The second trailer of the upcoming action spy film "Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation" has been released this week and features more seat-gripping scenes from lead actor Tom Cruise. Meanwhile, in an interview, director Christopher McQuarrie detailed the breath-taking airplane scene to which Cruise has dangled himself.
Paramount Pictures revealed the second trailer of the "Mission: Impossible" series fifth installment "Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation," which features more gasp-worthy action scenes from lead Tom Cruise, Collider reports. The said second teaser showed most of what the first trailer already revealed including car or motorcycle chases and bare-knuckle fighting scenes.
McQuarrie highlighted numerous high-tech gadgets in the 2:34-minute second teaser. The franchise's signature complicated break-ins and daring escapes were not left out.
The fifth "Mission: Impossible" movie features Rebecca Ferguson as a British spy Ilsa Faust who helps Tom Cruise's character, USA Today notes. The story follows Cruise's reprised role Ethan Hunt who assembles the IMF team for a final mission to bring down the assassins and rogue operatives of the organization Syndicate, by any means necessary.
But the biggest moment in the "Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation" second teaser is when Cruise was shown hanging off a flying airplane. In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, director Christopher McQuarrie dished out some details on the particular scene. "They brought me this plane, and I was looking at the model," McQuarrie exclaimed. "And I said to Tom, 'What if you were on the outside of this plane?' I was kinda half joking when I said it, and he just looked at me and said, 'Yeah, I could do that,'" the director elaborated.
The movie was initially scheduled to hit theaters on December 23, 2015. Paramount Pictures pushed the release date forward as early as July 31, 2015 to avoid a competition with the "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," states Forbes.
Are you hyped for more adventure of the "Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation"? Sound off your insights on the comments section.
Join the Conversation