accessdate=August 4, 2015}}</ref> It added $8.1 and $3.7 million in its second and third weekend for a total of $41.1 million making South Korea the film's current highest market followed by Japan ($36.1 million), the United Kingdom ($31.2 million), France ($18.4 million) and Germany ($12.4 million).<ref name="5thOverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/08/terminator-genisys-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-straight-outta-compton-hitman-international-box-office-results-1201510404/|title=‘Terminator’, ‘Mission: Impossible’ Each Cruise Past $300M; ‘Compton’ Tops In UK, Germany – Intl Box Office Update|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=August 30, 2015|accessdate=August 31, 2015}}</ref><ref name="6thOverseasOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/09/terminator-genisys-hitman-agent-47-straight-outta-compton-transporter-international-box-office-results-1201516578/|title=‘Terminator’, ‘Hitman’ Lead Sluggish Frame; ‘Compton’ Tops 5 Markets – International Box Office|author=Nancy Tartaglione|work=''[[Deadline.com]]''|publisher=([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=September 6, 2015|accessdate=September 7, 2015}}</ref> In China, ''Rogue Nation'' earned $18.5 million on its opening day of September 8 (including $1.4 million from midnight screenings), which is the country's biggest opening for a Hollywood 2D film, the second biggest for any 2D film in China (only behind the $22.2 million debut of local 2D film ''[[Jian Bing Man|Pancake Man]]''), and the fifth-biggest opening for any film.<ref name="ChinaOpening">{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2015/09/mission-impossible-rogue-nation-china-box-office-1201518121/|title=‘Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation’ Opens To $18.5M In China; Sets 2D Record|author=Nancy Tartaglione|publisher=[[Deadline.com]] ([[Penske Media Corporation]])|date=September 8, 2015|accessdate=September 9, 2015}}</ref><ref name="China1">{{cite web|url=http://www.forbes.com/sites/robcain/2015/09/09/mission-impossible-takes-no-prisoners-in-18-2-million-china-opening-day/|title='Mission Impossible' Takes No Prisoners In $18.2 Million China Opening Day|author=Rob Cain|work=[[Forbes]]|date=September 9, 2015|accessdate=September 12, 2015}}</ref> Despite opening on a Tuesday—during which most children are off to school—the film opened successfully and almost matched the opening figure of North America. Rob Cain of ''[[Forbes]]'' cited out possible reasons for the successful opening; The well-establishement of the franchise in China (its immediate predecessor ''Ghost Protocol'' earned $102.7 million when it released in China in early 2012), rapid expansion and growth of Chinese movie market, being the second Hollywood movie (after ''[[Terminator Genisys]]'') to be released after the nearly 60 days blackout period in which non-Chinese movies were dabarred from going to general release in the country, and the successful awareness campaign and marketing efforts team including Tom Cruise visiting several Chinese cities.<ref name="China1"/ref> ''Rogue Nation'' is projected to make 70% of its worldwide gross abroad.<ref name="OpeningDay"/> |
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===Critical response=== |
===Critical response=== |
Revision as of 10:43, 12 September 2015
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation | |
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Directed by | Christopher McQuarrie |
Screenplay by | Christopher McQuarrie |
Story by |
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Produced by |
|
Starring | |
Cinematography | Robert Elswit |
Edited by | Eddie Hamilton |
Music by | Joe Kraemer |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 131 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $150 million[2] |
Box office | $513.3 million[3] |
Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation is a 2015 American action spy film written and directed by Christopher McQuarrie. It is the fifth installment in the Mission: Impossible series and was preceded by Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol (2011). The film stars Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Ving Rhames, Sean Harris, and Alec Baldwin with Cruise, Renner, Pegg, and Rhames reprising their roles from previous films. Rogue Nation is produced by Cruise, J. J. Abrams, and David Ellison of Skydance Productions. In the film, IMF agent Ethan Hunt (Cruise) is on the run from the CIA, following the IMF's disbandment as he tries to prove the existence of the Syndicate, an international criminal consortium.
Filming began on August 21, 2014, in Vienna, Austria, and concluded on March 12, 2015. The film was released in North America by Paramount Pictures on July 31, 2015 to critical and commercial success. In its opening weekend, it took in $55.5 million at the U.S. box office[4] and has grossed over $513 million worldwide.[3]
Plot
After intercepting nerve gas being sold to terrorists, Impossible Missions Force (IMF) agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) is convinced he can prove the existence of the Syndicate, an international criminal consortium the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) does not believe exists. Hunt is captured by the Syndicate, but escapes a torture chamber led by Syndicate member Janik "Bone Doctor" Vinter (Jens Hultén) with the help of MI6 agent and Syndicate operative Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson).
CIA Director Alan Hunley (Alec Baldwin) and IMF agent William Brandt (Jeremy Renner) testify before a Senate committee. The IMF, currently without a secretary in charge, is controversial because of its destructive methods. Hunley, who dislikes Hunt, succeeds in having the IMF disbanded and absorbed into the CIA; Brandt warns Hunt to stay undercover. Cut off from the IMF, Hunt follows his only lead: A blond man in glasses, later identified as former MI6 agent Solomon Lane (Sean Harris).
Six months later, Hunt remains a fugitive. Unable to find the Syndicate without help, he recruits former colleague Benji Dunn (Simon Pegg) to attend the opera Turandot in Vienna to search for Lane, who he suspects is the Syndicate's leader. Despite stopping three snipers including Faust, Hunt is blamed for the death of the Austrian Chancellor (Rupert Wickham).
Brandt recruits former agent Luther Stickell (Ving Rhames) to find Hunt before the CIA's Special Activities Division kills him. Using a likeness of Faust left by Hunt, Brandt and Stickell track Hunt, Dunn, and Faust to Morocco, where the latter group infiltrates a secure server beneath a power station by changing access control data stored in a underwater turbine tank. After having stolen what they believe to be a ledger containing the names of all Syndicate agents, Faust betrays the others and flees with the data on a USB flash drive; Ethan, his group, Brandt and Stickell, and Syndicate members chase Faust. Faust escapes, but Dunn has already made a copy of the data.
Faust returns to London and attempts to use the file to end her mission to infiltrate the Syndicate, but her MI6 handler, Attlee (Simon McBurney), compels her to continue. She and Lane learn that Attlee wiped the drive, which contained an encrypted, British-government red box that requires the Prime Minister's biometrics to unlock. The former IMF agents confront Faust, but when Lane's men abduct Dunn, they are told they must deliver a decrypted copy of the drive to Lane. Despite the others' objections, Hunt realizes Lane will always have a plan to acquire the files; believing the way to stop him is to confront him, Hunt agrees to the ultimatum.
As part of Hunt's plan, Brandt reveals their location to Hunley. At a London charity auction, Hunley, Brandt, and Attlee take the Prime Minister to a secure room to protect him from Hunt. Attlee reveals himself as a disguised Hunt and has the Prime Minister confirm the existence of the Syndicate, a classified proposed project to perform missions without oversight. When the real Attlee arrives Hunt forces him to admit that he began the Syndicate without permission, and has been covering up its existence since Lane hijacked the project and went rogue.
Stickell discovers the file actually contains access to billions in currency. Hunt destroys the file and tells Lane he memorized the data, to force Lane to release Dunn and Faust in exchange for what he knows. Dunn escapes to Stickell and Brandt while Ethan and Faust are separated as Vinter and his men chase them through London. Faust kills Vinter in a knife fight, while Ethan lures Lane into a bulletproof cell where he is gassed, just as he had gassed Hunt to capture him initially, and taken into custody.
Hunley and Brandt return to the committee. Hunley requests the reinstatement of the IMF, claiming that he wanted to disband it to allow Hunt to go undercover; the Senators agree. Brandt congratulates Hunley, the new IMF Secretary.
Cast
- Tom Cruise as IMF agent Ethan Hunt
- Jeremy Renner as William Brandt, Field Operations Director of IMF
- Simon Pegg as Benjamin "Benji" Dunn, IMF agent and computer expert
- Rebecca Ferguson as Ilsa Faust, MI6 undercover and secret ally of Ethan
- Ving Rhames as Luther Stickell, IMF agent and Ethan's best friend
- Sean Harris as Solomon Lane, a rogue MI6 agent who controls and organizes the Syndicate
- Alec Baldwin as Alan Hunley, Chief Director of CIA
- Zhang Jingchu as CIA analyst Lauren
- Jens Hultén as Janik Vinter, also known as "The Bone Doctor", right-hand man of Solomon Lane
- Simon McBurney as Attlee, MI6 Director and founder of the Syndicate
- Hermione Corfield as an IMF agent who doubles as a record-shop keeper in London
- America Olivo as Chancellor's wife
- Rupert Wickham as the Chancellor of Austria, target of The Syndicate
- Tom Hollander as the Prime Minister
Production
Pre-production
Paramount Pictures announced in August 2013 that Christopher McQuarrie would direct the fifth Mission: Impossible film, from a script by Drew Pearce, with Tom Cruise reprising his role as Ethan Hunt. Tom Cruise Productions and Bad Robot would produce, and "Skydance Productions, who served as co-financers and executive producers of the last installment, will work closely with the team in the development and production process."[5] On November 14, 2013, Paramount announced a release date of December 25, 2015.[6] The same month, Simon Pegg confirmed he would reprise his role as Benji.[7] In May 2014, Will Staples replaced Pearce as screenwriter.[8] Also that month, Jeremy Renner confirmed he was returning in the role of William Brandt,[9] and Cruise said the film would shoot in London,[10] with a later report saying it would first shoot in Vienna in August.[11] At some point, McQuarrie replaced Staples as screenwriter; the final credits list McQuarrie as screenwriter, with story by Pearce.
In July 2014, Rebecca Ferguson was cast and Alec Baldwin was in talks for the film.[12][13] Baldwin was confirmed to have joined the cast in August 2014,[14] and Ving Rhames was confirmed to be reprising his role of Luther Stickell.[15] On September 5, it was announced that Sean Harris was in negotiations for the villain role.[16] On October 2, Simon McBurney joined the cast of the film.[17] On October 6, Chinese actress Zhang Jingchu joined the film's cast[18] (she only appears for 30 seconds in the finished film[19]). On March 22, 2015, Paramount revealed the film's official title, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, along with a teaser poster and trailer.[20]
Filming
Principal photography began in August 2014. On August 21, the production released its first photos from the set in Vienna, Austria.[14] On August 22, actors Cruise and Pegg, along with director Christopher McQuarrie, were spotted at Vienna's Metro.[21] Later on in the day, Cruise and Ferguson were also spotted, during the filming of some stunt (jumping) scenes from the roof-top of Vienna State Opera.[21][22] On August 26, actors were again spotted filming scenes in Vienna.[23] After finishing one and a half weeks of filming in Austria, on August 30, Cruise arrived in Rabat, Morocco for filming more scenes.[24][25] Here the Marrakesh Highway was closed for 14 days (August 30-September 12). Other filming locations in Morocco include Agadir and Rabat.[26] On September 2, Cruise was spotted racing a 2015 BMW M3 Sedan in Derb sultane, Casablanca, which were shod with BMW-homolagated Michelin Pilot Super Sport tyres.[27][28][29] On September 8 and 9, filming took place in The Marrakesh Stadium, which was closed both days for filming purposes.[30] On September 26, Cruise was filming scenes and doing his own stunts in a BMW car in Kasbah of the Udayas, in the capital city Rabat.[31]
After more than a month of shooting in Austria and Morocco, filming moved to London on September 28.[32] On October 7, a trailer was seen carrying damaged BMW M3s from the set after filming in Morocco.[33] On October 10, Cruise and his stuntman Wade Eastwood were spotted during filming some scenes in Monaco;[34] lead actress Ferguson was also spotted.[35] Filming of an action scene featuring Ethan Hunt climbing and hanging on the outside of a flying Airbus A400M Atlas took place at RAF Wittering in the United Kingdom. Tom Cruise performed the sequence, at times suspended on the aircraft over 1500 m (5000 feet) in the air, without the use of a stunt double.[36] On November 9, filming began on Southampton Water, while the crews were spotted arriving at Fawley Power Station before filming started.[37] On December 2, 2014, Cruise was almost hit by a double-decker bus while filming a scene in London. However, the bus missed him and he suffered no injuries.[38] Tom Cruise trained under diving specialist Kirk Krack to be able to hold his breath for three minutes to perform an underwater sequence which was filmed in a single long take without any edits.[39]
On February 20, 2015, The Hollywood Reporter said filming was halted to give McQuarrie, Cruise, and an unknown third person time to rework the film's ending.[40] Filming ended on March 12, 2015.[41]
Soundtrack
Untitled | |
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The musical score for Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation was composed by Joe Kraemer, who previously collaborated with director McQuarrie on The Way of the Gun and Jack Reacher. Kraemer was announced as the composer for the film in September 2014.[42] The physical soundtrack became available from La-La Land Records on July 28, 2015, with the digital album released from Paramount Music on the same day.
As well as incorporating Lalo Schifrin's thematic material from the television series throughout the score, three tracks ("Escape to Danger," "A Matter of Going", and "Finale and Curtain Call") interpolate "Nessun dorma".[43][failed verification][citation needed]
All music is composed by Joe Kraemer
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "The A400" | 6:38 |
2. | "Solomon Lane" | 4:08 |
3. | "Good Evening, Mr. Hunt" | 2:35 |
4. | "Escape to Danger" | 2:46 |
5. | "Havana to Vienna" | 5:13 |
6. | "A Flight at the Opera" | 2:23 |
7. | "The Syndicate" | 3:44 |
8. | "The Plan" | 3:21 |
9. | "It's Impossible" (CD Exclusive Track) | 1:23 |
10. | "The Torus" | 7:02 |
11. | "Morocco Pursuit" | 2:29 |
12. | "Grave Consequences" | 4:12 |
13. | "A Matter of Going" | 5:05 |
14. | "The Blenheim Sequence" | 4:00 |
15. | "Audience with the Prime Minister" | 4:23 |
16. | "This is the End, Mr. Hunt" (CD Exclusive Track) | 3:48 |
17. | "A Foggy Night in London" | 2:10 |
18. | "Meet the IMF" | 1:47 |
19. | "Finale and Curtain Call" | 6:14 |
Release
Paramount had originally scheduled the film for a December 25, 2015 release. On January 26, 2015, Paramount advanced the release date to July 31, 2015.[44] The main reason cited by The Hollywood Reporter was to avoid competition with Star Wars: The Force Awakens and the James Bond film Spectre.[45] In the United States and Canada, it was released in the Dolby Vision format in Dolby Cinema, the first ever time for Paramount.[46] On February 13, 2015, Paramount and IMAX Corporation announced that they would digitally remaster the film into the IMAX format and release it in IMAX theaters worldwide on the scheduled date.[47] The film was completed at 2:00AM on July 18, 2015, less than two weeks before its release date. The film was officially released in North America on July 31, 2015. Lotte released the film in South Korea on July 30, 2015.[48] The film is scheduled to be released in China on September 8, 2015.[49]
In August 2015, Fox Networks acquired the US cable broadcast rights, for broadcast after its theatrical release. The film will be available for FX Networks and its suite of networks: FX, FXX, FXM and the video-on-demand platform FXNow.[50]
Marketing
A teaser trailer for the film was released on March 22, 2015.[51] The following day, a full-length trailer was released.[citation needed] A second full-length trailer was released on June 3, 2015.
Paramount Pictures spent $42 million on advertising for the film.[52]
Reception
Box office
As of September 10, 2015[update], Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation has grossed $184 million in North America and $346.9 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $530.9 million, against a budget of $150 million.[3] It had a worldwide opening of $121 million and an IMAX worldwide opening total of $12.5 million (the third biggest of July behind The Dark Knight Rises and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2).[53]
North America
In the United States and Canada, according to pre-release tracking, the film was projected to earn around $40–50 million in its opening weekend, less than what the first three Mission: Impossible films earned in their initial weekend.[54][2][55] It made $4 million from its Thursday night showings which began at 8 p.m. from 2,764 theaters,[56][57] and $20.3 million on its opening day, which is the second biggest opening day for Cruise (behind War of the Worlds) and the biggest in the Mission: Impossible franchise (breaking Mission: Impossible II's record), with 16% of ticket sales from the film's 367 IMAX theaters.[58][59][2] In its opening weekend the film grossed $55.5 million exceeding expectations and is the second highest opening in the franchise, behind Mission: Impossible II and the third biggest for Cruise behind War of the Worlds and Mission: Impossible II.[60][61] IMAX contributed $8.4 million of the total opening gross from 369 IMAX screens which is the third best for a July opening after Dark Knight Rises ($19 million) and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 ($15.2 million). Premium large format grossed up $2.6 million, 13% of Friday’s gross with Cinemark XD grossing close to $700,000 at 108 screens.[60] It remained at the top spot for the second weekend earning an estimated $29.4 million (down 48%) from 3,988 theaters buoyed by strong word of mouth, rapturous reviews and strong plays at IMAX theaters.[62] Revenues from IMAX also dropped steadily by 39% to $4.3 million in its second weekend and has so far grossed a total of $170.2 million in the U.S. and Canada.[63] It topped the North American box office for two consecutive weekends until surpassed by the music biopic Straight Outta Compton in its third weekend.[64][65][66]
Outside North America
Outside North America, the film opened in 40 overseas markets including 135 IMAX theaters on July 31, 2015 in big markets such the United Kingdom, Mexico and Australia.[2] It grossed $64.5 million in its opening weekend and went No. 1 in 33 markets and IMAX contributed $4.1 million of its international opening.[53] Revenues from its second weekend increased by 0.5% to $65 million. It added 18 new markets including India, Japan, Russia and opened at No. 1 in 17 of the 18 markets with the exception of Japan where it was behind Jurassic World.[67] Overall, it opened at No. 1 in 55 of the 63 territories it has been released in and had the biggest opening weekend ever for the franchise in 46 markets and Cruise's best opening in 40 markets.[53][67][68] It topped the box office outside of North America for three consecutive weekends before being overtaken by Paramount's own Terminator Genisys in its fourth weekend.[69][68]
It had the biggest opening for the franchise in the U.K., Ireland and Malta ($8.3 million), France ($7 million), India ($6.5 million), Japan ($6.1 million), Russia and the CIS ($5.3 million), Mexico ($5 million), the Middle East ($4.7; including $2.5 million from UAE alone), Taiwan ($5.1 million), Australia ($3.8 million), Germany ($3.2 million) and Brazil ($3.1 million).[53][67][70][69] In South Korea, where the franchise has been a hit it opened to $16.95 million (49% above Ghost Protocol), which is the second biggest-opening ever for Paramount, behind Transformers: Dark of the Moon; Cruise's biggest ever opening; the best for the Mission franchise; and the second biggest opening for a Western film of 2015.[71][53] It added $8.1 and $3.7 million in its second and third weekend for a total of $41.1 million making South Korea the film's current highest market followed by Japan ($36.1 million), the United Kingdom ($31.2 million), France ($18.4 million) and Germany ($12.4 million).[72][73] In China, Rogue Nation earned $18.5 million on its opening day of September 8 (including $1.4 million from midnight screenings), which is the country's biggest opening for a Hollywood 2D film, the second biggest for any 2D film in China (only behind the $22.2 million debut of local 2D film Pancake Man), and the fifth-biggest opening for any film.[74][75] Despite opening on a Tuesday—during which most children are off to school—the film opened successfully and almost matched the opening figure of North America. Rob Cain of Forbes cited out possible reasons for the successful opening; The well-establishement of the franchise in China (its immediate predecessor Ghost Protocol earned $102.7 million when it released in China in early 2012), rapid expansion and growth of Chinese movie market, being the second Hollywood movie (after Terminator Genisys) to be released after the nearly 60 days blackout period in which non-Chinese movies were dabarred from going to general release in the country, and the successful awareness campaign and marketing efforts team including Tom Cruise visiting several Chinese cities.Cite error: The <ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). Metacritic gives the film a rating of 75 out of 100, based on 46 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[76] On CinemaScore, audiences gave the film a grade of "A-" on an A+ to F scale.[77]
Ty Burr of The Boston Globe called the film "preposterously enjoyable" and said that it "unfolds with fluid, twisty, old-school pleasure," highlighting the performances of Cruise, Pegg, Ferguson and Baldwin and comparing the action scenes to those of the James Bond films as well as Alfred Hitchcock's The Man Who Knew Too Much (1934). He ultimately gave the film 3 out of 4 stars. [78] Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times gave Rogue Nation 3.5 out of 4 stars, highly praising the film's cast and stating that the film "keeps topping itself". However, he criticized the villain for not being too memorable or intimidating.[79] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times said that McQuarrie's direction allowed Rogue Nation to stand out among the other films in terms of action and its inclusion of female characters, singling out Ferguson's Ilsa as uniquely empowered and action-oriented, also praising her scenes with Cruise. [80] Christopher Orr of The Atlantic praised Cruise, saying "You overcome the impossible through the application of sheer, unvarnished willpower, a quality that Cruise has always possessed in abundance" and describing him as the driving force of the film and the franchise. He too praised Ferguson among the supporting cast for her role as an action heroine.[81] Joseph Wigler of MTV.com considered the movie as "one of the most entertaining Ethan Hunt adventures" which proves that "the franchise still has plenty of fight left in it, with no signs of slowing down."[82] He praised the perfomances of Cruise and Ferguson,[82] aplauding the latter for playing "the most fascinating character in the entire movie" and "one of the most complicated and alluring characters in the entire five film series."[83] Manohla Dargis of The New York Times stated "Sleek and bloated, specific and generic, 'Rogue Nation' is pretty much like most of the 'Impossible' movies in that it’s an immense machine that Mr. McQuarrie, after tinkering and oiling, has cranked up again and set humming with twists and turns, global trotting and gadgets, a crack supporting cast and a hard-working star."[84]
A.A. Dowd of The A.V. Club remarked, "Rather than go full auteur on his formulaic material, McQuarrie instead offers a kind of greatest hits package: 'Rogue Nation' marries the shifting loyalties of Brian De Palma’s original to the kinetic action beats of John Woo’s series nadir and the all-set-piece structure of Brad Bird’s series zenith, adding an omnipotent villain not far removed from the one Philip Seymour Hoffman played in J.J. Abrams’ entry. It’s the least visually or conceptually distinctive of the five movies, leaning on what’s worked before rather than forging its own path."[85] Chris Nashawaty of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a B+, calling it "breathlessly thrilling" and giving high praise to its action sequences, saying " all you can do is pick your jaw off your lap and grin at the breathtakingly bananas spectacle you’ve just witnessed."[86] Meanwhile, David Edelstein of Vulture.com called Ferguson the "best reason" to see the film. However, he felt it did not surpass its predecessor and singled out several elements of some of the action sequences for criticism.[87] Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal also praised Ferguson but felt that she and Cruise had "zero chemistry" onscreen. Nonetheless he praised the film for working "ingenious changes on old tropes". [88] Daniel Krupa of IGN only gave the film a score of 7/10, praising the action sequences and the performances of the central cast but criticizing it for not adding enough to the series or expanding on the plot of Ghost Protocol.[89]
Sequel
By May 2015, Paramount was developing a sixth Mission: Impossible film, with Cruise, Abrams, Ellison, and Goldberg returning to produce, along with Don Granger and Matt Grimm executive producing, and Elizabeth Raposo overseeing development.[90] Shortly before the release of Rogue Nation, Cruise announced he would return for a sixth film, asserting that it could begin production in 2016.[91] Following Cruise's statement, Paramount also confirmed that a sixth film was in development.[92]
References
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ignored (|url-status=
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ignored (|url-status=
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ignored (|url-status=
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- ^ Anthony D'Alessandro (August 17, 2015). "Universal Reports 'Straight Outta Compton's Platinum Opening At $60.2M – Monday Update". Deadline.com. (Penske Media Corporation). Retrieved August 17, 2015.
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(help) - ^ a b Nancy Tartaglione (August 23, 2015). "'Terminator' Back To No. 1 As China Re-Opens; 'M:I5' Adds $25M; 'Hitman' Contracts $8.5M – Intl B.O. Update". Deadline.com. (Penske Media Corporation). Retrieved August 14, 2015.
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(help) - ^ a b Nancy Tartaglione (August 16, 2015). "'Rogue Nation' Revs Up $46M More; 'Man From U.N.C.L.E.' Spies $12M; 'Brothers' Shows Muscle – Intl B.O. Update". Deadline.com. (Penske Media Corporation). Retrieved August 17, 2015.
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(help) - ^ Nancy Tartaglione (September 6, 2015). "'Terminator', 'Hitman' Lead Sluggish Frame; 'Compton' Tops 5 Markets – International Box Office". Deadline.com. (Penske Media Corporation). Retrieved September 7, 2015.
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- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/31/movies/review-mission-impossible-rogue-nation-with-tom-cruise-and-plenty-of-stunts.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&_r=0
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ignored (|url-status=
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- ^ McNary, Dave. "Mission: Impossible 6: Paramount Backs Tom Cruise for Another Sequel". Variety. Retrieved August 3, 2015.
External links
- Official website
- Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation at IMDb
- Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation at Rotten Tomatoes
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