A movie about "Tom Cruise versus the algorithm" couldn't have come at a better time.
Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One , which also stars Hayley Atwell, is on screens now.
Ahead of Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One , we're ranking all of Tom Cruise's spy-fy action spectaculars
The Top Gun actor says he'd like to be making them when he's 80, like Harrison Ford with Indiana Jones.
Tom Cruise and Hayley Atwell star in the latest film in the storied action franchise.
A supercut celebrates the action star's commitment to cardio ahead of Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One 's release.
The accident caused by John Landis changed safety regulations, but his callousness has taken a different shape in how things are made these days.
Making a Mission: Impossible movie is already a big effort, so you can imagine how difficult that is for one that's been split into two parts.
Plus, Indiana Jones ' James Mangold talks about his approach to the DC Swamp Thing movie.
Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One starring Tom Cruise opens on July 12.
The actor says she's still down to live-die-repeat with Tom Cruise again, if the long-awaited project ever comes together.
Plus, an even wilder rumor about the next James Bond.
Tom Cruise stars in Mission Impossible: Dead Reckoning - Part 1 which hits theaters on July 12.
Turn to a movie like Galaxy Quest or Bill & Ted Face the Music the next time you need uplift awaiting at the end of your sci-fi adventure.
Plus, ponder your orb and get a new look at Jamie Lee Curtis' Madam Leota in Disney's Haunted Mansion .
Tom Cruise and Hayley Atwell star in Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One , out July 12.
The franchise, whose 4th installment hits theaters this week, is the rare modern example of an original Hollywood franchise
Music videos and AI-generated songs show the rapid, strange, ambitious, and at times creepy evolution of deepfake technology.
The folks who deepfaked Simon Cowell last year will create youthful representations of Forrest Gump alums including Tom Hanks and Robin Wright.
More than ever, it wasn't hard to see people questioning the need for big properties this year.