The contract for the IMF team this time is more explosive than its predecessors. Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his colleagues (Simon Pegg, Paula Patton) must prevent the mad Russians Hendricks (Michael Nyqvist) from coming into the possession of the launch codes for a nuclear weapon. Is attached as an attempt by the Kremlin Hendricks on the IMF, have to cope Hunt and his colleagues without the usual support. This pushes the analyst Brandt (Jeremy Renner), the team who seems to have secrets from Ethan Hunt.
As with the James Bond films, the plot basically does not matter. The fact that the team is acting on your own takes a back seat, because the agents have technical aids so amply. The emotional aspects, such as the Hunt's late wife, and the history of Brandt, only unimportant subplots that give the film some depth only superficial and irrelevant to the conduct of the action are. The film starts from the beginning of action and sets off with his type and the abundance of action scenes from all competition. The rest of the audience are short enough so that boredom does not. In this mix the well-known maker of hand scenes with unusual innovations. Like seemingly every Mission Impossible movie is sometime through a ventilation shaft, and as always, for some secure