They framed him. They hunted him. He improvised.
Mission: Impossible (1996) launched one of the most iconic spy franchises in cinematic history. Directed by Brian De Palma and starring Tom Cruise in his now-legendary role as Ethan Hunt, the film delivered an intense mix of espionage, betrayal, high-tech heists, and adrenaline-pumping action—all wrapped in a story where the line between ally and enemy vanishes in smoke.
Ethan Hunt is part of the elite Impossible Mission Force (IMF), a covert team operating in the shadows to protect global security. But when a mission in Prague goes disastrously wrong, and most of his team is killed, Ethan is left burned and branded a traitor. With the CIA hot on his trail, and a mole hiding within the IMF, Ethan must go rogue to uncover the truth.
From wire-suspension break-ins to exploding gum and double-crosses layered like chess moves, the film is a masterclass in tension and style. What begins as a spy thriller quickly escalates into a psychological game of cat and mouse, where loyalty is uncertain and survival is earned.
With sleek direction, a now-iconic score by Lalo Schifrin, and the unforgettable image of Cruise dangling inches above a pressure-sensitive floor, Mission: Impossible became more than a remake of a classic TV series—it became a genre-defining moment. The film doesn't just thrill. It whispers, runs, flips, and vanishes.