HiT Reviews: ‘Mission: Impossible – Fallout,’ ‘Teen Titans’

mission impossible fallout review

For nearly two hours “Mission: Impossible – Fallout” is a solid entry in a franchise with surprising legs.

“Fallout’s” final act? Buckle in and get plenty of oxygen in your system. You’ll need it.

The sixth film in the series opens with so much exposition you’ll think Tom Cruise’s stand-in wrote it on his iPad.

A terrorist group dubbed The Apostles crave uranium to blast the world’s most vital religious sites to smithereens.

Why?

Shake the planet like an Etch-a-Sketch and start all over again. And a baddie from the last “M:I” outing, Solomon Kane (Sean Harris), is helping make this nightmare a reality.

Enter the IMF team – Ethan Hunt (Cruise), Luther (Ving Rhames), Benji (Simon Pegg) and their crusty boss (Alec Baldwin). They nearly grab a passel of uranium only to be thwarted at the last second.

Now, the race is on to retrieve it before those Apostles rewrite history – and kill millions in the process.

An early sequence shows just how crafty Hunt’s team can be. That’s part of the mystique, the Bond-like tricks that keep the franchise humming.

We soon meet old friends and new, from a towering fellow agent (Henry Cavill) to Hunt’s frenemy from “Rogue Nation,” Rebecca Ferguson’s Elsa.

Her unexplained connection to the uranium chase is just one of several puzzles waiting to be solved.

This is standard spy movie material, delivered with a high sheen thanks to writer/director Christopher McQuarrie. He’s in full charge of the franchise at this point, and his resources are limitless.

FAST FACT: Lalo Schifrin, who penned iconic music for the “Dirty Harry” franchise, wrote the theme to TV’s “Mission: Impossible” in a tidy three minutes.

Cruise’s Hunt is ageless, much like the 56-year-old actor in question. Cruise’s easy bond with his co-horts slices some of the simmering tension. It’s almost medicinal given the stakes in play.

It’s all building toward the finale, set pieces that reveal movie magic at its finest. Sure, Cruise suffered a broken ankle doing some of his own stunts. That still can’t explain how his character dangles from helicopters, mountain sides and more.

You’ll watch, and blink your eyes and swear it’s Cruise doing all of the above. Modern FX are staggering in their authenticity. “Fallout” may be the finest example of just how far studios have come in this regard.

How do they do it/ Who cares? Sit back and enjoy the visceral excitment.

RELATED: 8 Unforgettable Action Movie Car Stunts

Yes, the action sequences almost always border on the improbable, if not outright insane. We hang on every stunt all the same. Why? The film shrewdly balances those heroic moments with the oops factor. A foot planted the wrong way. A grappling hook giving out at the worst possible moment.

That balance is essential to the thrills on display.​

Cavill is no one’s idea of an Oscar winning actor. Still, his stoic nature is a snug fit in the franchise. And while no one is thinking the latest “M:I” affair is Oscar bait, the screenplay squeezes in enough dramatic elements to make us wholly invested in that runaway finale.

Resistance is more than futile. It’s absurd when the thrills are so perfectly executed.

HiT or Miss: “Mission: Impossible – Fallout” – can we have some more, please?

TEEN TITANS GO! TO THE MOVIES

Today’s kiddie films require a PhD in pop culture. Remember all the in-jokes embedded in “The LEGO Movie?”

“Teen Titans GO! To the Movies” offers more of the same. Joke after joke after joke, a good two-thirds requiring audiences grasp geek culture with both hands.

If you’re on Team Nerd you’ll be in Nirvana for much of the film’s running time. Only by the third act will you exhale and wish the story had its screws tightened a few turns.

Robin is green with envy, not a good luck for a young crime fighter. He wants to be the star of his own blockbuster film like Batman, Superman and Wonder Woman.

Heck, he and his fellow Teen Titans are just as charming as those comic book mainstays. So where’s the love?

Robin’s chase for big screen fame lights the fuse for a furious array of gags, big and tiny. Most land squarely, assuming you spent your teen years watching movies over and again instead of double dating.

Fans of the Cartoon Network series won’t be shocked by anything on the screen. The animation is similar enough to be familiar. The yuks come at us with that winning, wink-wink formula. And the inside jokes are lethal in their precision – perhaps mostly for the adults in the crowd.

Just look who they hired to voice Superman. ‘Nuff said.

RELATED: Five Reasons the Animated World of Batman Matters

And yes, it’s a bit exhausting all the same. The script hits variations on the same themes in the third act. We won’t spoil them here, but it’s hardly earth-shattering material. It’s clear the modest running time could have used a trim or two.

Still, this is big, joyous storytelling for those longing to be 10 years old again, lost in the pages of their favorite funny books.

HiT or Miss: “Teen Titans GO!” To the Movies” demands a full working knowledge of pop culture lore. You’ll miss some pretty sweet jokes otherwise.

The post HiT Reviews: ‘Mission: Impossible – Fallout,’ ‘Teen Titans’ appeared first on Hollywood in Toto.



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