I HATE how people say MI4 is the best one…its the WORST!
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Deftone315 — 10 years ago(May 01, 2015 06:19 AM)
Well the rating sure proves otherwise. The worst one was the 2nd one, and the third was an improvement but ultimately boring and quite pretentious. You're kidding yourself if you think this is the worst one; to me this one embodies the best thing about this franchise: A great time at the theater
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slch112 — 10 years ago(May 24, 2015 06:21 AM)
I agree with everything you said except the ballet Kung foo gun fightsvery out of place for Ethan and the franchise. Also, I was definitely rocking out to those tunes as well! I hate Limp Bisquit but DAmn I loved that song.
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freshboy3001 — 10 years ago(June 21, 2015 01:35 AM)
I don't know why it's rated the highest, because it's just standard Hollywood action-movie schlock with a preposterous, pointless story. After watching Tomorrowland in theatres recently, I've realised Brad Bird is an overrated lackey for the studios. His visual style is bland, his set-pieces are forgettable and his editors are morons, as his films are at least 20 minutes too long. Stick to animation, bro.
Never let others dictate your opinion on a film:
http://www.imdb.com/mymovies/list?l=13340299 -
EJverh — 10 years ago(August 05, 2015 01:48 AM)
Yep. I agree 3 was by far the best, then 1 then 4 then 2. The opening of the original first was the best of all. Everything about that whole sequence was exceptional and darkly suspenseful. 3 had everything in it and yes Hoffman was so very good which upped the stakes for us caring about the main actor and the subplot (the wife).
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slyle — 10 years ago(August 05, 2015 10:27 AM)
The opening of the original first was the best of all.
No argument there.
I also like that each movie is purposefully different from the others. One thing that gets overlooked quite a bit about 4 is that it's partially a parody of the other movies. Hunt has to do the ridiculous stunt even though it's crazy, which is the opposite of how it happens in the other movies. Early on Hunt declares that everything has to go perfect for the plan to work, yet pretty much nothing goes as planned. They didn't get to use the masks this time. Hunt, rather than being in control the entire time, actually has to rely on his team for everything to work. Heck, he didn't even get to be the one to break the suspense on when they'd stop the missile. He had to wait for the rest of the team to get the relay working.
Combining that theme of nothing working right except for relying on the team with the subtle jabs at the previous installments ads a layer of depth that can be easily missed. That's one reason I think 4 deserves to be considered a great installment.
Personally, I do think 3 is superior. I have a hard time ranking 1 and 4 against one another because of how different they were. When the goal of the franchise is to force us to compare apples to oranges each time a movie comes out it's hard to put them in order when the quality of two of them is at all similar. -
peter_t_2k3 — 10 years ago(November 02, 2015 04:43 PM)
After finally watching 4 I find it a great improvement over 3.
3 didn't seem to do to we'll with the critics. It's been a while since I've seen it but I found it too action packed. As the op mentioned I do find it like a Michael bay film. The problem with Michael bay is he throws too much action at the screen. The way the camera moves, the editing etc. Just didn't do it for me.
Min is a lot less serious and quite a fun film. -
MurphAndTheMagicTones — 9 years ago(May 11, 2016 11:08 AM)
The only thing I know for certain is that MI2 was the worst one. The stunts in there weren't anything we couldn't have gotten from another director. I mean, the fight between Bond and Alec Trevelyan in Goldeneye was more intense. MI2 was all surface and no substance at all. Typical John Woo filming. (As they said in Honest Trailers, you never go the full Woo.) But after that, a good argument can be made for any of the other four movies to work as the best one.
For myself, I'll go with the first one as best and put III, IV, and V in the middle. The first one felt more like a great melding of the original series set in the modern day. I'd call it the best movie adapted from a TV show not named The Fugitive. III felt a bit underwhelming (and I agree Hoffman was underutilized), IV was fun to watch but not really that tense, and V I think made itself far too complex for what was a simple plotline of getting terrorist accounts (I've seen that plot in fanfic stories).
"Sir, I'm going to have to ask you to exit the doughnut!"Nick Fury,
Iron Man 2 -
Melton1 — 2 months ago(January 04, 2026 05:40 AM)
Yeah, Ghost Prot is one of the weaker ones. It has great stunts (the Burj Khalifa climb is a series highlight), good comedy and the failing equipment motif is genius… but it has a terribly weak villain and a dull made-up-as-they-went-along plot.
It doesn’t hold together well and never picks up momentum, it just dazzles you every now and then with an impressive action scene.
By contrast, 3 had a chilling villain in Philip Seymour Fucking Hoffman and a story which deployed Hitchcockian suspense techniques to constantly taunt the viewer’s expectations.
Of the first 6 films, all of which were good, this is the worst.
7 and 8 are in their own category as misguided, bloated, 3-hour mess-fests that, despite the odd superb action sequence, are flat out
bad
films. -
Paul P. Powell — 2 months ago(January 04, 2026 06:18 AM)
Are you openly admitting you watch sequel movies?
(I ask this because you placed the numeral, '4' in the subject-line
of your post's header)
Is the film you're referring to, the 'fourth' installment in some kind of franchise?
So this means you've sat down and watched I, II, and III of whatever series this is?
Paul P. Powell, Pool Player