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M:I-2
Great
Expectations?
Though
the much-awaited sequel has got a bumper opening, it has evoked mixed
reactions, and Tom Cruise might just discover that living up to the expectations
is indeed a ‘mission impossible’...
Tom Cruise has taken on new avataars in his recent release M:I-2 (Mission
Impossible - 2 for the uninitiated). Hes a little bit of Jean-Claude
Van Damme and a little bit of James Bond Pierce Brosnan in the film. Like
Van Damme, Cruise goes through carefully choreographed Kung Fu moves for
much of his latest movie, and just like Brosnans Bond he gets the
girl. But somehow the Hollywood heartthrob loses his way in this all-action
thriller, never quite matching the martial arts magic of Van Damme or
the suave aplomb Brosnan brings to 007. Perhaps it has something to do
with the fact that film director John Woo is an all-out action kinda guy.
M:I-2 screenwriter Robert Towne, who won an Oscar for writing Chinatown,
is known for painting his characters in shades of grey. But the most spectacular
scene, which opens the movie, has nothing to do with Kung Fu or British
suavity. It shows Cruise climbing a sheer cliff face in Moab, Utah, hanging
by one hand 2,000 feet above the ground. And yes, it is Cruise and not
a stuntman doing the scene. The actor insisted on doing 95 per cent of
his own stunts and, as co-producer of the film, he had enough clout that
when he insisted on something, the crew, from director Woo on down, did
not argue with him.
My heart was in my mouth when Tom was on that cliff face, hanging
by just one hand, Woo recalled at a press conference, But
what was worse was that he insisted on doing it time and time again, until
he was satisfied he had got it right. I would say, Tom, thats
great, its a cut, and he would say, No, its not
quite there, Im going to do it again. In the end, I think
we did it four times before he was happy.
Cruise, in fact, was tethered by a cable to his waist, but that did not
keep the Hong Kong-born directors heart out of his mouth. I
kept thinking, what if the cable breaks. We had a great stunt team there
to back him up, but it was just so risky, shuddered the director.
Long on action, short on plot, and with about as much dialogue as an early
Clint Eastwood spaghetti Western, M:I-2 was released in the US on May
26, to kick off the Memorial Day holiday weekend and summer blockbuster
movie season. It has an innovative, spectacular motorcycle joust when
Cruise, as Mission Impossible agent Ethan Hunt, and Scottish
actor Dougray Scott, as his evil nemesis Sean Ambrose, use cycles much
as knights jousted on steeds in medieval times. There is also a damsel
in distress, a beautiful but tough professional thief with just the right
amount of vulnerability, who is recruited by agent Hunt to help thwart
Ambroses plan to spread a deadly virus all across the planet. The
role is played by British actress Thandie Newton, who has not had much
exposure to American audiences, although she played the title character
in Beloved and worked with Cruise in Interview With The Vampire.
Newton also happens to be a close friend of Cruises wife, Nicole
Kidman, but it was not that that got her the part. Screenwriter Towne
said he first met Newton when he and Cruise were working on The Firm.
Although she did not get the part she was auditioning for then, she left
an indelible impression on Towne. When I came into this movie, Tom
and I were talking and he said, Do you know this girl Thandie Newton?
and I said Get her, Towne said. Co-producer Paula Wagner
said the search for the right actress to play Nyah was difficult until
Newton came along. We were looking for someone who defined the women
of the new millennium, Wagner informed, Shes femnine,
sexy, smart as a tack, and can be very physical if she needs to be.
Newton fitted the bill. Born in Zambia, of a Zambian mother and English
father, she moved with her family to England when she was four. She started
acting in high school, but put her career on hold to take a degree in
anthropology at Cambridge University. She is married to British screenwriter
Ol Parker and is five months pregnant with their first child. Of M:I-2
she said, I loved it, working with so many talented people, having
so much fun doing it, and the exposure cant hurt either.
But Newtons considerable acting talents are hardly put to the test
in the film, in which she plays a first-class thief who is also the former
girlfriend of bad guy Ambrose. She falls in love with Hunt despite Ambroses
attempts to win her back, before he tries to poison the planet. Apart
from a brief, nearly nude scene, the director chose to concentrate on
her enigmatic smile a beauty to behold, indeed, but not to be shown
in close-up after close-up, ad nauseam.
The movie was shot mostly in Australia and features several Australian
actors as good guys and bad guys, including one with a South African accent.
There is also a cameo appearance by Anthony Hopkins as the head of Mission
Impossible, a sort of tryout for playing M in the Bond series. Based
on the Mission Impossible TV series, M:I-2 follows the 1996 Mission Impossible
film directed by Brian De Palma. That one was criticised for being too
complex and confusing, an accusation the sequel definitely escapes.
Audiences really hate it when reviewers reveal the plot, and co-producer
Wagner pleaded that the plot shouldnt be given away. No problem
of that with this movie. Theres no plot to give away. l
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