Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One (yes, it's gonna be a two-parter!!) is the seventh installment in the Mission: Impossible film franchise. And in case you're wondering if it's gonna be any good...well, it currently has a 99% on Rotten Tomatoes.
I have seen the film and can confirm it's pretty great and definitely worth watching on the big screen. Fun? Check. Action filled? Check. Does Tom Cruise run A LOT in it? Check! Check! Check!
Now, at this point in his career, it's pretty well known that Tom Cruise LOVES to perform jaw-dropping stunts himself, especially in the Mission: Impossible films. So, for fun, here's a look back at some of the most extreme ones he's ever done:
1.Like when he drove a motorcycle off a massive cliff...and then base-jumped off of said motorcycle (with NO safety harnesses, for the record) for Dead Reckoning Part One.
The stunt, which 61-year-old Cruise said took years to prep, included a year of base-jump training, as well as learning advanced skydiving, canopying, and tracking skills.
And according to director Christopher McQuarrie, Cruise and his training team were doing "30 jumps a day," eventually totaling over 500 skydives for Cruise.
Unless you've been living under a rock, you've probably seen this stunt heavily promoted for the new film (and had to pick your jaw up off the floor afterward). But in case you haven't, here's a pretty great behind-the-scenes video of it:
2.When Cruise REALLY ran on top of, hung off of, and performed stunt fights on a fast-moving train on a working railroad track, also for Dead Reckoning.
"We had this huge fight on the roof [of the train], going 60 mph through a real valley," the stunt coordinator explained.
3.And when he learned to speed-fly, which is apparently one of the most dangerous sports in the world, for Dead Reckoning.
According to the film's skydive/base/speed-flying coordinator, Jon Devore, it's a sport "very few people" do. He said you basically use a really small canopy and race down a mountainside just feet off the ground.
4.When Cruise hung off the side of an Airbus 400 for one scene in Rogue Nation. He went 1,000 feet in the air, going 100 knots for SEVERAL minutes, with only a few simple wires holding him to the plane's body. (Which were digitally erased in postproduction.)
In an interview with the Hollywood Reporter, cinematographer Rober Elswit said, "It’s pretty damn crazy; it’s over 100 knots when it takes off. They can slow down pretty quickly, but it still does ... a complete circuit."
Elswit continued, "Tom was in a full-body harness, and he’s cabled and wired to the plane through [its] door. [...] He was also wearing special contact lenses to protect his eyes. If anything hit him at those speeds, it could be really bad. They were very careful about cleaning the runway so there were no rocks. And we took off in certain weather conditions; there were no birds."
Watch the iconic, heart-pounding scene here:
5.When Cruise did 64 takes in actual zero gravity for the plane crash scene in The Mummy. The sequence, which was filmed in an aircraft that was developed for the Apollo missions, took two days to shoot and apparently four high-altitude flights.
Although Cruise was given the offer to film the scene on a soundstage instead, he insisted on filming it in real zero gravity because he wanted to make it as authentic as possible.
According to director Alex Kurtzman, "There was a lot of barfing." Although not on Tom's part.
Watch the plane crash scene here:
6.When Cruise literally fractured his ankle during an "easy" stunt on the Mission: Impossible — Fallout set that required him to jump from one building to another. Of course, rather than stop, Cruise kept going to finish the shot, and they even kept it in the movie.
Cruise explained on The Graham Norton Show, "I was chasing Henry [Cavill] and was meant to hit the side of the wall and pull myself over, but the mistake was my foot hitting the wall. I knew instantly my ankle was broken and I really didn’t want to do it again, so just got up and carried on with the take."
Watch the ankle-breaking jump here:
7.When he performed an actual HALO (high altitude, low opening) jump for Mission: Impossible — Fallout, which involved the dangers of hypoxia, the bends, and other life-threatening risks.
The stunt was so risky, in fact, that the filmmakers even developed a special helmet that was both a prop and a lifesaving device.
Because the scene took place at night, they only had one shot a day to get it right, filming as close to sunset as possible, with only three minutes to spare.
Watch the impressive behind-the-scenes footage here:
8.When he personally created a three-month "rigorous, Navy-approved" boot camp for the actors of Top Gun: Maverick in order to train for the film.
BTW, Cruise — who is a licensed pilot — REALLY wanted to pilot one of the F-18 fighter jets for the film, but the Navy ultimately denied the request. Although he wasn't able to handle the controls, Cruise and the rest of the Top Gun pilots did ride in the F-18s (behind actual Navy pilots) in order to get the practical shots.
And while he didn't get to fly an F-18 for the film, he did fly the P-51 Mustang, which he owns IRL.
9.When he worked "around the clock" and learned to fly a helicopter in a short period of time just for one stunt in Mission: Impossible — Fallout...
...including how to learn how to do a "corkscrew downward spiral," which is HIGHLY dangerous.
10.When he learned how to hold his breath for SIX AND A HALF MINUTES to film a risky underwater scene in Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation.
Cruise explained on The Graham Norton Show, "These free divers came in and trained me how to do it. And ... it's not pleasant."
Fun fact: Kate Winslet recently beat Cruise's record while training for Avatar: The Way of Water (a fact she's jokingly very proud of). She managed to get to seven minutes and 47 seconds.
11.When he got into a near-fatal car accident after making a rookie mistake while driving a real stock car for Days of Thunder.
According to NASCAR veteran Hut Stricklin, who was a stunt driver on the film, he told Cruise that stock cars are built to only turn left.
Stricklin told USA Today that Cruise probably didn't understand what he meant. He said, “I guess he’d seen guys on TV squirming back and forth, left and right. He turned to the left, the car turned left. But when he goes back to the right...understood then. But too bad he had to kill a $100,000 camera.”
12.When he trained for several months, worked with professional rock climbers like Ron Kauk, and climbed a 2,000-foot cliff for that famous opening scene in Mission: Impossible II.
The film's stunt coordinator, Brian Smrz, explained, "Tom actually did the climb himself; the rope was just safety for if he were to fall ... which he didn't."
13.When he scaled and did aerial stunts on the Burj Khalifa — the tallest building in the world — in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, for Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol.
Not only was the stunt actually done high up on the building, but according to Screen Rant, the harness Tom wore was so tight that it cut off his circulation. So the shoot had to be done as quickly as possible.
Watch this fun behind-the-scenes video to see the stunt in full effect:
14.When he was totally cool with a practical knife (probably a stunt one, but STILL) being pushed just millimeters away from his eye in Mission: Impossible II despite the fact that they could've just CGI'd it.
According to Vox Cinemas, "Cruise had [Dougray] Scott try as hard as he could to push a real knife into his eyeball. The knife was carefully connected to a measured cable that kept it a quarter inch from his eye."
15.And finally, when he stood on top of an old biplane, thousands of feet up in the air, simply to promote Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part One.
Marvin Harrison Jr., Fanatics said, “rejected or ignored every request” from the company while refusing to fulfill obligations of their contract that was signed last May.