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Comments
This gives the script writers with Hunt more flexibility than with Bond and (perhaps) Hunt in a way is the stronger character as he can stand this and still have our respect where as Bond, I dont think this could ever happen.
Interesting stuff.
You asked us to imagine Craig in the film earlier. I did, and for me it doesn't work. I can see Brosnan much better fitting the tone of MI-RN.
It's interesting that you mention GE, because Pierce (circa 1995 with the long hair) would have been perfect for RN imho. RN has the same light touch mixed with humour, action and suspense that GE has.
I'm not sure about others, but I think the final India sequence in MI-GP has Bond written all over it. It starts off in traditional MI fashion at the party but then segues into that highly inventive fight in the parking garage, which is something I could see the Bond team doing in its past (I always learned something about the world as a kid in earlier Bond films and I learned about those kind of parking garages and how they work from GP).
Compare that to the CR Venice fight where Vesper's life was the stakes but that was not enough so they had to have the house floating on air bags etc. IMHO, Bond can learn alot from MI
I just think that Cruise plays those scenes with an almost 'everyman' quality. He often comes across as surprised and almost in over his head (it's in the humour) even as he does outlandish things. It's a nice mix of being a superman of sorts and still being relatable. That to me evokes Roger Moore the most but also Brosnan.
"Hang on James!". "The thought had occurred to me" is the vibe I get.
EDIT: To be fair, he's only done that in the last two MI flicks, and those are my favourites by far. In MI2 he was a machine and even though the stunts were out of this world for their time, I wasn't as connected to it. So I think he's being smart, because he realizes he's getting older and he's bringing the audience along with him as he ages. Now it makes the sequences more thrilling because he actually seems to be in genuine jeopardy as he does the 'impossible', unlike before.
With Hunt - he was "out of it" he had no idea what the hell was going on. He had lost control and was trying to regain it and was just at the beginning of a tense and thrilling set piece. I need to watch it again as, on paper , it does not work but, on screen, it works great. At 40 secs: It's very brave writing to change the tone so quickly and it's exactly one of the reasons I don't like SP so its interesting.