Tom Cruise, the Croisette and lots of clapping: What I saw at the 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning' premiere at Cannes Film Festival
CANNES, France — Getting a ticket to the most star-studded premiere at a prestigious French film festival might as well be an impossible mission. I still chose to accept it.
Even if you haven't heard of the Cannes Film Festival, you've definitely seen the pictures. Its sprawling red carpet draws dramatic displays of fashion and celebrity each year. Lately it's been the place to be to debut a buzzy film to famously lengthy standing ovations.
My task at hand: Get a ticket to the premiere of Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning for its May 14 premiere. Yes, at the same hallowed theater that incited buzz for last year's awards darlings (and conversation starters) like Anora and Emilia Perez. It might seem a little out of place for an action movie to screen here, but Furiosa: A Mad Max Saga and Horizon: An American Saga — Chapter 1 both premiered on the Croisette in 2024. The goal is glamour, and a hefty helping of A-list star power is a crucial ingredient in that recipe.
First, I needed a ticket. Four days before the premiere, I signed onto the website at the exact moment seats opened — down to the second at 1 a.m. E.T. — and the movie had sold out faster than the Eras Tour. I was thwarted. But if there's one thing I've learned from Ethan Hunt, the secret agent that Tom Cruise has played in the eight Mission: Impossible movies that I watched over the past two weeks to prepare, it's that the most impossible missions make for the most compelling stories.
Chalk it up to dumb luck, brute force or convenient plot development, but relentlessly refreshing the ticketing page at least a thousand times — in the car, on the plane and, finally, at the crack of dawn in my hotel room — resulted in a miracle: I got a ticket. I was going to see Cruise, the president of movies and savior of the theatrical industry, flashing his ever-present sunglasses and zillion-dollar-at-the-box-office smile in person. I would be among the first people to clap through the credits of the (alleged) end of a decades-spanning franchise.
Phase one was complete.
Phase two: Get inside. Each Mission: Impossible movie includes a soirée scene in which Hunt infiltrates a high-society event to beat up a bunch of people and end up covered in blood. But the strict Cannes premiere doesn't technically prohibit displays of bodily fluid as long as you're in an evening gown, so Hunt would have been fine. 'Naked' dresses and long trains were newly banned, though, but luckily for the Cannes event staff, I didn't have room for any of that in my carry-on.
I wore the kind of dress that would pass at a fancy wedding but wouldn't get you weird looks as a journalist technically working through the hours before the premiere, paired with the demure Croc heels I thought melted standing outside the rainy Met Gala. Some of my favorite looks belonged to the American college students that I met on the lawn a block away from the theater. They were relegated to that zone, attended by a security guard and tucked away under umbrellas, at 6 a.m. — more than 12 hours before the screening's scheduled start time — for a chance at snagging an unclaimed seat. I never saw them again.
That made my walk into the theater even more dramatic. I had my ticket scanned no less than five times. The glamorous steps of the red carpet had a security guard manning both sides of almost every step leading to the entrance, ready to scold and eject anyone who dared take a selfie of the momentous walk. Toto's 'Africa' blared on the loudspeakers outside. I saw Andie McDowell.
I was in.
On to phase three: Watch the movie. But first — and this is crucial in every Mission: Impossible movie — I had to make sure I didn't die. I couldn't bring a water bottle into the theater, and there were no water fountains to be found. Descending the stairs to the ground floor in search of concessions would expend energy I couldn't lose.
Cruise passed out filming Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning. He was climbing onto the wing of a stunt biplane that he was also flying. I wasn't about to disrespect him by fainting from something so unfilmable as dehydration. I went to the bathroom and stood at the sink, googling how to say 'please don't judge me' in French (s'il vous plaît ne me jugez pas). I cupped my hands and drank.
The older woman to my right, wearing an impossibly chic leopard-print dress, smiled and did the same. She said something in French I assume was approval. We both survived.
I hiked to the relegated upper balcony zone for the bourgeoisie, claiming a solo seat between the wall of a staircase and the aisle. Perfect for someone who needs elbow room to take notes for the story they're writing. A young man who looked like a tall Timothée Chalamet muttered 'so lonely' to his friends in a thick French accent, flicking his forearm toward me as he walked past.
Would Hunt have let jokes about his solitude thwart him on his mission? Certainly not. He probably would have made out with a hot thief and sped away from a fiery explosion on a motorcycle in front of that man for vengeance. I settled for taking really good notes.
While we waited for the film to start, the theater livestreamed the red carpet on the big screen, focusing on Cruise. We watched him sign dozens of autographs as his adoring fans, who had lined up in lawn chairs for hours before the screening to have a shot at waving notebooks, movie posters and drawings (and, in one instance, a dog) at him from behind a barricade for a few fleeting moments.
When Cruise appeared onscreen, the crowd in the theater went wild. An announcer shouted 'Tom Cruise!' among a litany of French words, really indulging in the accent for the R. The whole theater stood in reverence as the cast took their seats in the orchestra. One middle-aged blond woman recorded ultra-zoomed footage of Cruise with the resolution typically seen only in Bigfoot videos for at least 10 minutes, then left the theater entirely as the movie began.
I can't say much about it — it's not in theaters until May 23 — but there's nothing like watching a movie with people who have made a pilgrimage out of pure love for movies and their stars to sit in the dark with you for 2 hours and 45 minutes. It's a religious experience.
At premieres, crowds are louder. They clap for the Paramount and Skydance logos in the opening credits. They holler when punches are thrown and death is defied. At Cannes, they don't laugh much, but I assume that's a French thing.
Something I didn't expect was the double layer of subtitles for the film. The audio is in English with French subtitles, and below the big movie screen is a small second screen with English subtitles. I noticed they didn't match up to the audio, though — they might have been translations of the French subtitles. Regardless, that setup taught me that the French term for 'foosball' is babyfoot.
Having just done the equivalent of cramming for the exam the night before with the Mission: Impossible movies, I was intimately familiar with every reference made to past installments. I was shocked so many people in the audience weren't — especially when a character from the original movie appeared in a crucial role. That sort of stunt in a Marvel movie would have had fans at my local Regal theater foaming at the mouth, but the Grand Auditorium Louis Lumière was silent. Maybe I wasn't surrounded by die-hard franchise fans. I think these people just love movies and Cruise. Regardless, phase four was complete.
Phase five: Clap and leave.
Cannes audiences give famously long standing ovations. Take 2024, for instance — Anora went on to win the festival's top prize and Best Picture at the Oscars, earning a respectable seven-and-a-half-minute ovation. But that paled in comparison to that of Horizon, which went on for 11 minutes, moving star and director Kevin Costner to tears. That movie did so badly at the box office, its three planned sequels may never see the light of day.
In my experience, your palms really start hurting at the three-minute mark, but they sort of go numb after that. After the credits, the smiling faces of the cast are projected onscreen, and applause swells with adoration every time, peaking with Cruise. I started my timer at the first instance of clapping and turned it off when director Christopher McQuarrie started addressing the crowd at his seat with a microphone, effectively hushing the crowd. I counted seven and a half minutes. Other outlets have reported different times, but I know what I saw!
'One of the things Tom and I do when we sit here in the audience is we listen to you. We're listening to all of your reactions; we're listening to every breath you're taking,' McQuarrie said. 'A couple of times you were very, very quiet. You kept us in suspense. But this response is why we do it. You are why we do it.'
He referred to Cruise as 'my very own action figure … who was actually willing to do just about any crazy thing I could think of.' That yielded the most sincere laughter from the crowd that I'd heard all night, as well as a huge smile from Cruise, who might not have stopped beaming since landing in the south of France.
As people began to leave, I did what I knew Cruise himself would do: I went to the roof. Just kidding! I went to the balcony in the press room to watch people pour out of the theater. Celebrities, the ultra-rich and scrappy 20-somethings all had to spill through the same doors and back into the night — some walking to parties, others climbing into black SUVs. I walked a few blocks to McDonald's.
Going to the theater is a communal, sacred experience, but the prestige and social norms of this glitzy French venue also made it a uniquely isolating one. I felt deeply emotional and connected to the crowd, but maybe it was all in my head, just like my feelings for the characters of Mission: Impossible.
Regardless, my mission was accomplished.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
43 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dawn French says sorry for posting 'one-sided' Gaza video
Dawn French has taken down a video she posted on Instagram about the war in Gaza, saying she apologised "unreservedly" for it. The video sparked a backlash, with critics accusing the actress and comedian of appearing to "mock" the 7 October 2023 attack. On Saturday, French acknowledged on Instagram that the video "appeared one-sided", and said she never meant to "mock, or dismiss, or diminish the horror" of that day. "I hope you will understand my intention was not to offend, but I clearly have. For which I am sorry and I have removed the video," she added. In the 40-second video, posted earlier this week, the Vicar of Dibley star shared her views on the ongoing war, saying: "Complicated, no, but nuanced. But [the] bottom line is no." Switching into a high-pitched voice, she went on to say: "Yeah, but you know they did a bad thing to us, yeah but no. But we want that land... and we have history… No. Those people aren't really even people, are they really? No." On social media, people were quick to criticise her, with actress Tracy-Ann Oberman saying she was "so saddened" by the post. "This mocking voice 'bad thing' of October 7 that Dawn (who I revere by the way) appears [to] be mocking involved the most horrific terrorist attack involving rape, sexual violence, burning alive, child mutilation and taking of civilian hostages," she wrote. "Why would Dawn seem to deny that which has affected so many of us personally in the most painful way possible." MP Rosie Duffield commented on Oberman's post, writing: "One can, and should hate what is happening in Gaza and also condemn the hideous events of October 7th. "It is agonising to see events unfold, and requires extremely careful, measured and well-considered comments and actions. This is not that." Meanwhile, screenwriter and activist Lee Kern called her video "sneering mockery". Responding to the backlash, French said that she had posted a video in the style that she has been using for social media "in an effort to convey an important point". She added that she had "clumsily used a mocking tone". "My intention was NEVER to mock, or dismiss, or diminish the horror of what happened on 7 October 2023 and what continues to unfold from that brutal unthinkable, unforgiveable, savage attack," she said. She said her intention had been "to mock and point the finger of shame at the behaviour of the cruel leaders on all sides of this atrocious war". "THEY were my target, but clearly I failed to do that, and that's on me. I apologise unreservedly, and I'm particularly sorry that my disgust at Hamas didn't figure. It appeared one-sided and that is wrong." Israel launched a military campaign in Gaza in response to the Hamas-led cross-border attack almost 20 months ago, in which about 1,200 people were killed and 251 others were taken hostage. Some 54 of those captured during the attack remain in captivity, including 31 the Israeli military says are dead. At least 54,607 people have been killed in Gaza since then, including 4,335 since Israel resumed its offensive on 18 March, according to the Hamas-run Gaza health ministry.


New York Post
4 hours ago
- New York Post
Au revoir Pornhub! Adult site pulls out of France, sending users into a frenzy
Adult media giant Pornhub said au revoir to France Wednesday after fighting with its government over new age verification rules — sending the country of love into a frenzy. The law now requires users to upload a photo ID to access adult websites, instead of just clicking on a button that says they're 18. Critics argued there are less invasive ways to keep children out of porn. Advertisement 5 This is the image French visitors to Pornhub see since Wednesday. Obtained by the New York Post So in place of videos of porn, French users who visit Pornhub are now greeted by a topless Marianne — the symbolic representation of the republic's ideals of liberty, equality, and fraternity — and the phrase 'freedom doesn't have an off button.' And Frenchies are losing it. Advertisement 'Another attack on freedom. What's next?' raged Loire Valley resident Enguerran Richy on social media. 'And then we give lessons in democracy to other countries,' snarked Paris resident Maxime Fontanier. The famously libertine French were the second biggest Pornhub consumers last year – trailing only the US. 5 Many in France think the government is overreaching. Jack Forbes / NY Post Design Advertisement French President Emmanual Macron — who notoriously had an affair with his wife Brigitte when he was a 15-year-old schoolboy and she was his much older, married drama teacher — had been pushing hard for the law, arguing French boys get into porn at a young age. More than half of France's 12-year-old boys visit porn sites, according to an investigation released Tuesday by the country's regulatory authority for audiovisual and digital communications. Eva Hicks, who goes by the screen name Little Angel and was the top porn star on the site in France in 2024, says the move will just push adult content creators to post X-rated videos on social media instead. 5 Macron, who met now wife Brigitte when he was a 15-year-old schoolboy, was a big proponent of banning porn for minors. AFP via Getty Images Advertisement 'These are platforms accessible to minors, which is precisely the problem our government was trying to solve,' Hicks told The Post. 'There's a clear contradiction here.' 'Removing access to specialized platforms actually encourages the trivialization of pornography on mainstream social media.' 5 Hicks, known as Little Angel, was the top porn star on Pornhub in France in 2024. Little Angel/ Instagram Others found a fairly easy workaround. 'A VPN app and it'll be like they peed in the wind,' said Toulouse's Julien Carlot-Meunier. And he was right — it took a mere 30 minutes after Pornhub blocked access for one of the leading VPN providers to see sign-ups jump an astronomical 1,000%. 'This is more than when TikTok blocked Americans,' Proton VPN posted on X. The Canadian-owned porn conglomerate blasted the new government regulations as 'unreasonable, disproportionate and ineffective.' Advertisement 5 Hicks said the ban will just push many adult content creators to post on social media instead. Little Angel/ Instagram 'We built Proton VPN to help people in authoritarian countries with online censorship, an access gateway for porn was obviously not what we had in mind, but VPN can be used in this way,' a Proton spokesperson admitted to The Post. Meanwhile, French authorities — who engaged in a fiery exchange with Pornhub all week — were thrilled. 'Good riddance!' fumed French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot. Advertisement 'Less violent, degrading, and humiliating content accessible to minors in France. Goodbye!' ranted Equality Minister Aurore Bergé. The most searched term on the platform had been 'française' — the feminine version of the word French — meaning users were mostly interested in watching their own countrywomen in action. 'MILF,' 'mature woman' and 'woman with glasses' were also popular searches.
Yahoo
12 hours ago
- Yahoo
'Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning' Has Screened, And People Are Having Wild First Reactions To Its ‘Symphony Of Danger'
There's no denying the excitement that surrounds the impending release of a Tom Cruise "Mission: Impossible" movie, and two years after "Dead Reckoning Part One," the sequel — and eighth movie overall — is finally hitting the 2025 movie calendar. With the "Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning" release date just around the corner, critics have had the chance to see early screenings, and they're hitting social media with some wild reactions to what may be Cruise's final chapter. The upcoming action movie picks up two months after the end of "Dead Reckoning," with Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) continuing his mission to stop Gabriel (Esai Morales) from obtaining an A.I. program called 'The Entity.' Cruise has gotten fans hyped for more stunts, and CinemaBlend's own Jessica Rawden posts that we'll be talking about one action sequence for years.