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Mission Impossible 1-4 Tetralogy 1996-2011

Directed by Brad Bird. With Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Paula Patton. The IMF is shut down when it's implicated in the bombing of the Kremlin,. May 20, 2018 - Mission Impossible 1-4 Tetralogy 1996-2011 BluRay 720p x264 ac3.[iHD.me] 8.7 GB Mission.Impossible.1996.1080p.BluRay. Mission Impossible Ghost Protocol Dual Audio 720p Torrent by Wynack, released 25 January 2017 Mission Impossible Ghost Protocol Dual Audio 720p Torrent.

Running time 110 minutes Country United States Language English Budget $80 million Box office $457.7 million Mission: Impossible is a 1996 American film directed by, produced by and starring. Based on the, the plot follows (Cruise) and his mission to uncover the mole who has framed him for the murders of his entire (IMF) team. Work on the script had begun early with filmmaker on board, before De Palma, and were brought in. Mission: Impossible went into pre-production without a shooting script: De Palma devised several action sequences, but Koepp and Towne were dissatisfied with the story that led up to those events. Band members and produced an version of the. The tune went into the top-ten lists of music charts around the world and was nominated for the. The film was a commercial success, eventually becoming the, and received a mixed-to-favorable response from critics.

The film's success spawned the. Contents. Plot and his team, the (IMF), attempt to retrieve the (NOC) list from the American embassy in.

Their mission fails: Phelps is shot, his wife Claire dies in a car bombing, and the rest of the team except are eliminated by unknown assassins and supposed tech malfunctions. Meeting with IMF director Eugene Kittridge, Hunt reveals his awareness of a second IMF team sent to monitor them, and learns the job was a setup to lure out a mole within IMF, who is believed to be working with an arms dealer known as 'Max' as part of 'Job 314.' As Hunt is the only member left, Kittridge suspects him of being the mole, and Hunt flees. Returning to the Prague safe house, Hunt realizes 'Job 314' refers to Bible verse 3:14, 'Job' being the mole's code name.

Claire arrives at the safe house, explaining she escaped the bomb after Phelps aborted the mission. Hunt arranges a meeting with Max, and warns her that the list she possesses has a tracking device. He promises to deliver the real list in return for $10 million and Job's identity. Hunt, Max, and her agents escape just as a CIA team arrives.

Mission Impossible 1-4

Hunt recruits two disavowed IMF agents: computer expert and pilot Franz Krieger. They infiltrate in, steal the real list, and flee to. Kittridge, detecting the theft, has Hunt's mother and uncle falsely arrested for drug trafficking. He provides media coverage of the arrest, forcing Hunt to contact him from. Hunt allows the CIA to trace him to London before hanging up, but is surprised to find Phelps nearby.

Phelps recounts surviving the shooting, naming Kittridge as the mole. Hunt realizes Phelps is the mole, as the Bible from the Prague safe house had a stamp from the Drake hotel in Chicago; the same hotel Phelps was staying at during a previous assignment, which was known to Hunt and the team. Hunt also suspects Krieger as the one who killed the other IMF members on the Prague job since Krieger carried a characteristic knife; however, he is unsure whether Claire was involved.

Hunt arranges with Max to exchange the list aboard the train to Paris the next day. On the train, Hunt remotely directs Max to the list. Max verifies it and gives Hunt the code to a briefcase containing the payment along with Job in the baggage car. Ethan calls Claire and tells her to meet him there. Meanwhile, Stickell uses a jamming device to prevent Max from uploading the data to her servers. Claire reaches the baggage car, finds Phelps and tells him Ethan will arrive shortly. She questions the idea of killing Ethan, since they will need a fall guy, when Phelps reveals himself to be Ethan in a mask, exposing her as a co-conspirator.

When the real Phelps arrives and takes the money at gunpoint, Hunt dons a pair of video glasses that relays Phelps to Kittridge, blowing Phelps' cover as the mole. Phelps threatens to kill Ethan, but shoots Claire instead when she intervenes. He climbs to the roof of the train, where Krieger is waiting with a helicopter and a tether. Hunt connects the tether to the train itself, forcing the helicopter into the after the train. Hunt places an explosive chewing gum on the helicopter windshield, killing Krieger and Phelps. Kittridge arrests Max and recovers the list, then reinstates Hunt and Stickell as IMF agents, but Hunt is unsure if he will accept. As he flies home, a flight attendant approaches him and asks, through a coded phrase, if he is ready to take on a new mission, just as she asked Phelps at the beginning.

as. as. as Claire Phelps. as. as Max. as Eugene Kittridge. as Franz Krieger.

as Sarah Davies. as Jack Harmon. as Hannah Williams. as Matthias. as Alexander Golitsyn.

as CIA analyst William Donloe. as Kiev agent. as Frank Barnes Production Development and writing owned the rights to the television series and had tried for years to make a film version but had failed to come up with a viable treatment. Tom Cruise had been a fan of the show since he was young and thought that it would be a good idea for a film.

The actor chose Mission: Impossible to be the first project of his new production company and convinced Paramount to put up a $70 million budget. Cruise and his producing partner, Paula Wagner, worked on a story with filmmaker for a few months when the actor hired Brian De Palma to direct.

They went through two screenplay drafts that no one liked. De Palma brought in screenwriters, and finally. When the film was green-lit Koepp was initially fired with Robert Towne being the lead writer and Koepp being brought back on later.

According to the director, the goal of the script was to 'constantly surprise the audience.' Reportedly, Koepp was paid $1 million to rewrite an original script by and. According to one project source, there were problems with dialogue and story development. However, the basic plot remained intact. The film went into pre-production without a script that the filmmakers wanted to use. De Palma designed the action sequences but neither Koepp nor Towne were satisfied with the story that would make these sequences take place. Towne ended up helping organize a beginning, middle and end to hang story details on while De Palma and Koepp worked on the plot.

De Palma convinced Cruise to set the first act of the film in Prague, a city rarely seen in Hollywood films at the time. Reportedly, studio executives wanted to keep the film's budget in the $40–50 million range, but Cruise wanted a 'big, showy action piece' that took the budget up to the $62 million range. The scene that takes place in a glass-walled restaurant with a big lobster tank in the middle and three huge fish tanks overhead was Cruise's idea. There were 16 tons in all of the tanks and there was a concern that when they detonated, a lot of glass would fly around. De Palma tried the sequence with a stuntman, but it did not look convincing and he asked Cruise to do it, despite the possibility that the actor could have drowned.

The script that Cruise approved called for a final showdown to take place on top of a moving train. The actor wanted to use the famously fast French train the but rail authorities did not want any part of the stunt performed on their trains. When that was no longer a problem, the track was not available. De Palma visited railroads on two continents trying to get permission. Cruise took the train owners out to dinner and the next day they were allowed to use it. For the actual sequence, the actor wanted wind that was so powerful that it could knock him off the train.

Cruise had difficulty finding the right machine that would create the wind velocity that would look visually accurate before remembering a simulator he used while training as a skydiver. The only machine of its kind in Europe was located and acquired. Cruise had it produce winds up to 140 miles per hour so it would distort his face.

Exterior shots of the train were filmed on the, between, and. Most of the sequence, however, was filmed on a stage against a blue screen for later digitizing by the visual effects team. The filmmakers delivered the film on time and under budget with Cruise doing most of his own stunts. Initially, there was a sophisticated opening sequence that introduced a love triangle between Phelps, his wife and Ethan Hunt that was removed because it took the test audience 'out of the genre', according to De Palma.

There were rumors that the actor and De Palma did not get along and they were fueled by the director excusing himself at the last moment from scheduled media interviews before the film's theatrical release. Main article: The film uses 's original '. Originally, was hired to write the film's score and had, in fact, recorded somewhere around 23 minutes of the score. During post-production, due to creative differences, Silvestri's music was rejected and replaced with new music by composer. According to some sources, the decision to replace Silvestri was made by producer Tom Cruise.

Bandmates and were fans of the TV show and knew the original theme music well, but were nervous about remaking Schifrin's legendary theme song. Clayton put together his own version in New York City and Mullen did his in on weekends between U2 recording sessions. The two musicians were influenced by and the European dance club scene sound of the recently finished album. They allowed Polygram to pick its favorite and they wanted both. In a month, they had two versions of the song and five remixed by DJs. All seven tracks appeared on a limited edition vinyl release. The song entered the top 10 of music charts around the world, was nominated for the in 1997, and was a critical and commercial success.

Marketing had a $15 million promotion linked to the film that included a game, print ads and television spot featuring scenes from the TV show turned into the feature film; dealer and in-theater promos; and a placement of Apple personal computers in the film. This was an attempt on Apple's part to improve their image after posting a $740 million loss in its fiscal second quarter.

Reception Original television series cast Several cast members of the reacted negatively to the film. Actor, who portrayed in the original television series, was reportedly disgusted with the film's treatment of the Phelps character, and he walked out of the theater before the film ended., who played Jim Phelps in the original series as well as in the, also disliked how Phelps turned out in the film., who portrayed in the original series, expressed his own disapproval concerning the film. In an MTV interview in October 2009, Landau stated, 'When they were working on an early incarnation of the first one — not the script they ultimately did — they wanted the entire team to be destroyed, done away with one at a time, and I was against that.

It was basically an action-adventure movie and not Mission. Mission was a mind game. The ideal mission was getting in and getting out without anyone ever knowing we were there. So the whole texture changed. Why volunteer to essentially have our characters commit suicide? I passed on it. The script wasn't that good either!'

Box office Mission: Impossible opened on May 22, 1996 in 3,012 theaters—the most ever up to that point—and broke the record for a film opening on Wednesday with 11.8 million, beating the $11.7 million made in 1991. The film also set house records in several theaters around the United States. Mission: Impossible grossed $75 million in its first six days, surpassing, and took in more than $56 million over the four-day weekend, beating out.

Cruise deferred his usual $20 million fee for a significant percentage of the box office. The film went on to make $180.9 million in North America and $276.7 million in the rest of the world for a worldwide total of $457.6 million. Critical response Mission: Impossible received mixed to positive reviews from critics. The film has a 62% approval rating on, based on 52 reviews, with an average rating of 6/10, with the critical consensus reading, 'Full of special effects, Brian DePalma's update of Mission: Impossible has a lot of sweeping spectacle, but the plot is sometimes convoluted'. On, the film has a score of 59 out of 100, based on 29 reviews, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.

Film critic gave the film three out of four stars and wrote, 'This is a movie that exists in the instant, and we must exist in the instant to enjoy it.' In his review for, addressed the film's convoluted plot: 'If that story doesn't make a shred of sense on any number of levels, so what? Neither did the television series, in which basic credibility didn't matter so long as its sci-fi popular mechanics kept up the suspense.' Mike Clark of gave the film three out of four stars and said that it was 'stylish, brisk but lacking in human dimension despite an attractive cast, the glass is either half-empty or half-full here, though the concoction goes down with ease.' However, Hal Hinson, in his review for, wrote, 'There are empty thrills, and some suspense.

But throughout the film, we keep waiting for some trace of personality, some color in the dialogue, some hipness in the staging or in the characters' attitudes. And it's not there.' Magazine's wrote, 'What is not present in Mission: Impossible (which, aside from the title, sound-track quotations from the theme song and self-destructing assignment tapes, has little to do with the old TV show) is a plot that logically links all these events or characters with any discernible motives beyond surviving the crisis of the moment.' Writing for, gave the film a 'B' rating and said, 'The problem isn't that the plot is too complicated; it's that each detail is given the exact same nagging emphasis. Intriguing yet mechanistic, jammed with action yet as talky and dense as a physics seminar, the studiously labyrinthine Mission: Impossible grabs your attention without quite tickling your imagination.' Retrieved May 22, 2017. May 20, 1996.

Retrieved August 2, 2015. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2015-08-01.

Foutch, Haleigh (May 22, 2016). Retrieved July 17, 2018. ^ Portman, Jamie (May 18, 1996). 'Cruise's Mission Accomplished'. ^ Penfield III, Wilder (May 19, 1996).

'The Impossible Dream'. ^ Green, Tom (May 22, 1996).; (September 9, 2015). (Motion picture). ^ Brennan, Judy (December 16, 1995).

Mission Impossible 1-4 Movies Blu-ray

'Cruise's Mission'. Wolff, Ellen (May 22, 1996). ' Mission Uses Sound of Silence'. Thaxton, Ford A.; Larson, Randall D. Soundtrack Magazine.

EU: Runmovies.eu. ^ Gunderson, Edna (May 15, 1996). Enrico, Dottie (April 30, 1996)., CNN, May 29, 1996. November 14, 2007. Archived from on July 9, 2012. (blog), MTV, October 29, 2009, archived from on December 28, 2009.

Thomas, Karen (May 24, 1996). Hindes, Andrew (May 24, 1996).

Mission Impossible 1-4 Tetralogy 1996-2011Mission impossible 1-4

' Mission Cruises to B.O. ^ Weinraub, Bernard (May 28, 1996). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-07-16.

Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2015-08-01. Retrieved 2015-08-01. (May 31, 1996). Retrieved 2008-07-15. (May 22, 1996). Retrieved 2008-07-15.

Clark, Mike (May 22, 1996). Hinson, Hal (May 22, 1996). Retrieved 2008-07-15. (May 27, 1996). Retrieved 2009-05-21. (May 31, 1996).

Retrieved 2009-05-21. DVDs Release Dates. Retrieved 2018-05-02. External links Wikiquote has quotations related to:.

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