MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION was released 10 years ago this week. The 5th entry in the series and full of enormous set pieces, the behind the scenes tale is as spectacular as the film…
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After the huge success of the 4th Mission: Impossible film – Ghost Protocol – a follow up was inevitable. Paramount hired Drew Pearce to pen the script in 2013. He was then replaced in 2014 by Will Staples to carry out major revisions.
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The studio wanted Ghost Protocol director Brad Bird to return for the film. Bird declined, however, in order to direct Tomorrowland.
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Christopher McQuarrie had done rewrites on Ghost Protocol, and Tom Cruise had worked with McQuarrie on Valkyrie, Jack Reacher, and Edge of Tomorrow so recommended him to helm the next Mission: Impossible.
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Cruise and McQuarrie worked closely in outlining the script. They mapped out several huge action set pieces in detail and McQuarrie then had the task of developing a story that connected them effectively and logically.
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At the time, Cruise was attached to star as Napoleon Solo in The Man from U.N.C.L.E. Delighted with how things were progressing with McQuarrie though, he dropped out in order to make this film. He was replaced in The Man From U.N.C.L.E. by Henry Cavill.
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McQuarrie’s first choice to play female lead Ilsa Faust was Jessica Chastain. She didn’t like the idea of the six month training regime that was required so McQuarrie went to second choice, Rebecca Ferguson.
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Ilsa is named after Isla Lund – Ingrid Bergman’s character in Casablanca – and German folk tale Faust, where the title character makes a deal with the devil.
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Solomon Lane was the first antagonist in the series to be a villain in the original TV show. Benedict Cumberbatch was considered to play Lane, but Cruise and McQuarrie agreed Sean Harris was a perfect fit.
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Harris was hesitant about taking the part at first, as he thought he worked better on TV than the big screen. He agreed to play Lane on condition his character was killed off, as he didn’t want to do sequels. Cruise and McQuarrie agreed (though it ended up not happening).
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Aside from Cruise, the only actor to appear in every Mission: Impossible film to date is Ving Rhames. And Rogue Nation was the first film where every member of Hunt’s IMF team had appeared in a previous film.
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McQuarrie wanted Paula Patton and Maggie Q to rerise their roles from Ghost Protocol and M:I III as Jane Carter and Zheng Lei. They both agreed but had to pull out due to scheduling conflicts.
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Chinese film star Zhang Jingchu plays Lauren. Perhaps to appeal to the Asian market, she has a top-billing at the beginning of the film, despite having just two lines and 30 seconds of screen time.
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Writer/director Christopher McQuarrie has a very brief cameo. He can be seen in the bottom left corner of the screen in the establishing shot at the train station.
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The film was in production at the same time as Rogue One and the similar titles caused conflict between Paramount and Disney. In exchange for use of the title, Disney agreed not to promote their film until Rogue Nation was released.
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McQuarrie used a subtle visual trick to differentiate the heroes and villains. All the good guys in the movie drive BMW cars. The bad guys drive an Audi or a Mercedes.
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Producer Maricel Pagulayan's name shows up three times in the film, credited as an Associate Producer, the Visual Effects Supervisor, and one of the Syndicate's banks is the "Bank of Pagulayan".
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There are a couple of nods to 007. Solomon Lane wears a grey Nehru coat, a trademark of James Bond villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld. Also, at the opening of the Ball Scene, a silver Aston Martin is seen in the car park.
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Similarly, the grey suit worn by Hunt in the opening sequence is a nod to the suit worn by Cary Grant as Roger Thornhill in North By Northwest.
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The poem the British PM – played by Tom Hollander - reads off to activate the Syndicate are lines from the famous Rudyard Kipling poem, If.
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McQuarrie’s first idea for was for Benji (Pegg) to be killed and the rest of the IMF team tracked down by Hunley (Baldwin). The team are alone with Hunley, at which point it’s revealed Benji is disguised as Hunley. McQuarrie changed it as he felt the mask gag was overused.
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Michael Giacchino had scored Ghost Protocol but couldn’t return for Rogue Nation due to scheduling conflicts with Jurassic World. McQuarrie and Cruise went back to Jack Reacher and hired the composer from that film, Joe Kraemer.
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Cruise performed the opening sequence the outside of a flying airplane himself, and without any use of visual effects. He was suspended 5000ft in the air. And a wind-resistant frame for the camera was mounted to the wing.
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A problem was keeping Cruise his eyes open in the face of very fast winds. An eye specialist designed a special lens to cover the entirety of Cruise’s exposed eyeballs. McQuarrie was concerned about the stunt but Cruise told him whatever happened, not to stop filming.
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The sequence was filmed 8 times and on one take, Cruise was struck by a small pebble. He said it was what he imagine being shot would feel like and was amazed to find out it was a tiny stone when he landed. In total, Cruise weas injured 6 times during production.
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The record Hunt is looking for at the record shop is of jazz legends Thelonious Monk and John Coltrane. They were selected in honour of the Mission: Impossible theme's composer Lalo Schiffrin, who is also associated with jazz.
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Cruise carried out all of his own driving stunts, too. Simon Pegg later said he wanted to, but stunt co-ordinator Wade Eastwood said the reason Cruise was doing them was because he was a better driver than anyone in the stunt team.
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It wasn’t just Cruise. Rebecca Ferguson did almost all of her own fighting scenes, and also the rappel off the Opera House roof. It was her first day of shooting and she was worried she’d annoyed Cruise as she swore in his ear all the way down.
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Also in this scene, Ilsa asks Hunt to remove her high-heel shoes. This came in light of criticism Jurassic World received, where Bryce Dallas Howard sprints away from dinosaurs in high heels. Special shoes were created so Cruise could easily pull them off.
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In the original script, the underwater sequence had Hunt holding his breath for 4 minutes. Cruise trained extensively and was able to do 6 minutes, so McQuarrie made the scene even longer.
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The film was scheduled for a December 2015 release, but was pushed forward to the summer to avoid competing with Spectre and Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens. It was a huge hit, grossing $682.7m from a $150m budget.
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To finish, a superb stunt from the car chase action sequence…
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If you liked our making of story of MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION, please share the opening post.
THE LOST BOYS was released 36 years ago today. A reinvention of the vampire genre, and an 80s cult classic, the behind the scenes story will have you cursing all the damn vampires…
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In the 1980s, writer James Jeremias read Anne Rice’s Interview With The Vampire, featuring a 200 year old in the body of a 12 year old girl. A fan of JM Barrie’s Peter Pan, Jeremias thought ‘what if the reason Peter could fly and came out at night was that he’s a vampire?’
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Jeremias and his writing partner, Janice Fischer, fleshed the idea out into a screenplay they called The Lost Boys (another Peter Pan reference). Warner Bros were interested and the first-time writers sold their script for $400,000.
DELIVERANCE was released 53 years ago today. John Boorman’s brutal tale of naïve city boys in an unfamiliar environment continues to cause controversy to this day. The behind-the-scenes story was as dangerous as its subject matter…
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Deliverance was based on James Dickey’s debut novel of the same name from 1970. Dickey was a poet, an ex-lawyer, teacher, ad-man and WWII veteran. Dickey claimed that a lot of what happens in the novel were based on real events.
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At first, Dickey was hell bent on Sam Peckinpah directing his script, he thought the material was perfect for him. But Peckinpah’s previous picture, The Ballad Of Cable Hogue went $3 million over budget, and Warners had lost confidence in him.
The movie TEASER TRAILER can be an art form all of its own and we’ve pulled together some of our all-time favourites. To start, a classic. Inside the Terminator factory that teased TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY (1991).
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JURASSIC PARK (1993)
A fossilized mosquito caused quite a stir 30+ years ago.
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THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT (1999)
The legendary online marketing campaign was backed up by the teaser that promoted the idea the events of the film were real…
WATERWORLD was released 28 years ago today. The most expensive movie ever made at the time, it went down in history with a reputation as one of the biggest flops in Hollywood. The making of story is full of fallouts, terrible luck, and lots more…
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In the 1980s, screenwriter Peter Rader saw the Mad Max series and was inspired to write a post-apocalyptic adventure of his own. Taking further inspiration from the Old Testament and Homer’s The Odyssey, he came up with an idea of a future Earth submerged under water.
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Rader pitched his idea as a children’s adventure film and was keen on directing himself. Legendary low-budget producer Roger Corman was interested, but pulled out when he decided the film couldn’t be made for less than $5m. Charles and Lawrence Gordon then got involved.
ONCE UPON A TIME IN HOLLYWOOD was released 6 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of Quentin Tarantino’s greatest movies and featuring an all-star cast, the behind the scenes story is as big as the film…
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Once Upon A Time In Hollywood started life as a novel. Tarantino referred to the project as his ‘Magnum Opus’ and developed it over 5 years. Over time, QT realised it would work better as a screenplay.
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When the allegations against Harvey Weinstein surfaced, QT severed ties and wrote to all major studios asking if they wanted his new script. After leaks on The Hateful Eight, Tarantino said they could send one representative to his agent’s office read the script.
SAVING PRIVATE RYAN was released 27 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of the most realistic depictions of WWII warfare, and among Steven Spielberg’s most popular films, the making of story is enormous. Earn this…
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In 1994, writer Robert Rodat received a gift from his wife: Stephen Ambrose’s D-Day June 6, 1944: The Climactic Battle of World War II. He was interested in writing a script and, visiting Tonawanda cemetery in New York, came across a monument that inspired him further.
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The monument was to the Niland Brothers – 4 young American men who fought in the Second World War. When three of the Nilands were reported KIA, the surviving brother, Fritz, was sent home. (It turned out one of the brothers was alive and held captive in a Burmese POW camp).