Cruise unleashes 'Mission: Impossible' juggernaut at Cannes
Tom Cruise's "Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning" powers into the Cannes film festival for its premiere on Wednesday on a steamroller of hype.
With some fans fretting that the $400-million epic -- the eighth in the high-octane franchise -- could be the last, Cruise and director Christopher McQuarrie have been teasing up the tension by dropping contradictory clues about its future.
Cruise, 62, has also been sharing heart-stopping footage of the stunts he did for the movie on social media, including discussing a freefall jump from a helicopter at 10,000 feet (3,000 metres).
He is seen jumping from the chopper high over a South African mountain range and putting himself into a high-speed spin with a camera strapped to his stomach.
The blockbuster is set to ramp up adrenaline levels and promises to somewhat lighten the tone at Cannes.
The festival's highly political opening day began with accusations that Hollywood was ignoring "genocide" in Gaza, while the conviction of French screen legend Gerard Depardieu for sexual assault in a Paris court on day one also dampened the mood.
Even Cruise's iron-clad optimism has come under stress with the industry shaken by President Donald Trump's threat to stick tariffs on movies "produced in foreign lands".
With "Mission: Impossible" among Hollywood's most globalised franchises, shot on a dizzying roster of exotic locations from the Arctic to Venice and Shanghai, Cruise shut down questions about the issue at a promotional event in South Korea last week.
Asked about tariffs and the franchise's globetrotting shoots, Cruise said tersely: "We'd rather answer questions about the movie. Thank you."
In one glimmer of hope, Trump has said he will make an exception for the James Bond movies -- which are mostly shot in the UK -- because the late 007 Sean Connery once helped him get planning permission for his Scottish golf course.
Cruise's franchise also leans heavily on London studios.
- Highly-charged -
Yet it is likely to be all smiles when the indomitable star bounds up the red carpet at Cannes at 1645 GMT on Wednesday for the premiere.
Fans will find out if this really is the end of the road for secret agent Ethan Hunt when "The Final Reckoning" is released in Europe and the Middle East from May 21, with the US and several other countries having to wait two or three days longer.
However, Indian, Australian and Korean cinemagoers will be able to see it from the weekend.
Director McQuarrie, who wrote the 1993 classic "The Usual Suspects", will also be giving a masterclass earlier in the day at the world's biggest film festival.
Veteran US star Robert De Niro will be talking about his long, illustrious career after being awarded a lifetime achievement at Tuesday's often highly-charged opening ceremony.
The outspoken Trump critic took the chance to blast the US leader as "America's philistine president".
He slammed Trump's film tariff proposal -- which few experts think can be carried through without creating havoc -- as he picked up an honorary Palme d'Or from his friend and sometime co-star Leonardo DiCaprio.
"You can't put a price on creativity. But apparently, you can put a tariff on it," De Niro said in a fiery speech in which he urged "everyone who cares about liberty to organise, to protest.
"Of course, all these attacks are unacceptable. This is not just an American problem, it is a global one."
"In my country we are fighting like hell for democracy," he said, adding that "art embraces diversity. That's why art is a threat. That's why we are a threat to autocrats and fascists."
Jury head Juliette Binoche made an emotional tribute to the slain Gaza photographer Fatima Hassouna.
The 25-year-old was killed in an Israeli air strike last month along with her family, a day after a documentary about her was selected to premiere at Cannes.
"Put Your Soul on Your Hand and Walk", by exiled Iranian director Sepideh Farsi, will be shown on Thursday.
"She should have been here tonight with us," the French actor said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
4 hours ago
- News.com.au
Sad truth behind Bruce Willis' final on-screen performances
Whether he's single-handedly taking down terrorists in the Die Hard franchise or evading mobsters in Pulp Fiction, Bruce Willis can be counted on to win any screen battle. Sure, he has sought to challenge his singlet-wearing, against-the-odds hero reputation with memorable performances in films such as Look Who's Talking, The Sixth Sense and Death Becomes Her, but Willis will always be best known as the guy who saves the day. That's perhaps why the cinematic strongman's diagnosis with frontotemporal dementia came as such a shock to his fans around the world when it was announced by his family in February 2023. After a career spanning 40 years – first making his mark in the TV series Moonlighting in the 1980s – the veteran actor was forced to retreat from the spotlight in March 2022 due to his deteriorating health. This difficult and private battle will be detailed in his wife Emma Heming Willis's upcoming memoir The Unexpected Journey, due to be released in September. Before making his condition public, Willis had found ways to soldier on with his acting, having directors scale down his dialogue and getting a trusted friend to feed him his lines through an earpiece on films such as Assassin and the Detective Knight series. Willis's deterioration wasn't immediately obvious to anyone on-screen or off. Burdened with a crippling stutter as a child, Willis always had a slow speech pattern – so his inner circle wasn't overly concerned when he began stumbling over his words a little more than usual. Far from seeing the stutter as a hindrance when embarking on his career, Willis explained to TV host Michael Parkinson that his speech impediment had put him on the path to stardom. 'It's how I got my sense of humour, because I realised, yeah I stutter, but I could make people laugh by doing stupid stuff,' he shared on Parkinson's TV show. 'I also learned that when I got on stage, I magically stopped stuttering. You can still hear a little bit of it in my voice. You'll still hear that little pause in my voice while I catch myself and think about what I want to say next.' Now, it's Heming Willis who will get the last word on his behalf, explaining that she's written about her 70-year-old husband's decline to help others headed on the same journey. 'I really wrote the book that I wish someone had handed me the day we got our diagnosis with no hope, no direction … not much,' Heming Willis shared on Instagram, choking back tears. 'Today life looks different for me and our family because I was able to put support into place.' After the death of 95-year-old screen legend Gene Hackman and his wife, pianist Betsy Arakawa, in February this year, Heming Willis urged her social media followers to see the tragedy as 'a teaching moment' about the toll of caring for people with dementia. Like Heming Willis, who turns 47 this month, 65-year-old Arakawa had been caring for her much older Hollywood star husband as he was ravaged by Alzheimer's disease. The double Oscar-winner died after Arakawa suddenly passed away, leaving Hackman alone in their home and unable to fend for himself. 'Caregivers need care too,' Heming Willis said in her post. 'They are vital. And it's so important that we show up for them so that they can continue to show up for their person.' Willis certainly has a village of support around him, including his ex-wife Demi Moore and their three adult daughters, Rumer, 36, Scout, 33, and Tallulah, 31. Oscar-nominee Moore has remained close to her ex since they finalised their divorce 25 years ago, even bunkering down with him and their daughters during the pandemic. The women are also regular fixtures at important milestones for Heming Willis's two daughters with Willis, Mabel, 13, and Evelyn, 11. In an interview with CNN, Moore admitted that watching her ex's decline has been difficult for all of them. 'But there is also great beauty and gifts that can come out of it,' she added. 'It's so important for anyone dealing with it to meet them where they are at.' Celebrate Willis's remarkable career by watching these three films now streaming on Tubi. The Player: Having joked that he was 'tired of running down the street with a gun in my hand' on Parkinson, Willis poked fun at his action-man persona with a cameo as himself in this black comedy about Hollywood directed by Robert Altman. Hostage: Willis teams up with his then teenage daughter Rumer in this film about a traumatised police hostage negotiator, who is forced back into action when his own family is kidnapped. Midnight In The Switchgrass: Based on the true story of Texas's most dangerous serial killer, Willis and Megan Fox play FBI agents determined to hunt him down.

News.com.au
6 hours ago
- News.com.au
Miley Cyrus jokes about ex-husband Liam Hemsworth ‘catching strays' after savage dig
Miley Cyrus made a rare comment about ex-husband Liam Hemsworth. While breaking down every stage of her music career on the Every Single Album podcast on Thursday, Cyrus joked about the actor 'catching strays', reports Page Six. Hemsworth came up when the singer, 32, looked back on 'really enjoy[ing]' filming The Last Song in 2009 alongside him and 'really want[ing] to hang out' every weekend. 'That's where I met Liam, who I would go on to marry and write a tonne of — or, most of — my songs about,' Cyrus said. 'Talk about catching strays,' she added, referring to a slang phrase that means to unintentionally receive criticism. The joke referenced a previous admission the former Disney Channel star made in the podcast episode about her ex-boyfriend Nick Jonas. Cyrus noted that after their on-again, off-again romance ended in 2009, she saw the Jonas Brothers member, 32, as a 'd**k' and 'a**hole' who 'dumped' her. 'He's still catching strays,' the Hannah Montana alum quipped. However, she clarified to listeners that she 'like[s] Nick' and is 'into him,' saying, 'We're all moving on. Everything is good. … Niley for life.' Cyrus, however, did not open up about where she and Hemsworth, 35, stand now. The former couple started dating in 2010, breaking up multiple times before getting engaged in 2012. The duo tied the knot in December 2018, only to call it quits before their first anniversary. Cyrus and Hemsworth have since moved on, respectively, with singer Maxx Morando and model Gabriella Brooks. While the exes rarely discuss their relationship, the Grammy winner sparked speculation Hemsworth cheated on her with the Muddy Feet song off her Endless Summer Vacation album in 2023. 'And you smell like perfume that I didn't purchase / Now I know why you've been closing the curtains / Get the f**k out of my house,' she sings on the track. She also addressed their failed marriage in Flowers. 'We were right / 'Til we weren't / Built a home and watched it burn,' the lyrics read, referencing the 2018 wildfire that destroyed their Malibu, California, house. While Cyrus was believed to have shaded Hemsworth — and his Hunger Games co-star Jennifer Lawrence — in the song's music video with a gold Katniss Everdeen-esque dress, she recently denied this. She, did however, savagely shade her ex earlier this week. While autographing a vinyl for a fan sharing Hemsworth's moniker on Wednesday, Cyrus cheekily addressed the signature to 'the best Liam.'

News.com.au
7 hours ago
- News.com.au
Gaza rescuers say Israel fire kills 36, six of them near aid centre
Gaza's civil defence agency said Israeli forces killed at least 36 Palestinians on Saturday, six of them in a shooting near a US-backed aid distribution centre. The Israeli military told AFP that troops had fired "warning shots" at individuals that it said were "advancing in a way that endangered the troops". The shooting deaths were the latest reported near the aid centre run by the Gaza Humanitarian Fund (GHF) in the southern district of Rafah and came after it resumed distributions following a brief suspension in the wake of similar deaths earlier this week. Meanwhile, an aid boat with 12 activists on board, including Swedish climate campaigner Greta Thunberg, was nearing Gaza in a bid to highlight the plight of Palestinians in the face of an Israeli blockade that has only been partially eased. Civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal told AFP that at around 7:00 am (0400 GMT), "six people were killed and several others wounded by the forces of the Israeli occupation near the Al-Alam roundabout", where they had gathered to seek humanitarian aid from the distribution centre around a kilometre (a little over half a mile) away. Palestinians have congregated at the roundabout almost daily since late May. AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls compiled by the civil defence agency or the circumstances of the deaths it reports. Samir Abu Hadid, who was there early Saturday, told AFP that thousands of people had gathered near the roundabout. "As soon as some people tried to advance towards the aid centre, the Israeli occupation forces opened fire from armoured vehicles stationed near the centre, firing into the air and then at civilians," Abu Hadid said. - Activist boat nears Gaza - The GHF, officially a private effort with opaque funding, began operations in late May as Israel partially eased a more than two-month-long aid blockade on the territory. UN agencies and major aid groups have declined to work with it, citing concerns it serves Israeli military goals. On Saturday, the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said that the overall toll for the Gaza war had reached 54,772, the majority civilians. The UN considers these figures reliable. The war was sparked by Hamas's October 2023 attack on Israel, which resulted in the deaths of 1,218 people on the Israeli side, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally of official figures. Israel has come under increasing international criticism over the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza, where the UN warned in May that the entire population was at risk of famine. The aid boat Madleen, organised by an international activist coalition, was sailing towards Gaza on Saturday, aiming to breach Israel's naval blockade and deliver aid to the territory, organisers said. "We are now sailing off the Egyptian coast," German human rights activist Yasemin Acar told AFP. "We are all good," she added. In a statement from London, the International Committee for Breaking the Siege of Gaza -- a member organisation of the flotilla coalition -- said the ship had entered Egyptian waters. The group said it remains in contact with international legal and human rights bodies and warned that any interception would constitute "a blatant violation of international humanitarian law". The Palestinian territory was under Israeli naval blockade even before Hamas's October 2023 attack and the Israeli military has made clear it intends to enforce it. "For this case as well, we are prepared," army spokesman Brigadier General Effie Defrin said on Tuesday. - Body of Thai hostage recovered - "We have gained experience in recent years, and we will act accordingly." A 2010 commando raid on the Turkish ship Mavi Marmara, which was part of a similar attempt to breach Israel's naval blockade, left 10 civilians dead. The Israeli military has stepped up its operations in Gaza in recent weeks in what it says is a renewed push to defeat Hamas, whose October 2023 attack sparked the war. On Saturday, the military issued evacuation orders for neighbourhoods in northern Gaza, saying they had been used for rocket attacks. Separately, in a special operation in the Rafah area on Friday, Israeli forces retrieved the body of Thai hostage Nattapong Pinta, Defence Minister Israel Katz said. "Nattapong came to Israel from Thailand to work in agriculture, out of a desire to build a better future for himself and his family," Katz said. He was "brutally murdered in captivity by the terrorist organisation Mujahideen Brigades", the minister charged. The Mujahideen Brigades is an armed group close to Hamas ally Islamic Jihad that Israel has also accused over other deaths of hostages seized from Kibbutz Nir Oz near the border. The military said Nattapong's family and Thai officials had been notified of the operation. Thai Foreign Ministry spokesman Nikorndej Balankura said the country was "deeply saddened" by his death. During the October 2023 attack, militants abducted 251 hostages, 55 of whom remain in Gaza, including 31 the Israeli military says are dead.