Review: J.J. Abrams’s Mission: Impossible III on Paramount DVD

This disc boasts more fulsome praise for Tom Cruise than any DVD can feasibly handle without self-destructing.

Mission: Impossible IIILess insanely intricate than Brian De Palma’s 1996 original and far less flamboyantly queer than John Woo’s 2001 sequel, J.J. Abrams’s Mission: Impossible III (or M:i:III, for those who crave multiple colons) is the oddest entry in Tom Cruise’s loosely TV-based franchise. Unlike its wildly divergent precursors, Abrams’s preordained blockbuster is a somewhat featureless espionage adventure, a straightforward tale of intelligence agency heroics and arms-dealing intrigue which—with its cornucopia of high-tech gadgets, loved ones in peril, and corrupt government baddies, as well as its passing interest in the toll wrought by duty on a super-spy’s personal life—resembles two other small-screen techno-thrillers: 24 and the director’s own Alias.

Moving from the idiosyncratically complex and outlandish to the impersonally efficient is a strange evolution for the series, especially considering that Cruise conceived of the films as vanity projects which would differentiate themselves via the employment of inimitable auteurs, a category into which Lost mastermind Abrams does not at present fall. And yet this transformation is also a financially and creatively shrewd one, allowing for the dispatching of intrusive “artistry” in favor of white-knuckle, five-a-minute kicks delivered, as usual, by unnaturally beautiful people in travel magazine-gorgeous locations. Shallow to its core and as propulsive as a runaway locomotive, it’s the most blatantly summer movie-ish of the Mission Impossibles. And also, surprisingly, the most viscerally entertaining.

As if culled from Abrams’s DVD collection, M:i:III’s inconsequential plot synthesizes elements from—and offers random nods to—numerous sources (the work of De Palma and Hitchcock, On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, Total Recall, Born on the Fourth of July) in recounting IMF agent Ethan Hunt’s (Cruise) globe-trotting quest to recover a mysterious MacGuffin known as the Rabbit’s Foot from wicked Owen Davian (Philip Seymour Hoffman), who’s also abducted Hunt’s new wife Julia (Michelle Monaghan). After a bravura opening in which Davian threatens to murder Julia if Hunt doesn’t disclose the Rabbit’s Foot’s whereabouts, however, it becomes pointless to pay attention to anything uttered by the film’s stylish characters, each of them little more than human action figures with one expression and bendable appendages designed for myriad fighting-kicking-jumping poses.

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This holds truest for Hunt, whose humanity is meant to shine through during domestic and romantic scenes with Julia (one culminating in an excruciatingly cute wedding), but who exhibits less personality than the current, crazy couch-jumping/silent birth-practicing/anti-depressant-vilifying celebrity iteration of Tom Cruise. Recast as the leader of a tactical team featuring Ving Rhames, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, and Maggie Q—it’s Ethan Hunt and the Impossibles!—Cruise’s back-from-retirement hero is now both devoted spouse and father figure, all the while exuding a market-tested mixture of Jerry Maguire charm and macho fearlessness. The monumental lengths to which M:i:III goes to depict Cruise as an über-man are often comical (epitomized by an Austin Powers-worthy climactic resurrection), so much so that when Rhames tells Hunt “That look in your eye is a pain in my ass,” the inadvertent innuendo—recently rekindled by South Park’s “Trapped in the Closet” episode—is priceless.

But as a handsome, athletic cipher, the actor is well-suited for Abrams’s extravagant set pieces, each one constructed with just enough proficiency (and loud-as-all-get-out audio) that even the disorienting sight of Felicity’s Kerri Russell wielding firearms in slow-mo seems mildly reasonable. More than his adequate use of the widescreen frame, it’s the director’s skill at assembling his extended centerpieces—including a bridge siege by a fighter jet, and a Shanghai skyscraper robbery involving a death-defying base jump—that gives the bullets-and-bombs mayhem a coherence otherwise sorely lacking from his script (co-written by Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci). Rarely bothering with even the pretense of dramatic depth, the film uses breakneck momentum as its trump card, overwhelming one’s senses with a steady diet of sound and fury as a means of distracting attention away from the undernourished backgrounds of each principal player, the narrative’s logical inconsistencies, or the emptiness of the entire endeavor.

As with such high-profile ventures, the cast is rounded out by an assortment of heavy-hitters, all of who attempt—with mixed results—to enliven their one-dimensional roles through sheer force of personality. Thus, Rhames partakes in his usual suave badass routine, Billy Crudup goes the confidently classy route as an agency bigwig, Shaun of the Dead twit Simon Pegg provides flustered British quirkiness—and gets to ominously detail his thoughts on an apocalyptic device dubbed the “anti-God”—as a geeky computer specialist, and Laurence Fishburne relishes the opportunity to supply imperial scowls and devious smiles as Hunt’s IMF boss.

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Ultimately, though, it’s Hoffman who steals M:i:III out from under Cruise and company’s constantly sprinting feet, turning his barely-outlined evil mastermind into a portrait of pitilessness so chilling that he almost achieves the unthinkable (or am I required to say “impossible”?) feat of casting legitimate doubt on Hunt’s chances for eventual success. His eyes dark and brutal, his portly frame belying sadistic strength, and his arrogance unyielding, Hoffman’s Davian is a creature of exquisite depravity. And as exemplified by an elaborate, mask-dependent Vatican kidnapping in which Cruise’s visage is visually devoured by that of Hoffman’s, he’s also the cold-blooded star of Abrams’s no-heart, all-action spectacular.

Image/Sound

Given the speed at which this tinker toy moves, you’ll need to pause the image to behold the stunning object detail, color rendition, skin tones, shadow delineation, and lack of haloes. The audio is crystal clear and through the roof for much of the film. There’s no DTS option, but the Dolby Digital 5.1 track readily reveals the film’s ambitious sound mix and lush surround work.

Extras

On disc one, J.J. Abrams and Tom Cruise whip out their dicks for a commentary track loaded with effusive gushing about a whole lot of nothing, uncomfortable interruptions, and humdingers like “I feel the whole team in this movie.” (Tom ostensibly means “feel” in the urban sense of the word, but the snarky Gawker cult can take it otherwise.) Also included on disc one: five “never-before-seen” deleted scenes, a Cruise tribute montage that spans an unnecessary nine minutes, and a generic making-of-featurette that extols, among other things, Cruise’s death-defying stuntmeister antics and Maggie Q going from not driving to having to learn how to operate a Lamborghini. On disc two, “Inside the IMF” allows the film’s actors to praise Abrams for taking the Mission: Impossible franchise inside the IMF building, and “Mission Action: Inside the Action Unit” finds room during its 30 minutes to praise Cruise’s gift for “retaining information.” Abrams and Cruise will fight for attention for the remaining featurettes: On “Visualizing the Mission,” Cruise (in obvious producer mode) extols the virtues of pre-vising a film, but Abrams reveals how his planning of the film accommodated room for error; “Mission: Metamorphosis” devotes an inordinate eight minutes on the film’s mask-making machine; “Scoring the Mission” assigns an equally long four minutes to the film’s music; and Abrams and Cruise go at it during an unscripted interview for Moviefone that has the actor calling Abrams a “great filmmaker.” After such fulsome praise you probably won’t bother with the photo gallery, numerous teasers and trailers, TV spots, footage from the film’s premiere in five different cities, and another Cruise tribute montage, this one from the 2005 MTV Movie Awards.

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Overall

This disc boasts more fulsome praise for Tom Cruise than any DVD can feasibly handle without self-destructing.

Score: 
 Cast: Tom Cruise, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Ving Rhames, Laurence Fishburne, Billy Crudup, Simon Pegg, Michelle Monaghan, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, Maggie Q, Kerri Russell  Director: J.J. Abrams  Screenwriter: J.J. Abrams, Alex Kurtzman, Roberto Orci  Distributor: Paramount Home Entertainment  Running Time: 125 min  Rating: PG-13  Year: 2006  Release Date: October 30, 2006  Buy: Video, Soundtrack

Nick Schager

Nick Schager is the entertainment critic for The Daily Beast. His work has also appeared in Variety, Esquire, The Village Voice, and other publications.

Ed Gonzalez

Ed Gonzalez is the co-founder of Slant Magazine. A member of the New York Film Critics Circle, his writing has appeared in The Village Voice, The Los Angeles Times, and other publications.

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