Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning Review – Ethan’s Last Dance?

Mission Impossible Final Reckoning review — Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt returns in another globe-trotting, high-stakes mission. But is it his last? The hype is real. But how does it stack up against the franchise’s legendary predecessors?
For the Uninitiated…
If you’re new to the franchise (seriously?), you’ve picked a strange place to start. But here’s the gist: a group of US government agents take on missions deemed “impossible” — usually involving world-ending stakes. At the center of it all is Ethan Hunt, played by Cruise with reckless charm. He doesn’t always follow orders, often prioritizes his loved ones over the mission, and somehow always survives the chaos — barely.
So now you’re caught up. Let’s get into the movie.
A Reckoning Indeed — But For Whom?
The title “Final Reckoning” suggests closure, and to an extent, the film does feel like a reckoning for Ethan. His past decisions have led to a global crisis — this time, it’s an ever-learning, ever-evolving Artificial Intelligence known simply as “The Entity.”
First introduced in Mission Impossible 7: Dead Reckoning Part 1, the Entity is a rogue AI that’s infiltrating the global digital space, corrupting and manipulating systems. The only way to stop it? Retrieve its original source code, which is locked in a sunken Russian submarine called the Sevastopol. To access it, one must find a two-part key that unlocks the chamber.
In Part 1, Ethan gets the key and goes rogue — again — believing that no one government should control the Entity.
Spoilers Ahead – Enter the Chaos
Final Reckoning opens a few months after Part 1. Luther (Ving Rhames) has gone off-grid and developed a kill switch for the Entity. Naturally, things go sideways. Ethan and Grace (Hayley Atwell) are captured by Gabriel (Esai Morales), the Entity’s former human proxy, who wants to control it, rule the world. You know, like a megalomaniac villain should.
Ethan escapes using a fake cyanide pill — and here’s where it gets a bit absurd. No one checks if he’s actually dying? These are supposed to be professional villains, but instead of verifying, they whip out a defibrillator? (I mean, cyanide poisoning kills in minutes, not seconds — and no, a defibrillator wouldn’t magically fix it. But hey, it’s cool.)
Ethan recovers quickly enough, beats the hell out of his captors, and retrieves the coffin-like tech Gabriel uses to communicate with the Entity. During the connection, the Entity shows him predictive flashes — nuclear armageddon, deaths of allies — definitely different in tone and purpose, but it kind of reminded me of the flash-sequence concept from Chuck, where images flash while the protagonist wears a special pair of glasses. Here, it’s a sleek mask instead.
Soon after, Luther is killed and the kill switch is stolen.

Going Deep – Quite Literally
Ethan hatches a desperate plan: dive 500 ft underwater to the sunken Sevastopol, retrieve the source code (called Padvakol), and escape. The US President and high-ranking military officials lend secret support.
The underwater sequence is stunning in IMAX. Ethan battles immense pressure, limited oxygen, and enemy threats. It’s suspenseful, well-scored, and arguably more intense than the iconic underwater scene from Rogue Nation. Could be recency bias — or maybe it really is just that good.
The 5D Drive Plot Twist
We learn Luther had created a “5D Drive” (yes, theoretical tech built in 2 months — Luther is just built different). The plan: let the Entity enter this drive during a timed infiltration of a doomsday server. Then, it must be detached within 100 milliseconds to trap it. Because of course it has to be that exact. Easy, right?
Naturally, chaos ensues — shootouts, car chases, a nuclear threat (what’s an MI movie without one?), and then…

The Crown Jewel: The Aerial Dogfight
The aerial sequence is easily the film’s highlight. And yes, Tom Cruise really did that stunt — hanging off a plane mid-air during a 360° flip at 10,000ft. The wind distorting his face, the raw effort — it’s the kind of realism CGI can’t replicate. You feel the urgency, the danger.
That’s what sets Mission Impossible apart — authentic, high-stakes action, with a familiar rhythm. You know Ethan will probably survive, yet it still feels nerve-wracking.
Is This the End? Or Another Beginning?
Despite its name, Final Reckoning doesn’t feel final. Sure, there’s closure — but not death. Ethan survives. Grace saves the day (with Benji’s help) by detaching the drive at the perfect moment. Boom. The world is saved.
So, is this Ethan’s swan song? Maybe. Maybe not.
Maybe Tom Cruise retires. Maybe Ethan becomes the IMF director, guiding a new team — Grace, Benji, Paris (Pom Klementieff), Degas (Greg Tarzan Davis). Or maybe we’ll see him running across airport rooftops and diving into vaults again soon.

Verdict
To sum up this Mission Impossible Final Reckoning review, it’s got the signature chaos and stunts, even if not everything lands.
Is the story groundbreaking? No. Is it a little silly at times? Absolutely. There’s borderline too much exposition in my opinion, especially in the first half.
But it’s still Mission Impossible — and that means top-tier action, insane stunts, and Tom Cruise doing the impossible, again.
Someone told me there wasn’t “enough action” in this. But what is action? Just fist fights? For me, it’s Ethan jumping from submarines, evading missiles, and surviving the impossible — again and again.
So yes, go watch this. In a theatre. On the biggest screen possible. You’ll be breathless by the end.
Rating: 3.75 / 5
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️☆
Near great — packed with thrills, slightly weighed down by predictability.
So What Did You Think?
Let me know in the comments:
Did you enjoy Mission Impossible: Final Reckoning?
Was it the high-octane, adrenaline-pumping ride we’ve come to expect from Ethan Hunt?
Or did it fall flat — just a flashy, overhyped film using outrageous stunts as a distraction, masquerading as a true action-spy thriller?
Drop your thoughts below. Let’s chat.