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Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning

  • 2025
  • PG-13
  • 2h 49m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
158K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
34
10
Tom Cruise in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning (2025)
Action EpicAdventure EpicSpyActionAdventureThriller

Hunt and the IMF pursue a dangerous AI called the Entity that's infiltrated global intelligence. With governments and a figure from his past in pursuit, Hunt races to stop it from forever ch... Read allHunt and the IMF pursue a dangerous AI called the Entity that's infiltrated global intelligence. With governments and a figure from his past in pursuit, Hunt races to stop it from forever changing the world.Hunt and the IMF pursue a dangerous AI called the Entity that's infiltrated global intelligence. With governments and a figure from his past in pursuit, Hunt races to stop it from forever changing the world.

  • Director
    • Christopher McQuarrie
  • Writers
    • Bruce Geller
    • Christopher McQuarrie
    • Erik Jendresen
  • Stars
    • Tom Cruise
    • Hayley Atwell
    • Ving Rhames
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    158K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    34
    10
    • Director
      • Christopher McQuarrie
    • Writers
      • Bruce Geller
      • Christopher McQuarrie
      • Erik Jendresen
    • Stars
      • Tom Cruise
      • Hayley Atwell
      • Ving Rhames
    • 1.5KUser reviews
    • 301Critic reviews
    • 67Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 3 nominations total

    Videos21

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:17
    Official Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 2:01
    Teaser Trailer
    Teaser Trailer
    Trailer 2:01
    Teaser Trailer
    Why the 'Mission: Impossible' Cast Couldn't Watch Tom Cruise's Plane Stunt
    Clip 2:58
    Why the 'Mission: Impossible' Cast Couldn't Watch Tom Cruise's Plane Stunt
    Mission: Impossible-The Final Reckoning: Out Of Your Mind
    Clip 0:58
    Mission: Impossible-The Final Reckoning: Out Of Your Mind
    Mission: Impossible-The Final Reckoning: Submarine
    Clip 1:25
    Mission: Impossible-The Final Reckoning: Submarine
    Shooting in Svalbard
    Featurette 0:45
    Shooting in Svalbard

    Photos499

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    Top cast93

    Edit
    Tom Cruise
    Tom Cruise
    • Ethan Hunt
    Hayley Atwell
    Hayley Atwell
    • Grace
    Ving Rhames
    Ving Rhames
    • Luther Stickell
    Simon Pegg
    Simon Pegg
    • Benji Dunn
    Esai Morales
    Esai Morales
    • Gabriel
    Pom Klementieff
    Pom Klementieff
    • Paris
    Henry Czerny
    Henry Czerny
    • Kittridge
    Holt McCallany
    Holt McCallany
    • Serling
    Janet McTeer
    Janet McTeer
    • Walters
    Nick Offerman
    Nick Offerman
    • General Sidney
    Hannah Waddingham
    Hannah Waddingham
    • Admiral Neely
    Tramell Tillman
    Tramell Tillman
    • Captain Bledsoe
    Angela Bassett
    Angela Bassett
    • Erika Sloane
    Shea Whigham
    Shea Whigham
    • Briggs
    Greg Tarzan Davis
    Greg Tarzan Davis
    • Degas
    Charles Parnell
    Charles Parnell
    • Richards
    Mark Gatiss
    Mark Gatiss
    • Angstrom
    Rolf Saxon
    Rolf Saxon
    • William Donloe
    • Director
      • Christopher McQuarrie
    • Writers
      • Bruce Geller
      • Christopher McQuarrie
      • Erik Jendresen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews1.5K

    7.3157.9K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning' is noteworthy for its spectacular stunts and action sequences, particularly Tom Cruise's death-defying performances in the underwater and airplane scenes. However, many reviewers criticize the film for its pacing, over-reliance on exposition, and lack of a compelling plot. The character development and emotional depth are often seen as lacking, with some reviewers feeling the film prioritizes spectacle over story. Despite these criticisms, the film is generally considered entertaining, with the high-octane action and Cruise's performance being the main draws.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    6simplymaxx

    "In the pursuit of great, we failed to do good."

    I really wanted to like this movie, and it hurts to say that it is actually very mid. It tries to be extremely high-stakes but forgets what made the best mission films so great-not only the action but also the characters. It's hard not to see that the plot is there just to fill the time between the key stunts. But I'd like to go into more detail, starting with what I liked.

    1. Cinematography and action. As usual, the cinematography is strong with this one. Some of the shots were jaw-dropping, hands down. The submarine underwater sequence is a masterclass in tension. I forgot all the problems I had with the plot while watching it. Truly beautiful. No matter the issues that I will list further, I still have a crazy respect for Tom Cruise doing this for real and bringing the best action possible.

    2. Benji. I absolutely love everything they did with this character. From being a nameless computer guy, to Ethan's close friend and partner, to actually becoming a co-leader with Ethan. Definitely well built and deserved.

    3. Some connections with previous movies felt nice; one even had a great message behind it. Though I have to say, it felt like the creators didn't trust the audience enough to recognise them. For example, when one of the characters was brought back from another M:I, Benji immediately started explaining who this guy was, which killed some of the joy for me, as a fan.

    But, even if I wouldn't call TFR a bad movie, it is a very flawed one.

    1. The whole "CHOICE" situation is stupid. It's never once foreshadowed in any of the first six movies, so it feels like a retcon. Why was this even needed? It brings nothing to the story apart from Grace joining the team, which could've been done in a dozen other ways.

    2. This movie has some of the heaviest exposition I've ever seen. It felt dragged a lot of times. Not Andor-slow, rather just dragged and pointless. Characters explain things all the time, repeating and finishing each other's sentences. And even with so much info being said, it still sometimes gets unclear who the villain is or what motivation/goals they have.

    3. We learn NOTHING about the Gabriel-Ethan relationship, which was teased so much in Part 1. Honestly, in the end, if Entity chose any other guy and not the one who happens to be Ethan's old enemy, nothing would've changed. Like absolutely nothing. What was the point of those flashbacks in Part 1? We have no idea what the situation was, who that woman was, why Gabriel killed her, or why Ethan was framed for it. It brings nothing new to Ethan's character. Also, Gabriel himself is boring. We know nothing about him, and if in theory, this could've been intimidating, in practice, it just makes him a poorly written villain. Why establish a detailed background and motivation for a character if we can just throw in the same flashback here and there and make Ethan panic when he sees him the first time in DR :) (I am not saying this franchise always had nuanced villains. It's an action blockbuster of all things. But Gabriel is just rock bottom.)

    4. Final fight with Gabriel didn't feel earned or satisfying, because Gabriel is probably one of the most passive villains I've ever seen. He makes some bald statements and runs away the whole movie. And when he finally gets defeated, the scene itself is straight out of the comedy genre, in a film that otherwise tries to be obnoxiously serious.

    5. Villains in this movie generally take minimal conscious action, so they do not feel intimidating or engaging. This is especially true of AI. It is hard to be afraid of it. AI enemy sounds cool on paper, but it doesn't really fit in Mission's formula. My concerns from watching DR were proven true. In the end, all we got was a race for an ultra-tech macguffin, which has to connect to other macguffin, which can be found by using another macguffin, only then to use the final macguffin at the right timing to defeat the Entity. Sounds stupid and boring? It is. That is the price for having the enemy you can't see in the media, where everything is based on seeing.

    6. Yes, some villains from other iterations might not have been top-level, but at least the characters around Ethan made the movie engaging. This brings us to secondary characters in this movie. Paris... Pom Klementieff did a great job, but she did not have a lot to work with, unfortunately. We do not learn anything new about her. I really wanted to see her character developed in this movie, but it's just a sad mess, honestly.

    7. Same goes for Degas. He showed signs of conscience, joined Ethan to save the world, and then completely disappeared from the plot.

    8. There is just too many side characters, especially in the government and military. Most of them don't even have names. They are just plot vessels, not actual people.

    9. Lite spoiler: In the film's first minutes, you get a montage of key moments from previous entries. That looked peak in the trailer, but watching it again in the actual movie felt very cheesy. I felt like watching a fan edit on TikTok, not a Hollywood blockbuster.

    10. That ending... Probably the worst Mission ending ever. Extremely cliche and lacks emotion. I can't believe this is all they came up with, especially considering this is supposed to be the ending of a 30-year-long journey.

    11. Probably the weakest soundtrack we got since MI3. Not a musician, so I won't be commenting on this, but subjectively it is definitely not as consistent and emotional as previous ones.

    For me, this movie can be best described by my favourite quote from Arcane. In pursuit of the highest stakes possible, more characters than ever, and the longest, most extreme stunts, they failed to deliver the characters that make the audience care, stunts that feel natural inside the plot, and a villain who is actually intimidating.
    rahimali

    Lame

    Lamest movie in the series, if not ever! I unfortunately spent money in the theatre to watch this so waste of time as well as money! I don't even want to waste any more words writing this review but unfortunately cannot post this until and unless it contains three hundred words so to sum up... Lamest movie ever!
    6SteelBleu

    How can a 3-hour movie have so many plot holes?

    It should be titled "Missing" Impossible. Everything you love about the MI franchise is gone. If you are expecting an espionage thriller, there are 7 other Mission Impossible movies for that. It isn't this. The story is convoluted and doesn't make sense. The editing is so choppy and doesn't feel cohesive. Taking place less than 2 months after the last movie, so much has changed that is never explained. How is so-and-so president all of a sudden when they weren't 2 months prior? How did that other character get into the state they are in? No explanation. The franchise should have ended with the last movie. This felt like it was all about Tom Cruise trying to prove to himself and others that he can still do this. What a disappointment!
    6Jeremy_Urquhart

    A couple of amazing scenes, but so much of this is surprisingly dull and lifeless.

    Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning is a bit of a disappointment, coming off the particularly high highs of Fallout and Dead Reckoning. The stakes are heightened narratively, with the end of the world being imminent throughout, but you don't often feel the desperation; you're mostly just told about it. And that's one of the things that holds this film back. It's so weighed down in exposition and dialogue scenes that aren't necessarily that much worse than such scenes in the other films in the series, but they're inferior enough that they start to drag. And there's not enough action here, which feels weird to say. There needed to be one more set piece, preferably during the first hour, because this is a long movie and the first hour or more is honestly a bit dull. The funny banter was also much less funny, when they even attempted humor. It's kind of a dour movie, which makes sense with the stakes, but also, I didn't really feel those stakes. So I would've rather just had that usual breezy team chemistry and joke-making.

    Speaking of stakes and showing things, I would've loved a set piece in a populated area? Or an action scene that felt more alive/crowded/in a place that felt real. In The Final Reckoning, there's an extended one with Cruise alone, one near the end (and on some of the posters for the film) involving some small planes, and then a handful of small shootouts and fist fights. There's nothing that's as big or as exciting as the whole train sequence in Dead Reckoning, and that film had some city action (plus a great car chase) and the whole airport scene. It's fresher in my mind than The Final Reckoning, even though I saw one two years ago and the other two hours ago. There's more tension and a feeling of danger when you can see civilization and bystanders, I think. And with everyone in the world being in danger because of the plot, it was weird to feel like no one (other than the main heroes and villains) was in danger during the action scenes.

    The finale of this movie is smaller scale, but that sequence is a knockout. It's almost worth the price of admission, but you do have to slog through some dreary stuff beforehand. The end of the world is nigh, but mostly you just hear about it, or some high-ranking government officials discuss things in board/bored rooms (and some of those scenes feel like if they were pushed into territory that was any more over-dramatic, we'd have Dr. Strangelove-esque comedy).

    The more I think about it, the more I realize this was kind of disappointing, even if I really loved the one big action scene that will, eventually, be the only thing I remember about this. I'm torn between like a 3/5 or a 3.5/5, and think I have to go more toward the former, just because this is too long for something with so little action. It needed to show more of the world, and we needed at least one sequence with more people and things in it. I feel like Dead Reckoning had about two or three times more great action than this, and the same can be said about Fallout. Dead Reckoning was a few minutes shorter, and Fallout was like half an hour shorter. Neither cost as much, but both felt more expensive. More bang for your buck watching those, and fewer bucks spent by the filmmakers to make them. The Final Reckoning feels pretty expensive, but not $300-400 million expensive.

    They got a little lazy with The Final Reckoning. They didn't get lazy in the couple of particularly flashy scenes, but they needed more big scenes and they shouldn't have had the film feel so empty. Too much telling, not enough showing. The lack of a consistent villain throughout hurt - Gabriel was a compelling presence in Dead Reckoning, but he's not in this one as much, disappearing for long stretches at a time.

    The Final Reckoning comes alive in parts. The plane stuff is thrilling. 90% of the movie, or maybe even a little more, fluctuates between being a tiny bit disappointing and very disappointing. I guess overall, I'm quite disappointed they couldn't keep the momentum going; these films had just kept getting better, from the second onwards, but no more.

    This really will be the Final one, I Reckon. Can't see it turning a profit, either.
    7dorMancyx

    For the Greater Mission

    Hats off to Agent Cruise, the only man who can make my heart race that fast. His 40-year dedication to extreme, practical stunts is why the MI saga holds an elevated position in action cinema. Whether his return to underwater sequences or clinging to a moving plane at 140 mph, Cruise really is the last man standing against CGI other than Nolan. Just for the action scenes, Final Reckoning deserves to be watched in an IMAX theater, preferably with comfortable seating options unless you want a backache from all the clenching.

    But, there's always a but, the movie's storytelling is much worse than its prequel. The first hour of the film is surfeited with explanatory dialogue and contextualization, which becomes quite frustrating pacing-wise. Stylistically, there's also a superfluous amount of frontal close-ups and Dutch angles, which are really cheap choices for an epic finale. I loved the Entity in Part One because its mission remains unclear even to the end, but this movie blows that setup and we're again relying on one hero to save us from nuclear armageddon. To double down on that decision, the film spends its entirety adding stakes to this supposed world destruction by using countdowns numerous times and allowing the gloomy tension to pervade every scene, as the story is so self-serious it becomes too heavy and hard to immerse in.

    In conclusion, The Final Reckoning is complete, it does bring back the nostalgia, but has a bit of issue executing its ambition.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Hayley Atwell was eight and a half months pregnant when she shot a fight scene for the movie.
    • Goofs
      As the lights go back on around the world, it is simultaneously nighttime in both the eastern and western hemispheres.
    • Quotes

      Luther Stickell: Our lives are not defined by any one action. Our lives are the sum of our choices

    • Crazy credits
      [Netherlands theatrical viewing] Even before the first production/distribution company logos appear on-screen, the movie starts with a personal welcoming word by Tom Cruise himself, briefly mentioning the effort they put in making this movie and wishing the audience a happy viewing.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Project: Episode dated 16 May 2025 (2025)
    • Soundtracks
      Mission: Impossible Theme
      Written by Lalo Schifrin

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    FAQ21

    • How long is Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning?Powered by Alexa
    • Is there a post credit scene?
    • How did Ethan Hunt open the outer door of the torpedo tube from the inside?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • May 23, 2025 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Franchise site (United States)
      • Official Twitter
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
      • Russian
    • Also known as
      • Misión imposible: Sentencia Final
    • Filming locations
      • Aurland, Vestland, Norway
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Skydance Media
      • TC Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $400,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $197,413,515
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $64,036,428
      • May 25, 2025
    • Gross worldwide
      • $598,056,261
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 49m(169 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
      • IMAX 6-Track
      • Dolby Digital
      • Auro 11.1
      • DTS 70 mm
      • DTS:X
      • 12-Track Digital Sound
      • Sonics-DDP
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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