the one where you steal a scene and upload it to youtube, get 1.2Mil views and still dont put in the info below the video which mission impossible movie this is from.
oh, I think the scene where the Russians plant Hunter Biden's laptop in the garage would have looked more interesting and would have complemented the MI series nicely.
What I like about this scene is how painfully quiet it is. Music is very low or nonexistent, no one speaks, they just let the intensity of the scene speak for itself
I work in a military installation, and this scene is exactly why I punch my way down any hallway that I have to walk through. Just air-punching like a training boxer.
This is my favorite Mission Impossible movie for 2 reasons: 1) all the gadgets fail, even the _coat,_ and the characters have to find inventive ways out of their situations 2) Tom Cruise gets hurt A LOT.
i get that it's a movie and it's supposed to be fun, but you could just convince a guy who already works there to just walk down the hallway and do what they had to do instead of inventing a weird eye tracking projector device that only works when one person is looking at it
As a guy who used to work for DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) this was an idea one of my colleagues had a number years ago, and we started the research on the concept of a retractable, one way, holographic screen that could conceal friendly personnel, but we abandoned the project, because we didn’t have the funding to conduct test trials for application in the field, but it warms my heart to see that it was brought to the big screen. Granted, the movie is fiction, but the idea is the same.
Technical details and solutions like that are few and far between nowadays. They usually resolve it with something like: "its future tech", don't ask questions. I also liked how they played the flaw of the machine, the guard knows something is not right. Reason is that even with a perfect image the focus distance would shorten which is easily observable in closer proximity... genius scene
@@thienbaongo7997 Well ok, if you are, let's say looking at a tree which is 30 meters away, there is a certain angle both your eyes turn to, 89.905 degrees. if you are seeing a perfect image from your perspective which is 5 meters away that shows a tree appearing the same distance as befor then your eyes turn to 89.427 degrees... even this small deviation can be percieved by some. Your brain knows it should be close to 89.9 deg but you see 89.4 it is a bit unnerving. Focus distance is entirely different, your eye's lens are stretched and pulled together by the muscles behind the iris, this changes the properties for the lens to create the perfect image on the cornea. If the distance is shorter than it should be, the muscles automatically contract to the proper size and the brain can "smell" that something is not right. Like contraction in case a 30m tree is around 68.9% but now we have 70.1% looks a bit weird... This is all I meant by the "focus distance". Doing some experiments with people and using static images would be really interesting in this case. We could calculate the "visual" precision of the brain. :)
@@amoeb81 Not sure I completely understand this but I think I get the jist of it and I love it. The idea that we can tell things are wrong by these almost imperceptibly small amounts - possibly even instinctively/unconsciously - is quite incredible. Shows how clever our brains and senses really can be sometimes
That'd be actually easier way of taking out this guard. He'd get locked in a asylum aswell because nobody would buy his history of a giant ass face appearing on a corridor out of nowhere.
This is why if you're the commander of some base storing secret files, it is crucial to never oil any of the important doors so they all screech like hell when Tom Cruise comes and tries this.
Exactly, if this scene had a suspenseful score it wouldn't have worked half as well. It is crucial that the audience understands how quiet the characters have to be not to give themselves away
Love how this gadget is so situational, like it was specifically made for this exact hallway and if it has just a bit wider or had obstacles it wouldn't work
Realistically it’s just a movie as well. Also the vault scene in the first movie will never be beaten……let alone the chopper scene. People just forget high quality cinema. Most movies are total shit in the “woke” era
Not really, the real thing was when Ethan Hunt infiltrated the Führerbunker as a Wehrmacht officer speaking German with American accent. That’s Mission impossible.
Actually the original Mission Impossible from the 1970s were brilliant in their own way. The tech was far more approachable and believable because they did not have magical level of capability. It was all mechanical or simple electronics, but the gumption and planning is what made those missions exciting and full of tension.
@@anthtan It's a tiny directional loudspeaker. Like a laser pointer but for sound. This sound then bounces off the wall and gets scattered across the room, making it sound as if the sound came from the place where you're pointing at. Sony's soundbars use this same concept for simulated surround sound.
The most unbelievable bit is simply the screen perfectly unfolding to fit the width and height of that corridor lol, the rest I can believe quite easily
@@danrono9725 but that buliding is presumably Soviet! Due to the lack of laser levellers and such, Soviet bulidings are often not perfectly rectangular (as it would be planned). You often need a perforator and some foam to install modern doors or windows in a soviet house bulit even in 1970s or 80s for this reason - to make the holes actually rectangular, not having 89° 92° something angles. The place they show looks WAY yoo modern in general if it's supposed to be the Kremlin. The Kremlin's newest buliding was opened in 1961 with no major construction works afterwards. This one is and has always been a concert hall open to the general public, and it also used to be the place Soviet communist party gathered. It's known to hold New year celebrations every year since 1961. It used to be open to journalists since the very beginning. There's also a banquet hall where they welcomed diplomatic delegations too. Generally speaking, there would rather be ballet costumes then secret documents. It's also the only concrete buliding in Kremlin. As for "what's below it? Well, the 6000 person concert hall is mostly underground itself. It's highly unlikely there's anything apart from it's service rooms below. All the other bulidings date back to XVI- early XIX centuries, and most of them aren't perfectly vertical to the eye of a trained engineer with perfect eyesight. What's below the other parts of Kremlin? Well, it's likely to be ancient fundaments and undergrounds dating back to XIV century at least. If you want to hide something below Kremlin - you're likely to just use these: Ivan the Terrible had his whole library hidden there, it's still not found. And what's shown doesn't look like a medieval dungeon, right? And doesn't look like it's 200 years old bricks. Nah, it's modern concrete. It's way too modern. Also, magnetic card keys. Magnetic card keys are both way too modern of a technology and are known to be unsafe since the very beginning they came to Russia. What is it, a modern hotel? Soviets would stick to something more classic and reliable. See why it's hilarious? Imagine them saying it's inside the Tower of London. Kremlin is an actual MEDIEVAL CASTLE first of all. Most doors look too lightweight and flimsy for Russia, too. And too quiet. Take any soviet buliding and the foors are heavy and noisy.
I imagine the frame and "screen" might have been made in a way so it can adjust to a space within a certain limit. Although it could have been made specifically to only fit that hallway near perfectly.
Reminiscent of that, what was it scary movie? Where they have the sheriff with the hat and literally every scene they increase the size of her hat by a couple inches until it’s like 5 feet wide
I love the naivety of these movies. Like anyone would trust ONE guard to keep top secret stuff safe. No redundancy with a second pair of eyes, no redundancy inside the room with cabinets through CCTV cameras. If that guard is sitting at the desk, what the hell is he looking at the whole day? LOL
It's actually not that bad - doors would beep loudly and there would be more guards, but CCTV is not inside secure spaces generally - having a video feed of your secret goings on tends to make them less secret 😂
How the projector adjusts to the vision of the guard as it gets closer, making him feel its at original distance is mind blowing. It could be already in use. 👍
This scene taught me on how to distract people into something. First time they really don’t give attention. Second time when they see or hear the same thing, the human brain gets curious enough to know what could it be.😂 that 15 Seconds is so precious and it could pull off a great mission. (If they hadn’t got the piggybacking frequency from the intruder , this mission would have been the most fastest military heist in the world)😂
You'd have thought that after Samantha Carter pulled that stunt with the holoprojector in the Tel'tak that the guard would be wise to tricks like this.
As if basic motion sensors and simple door contact switches don’t exist in this universe. “Let’s build a key coded vault door, but never mind the 15 ruble contact switch, comrade.”
I really don't want to nitpick on a Mission:Impossible movie, but shouldn't Benj be the one signaling when to stop? He can see the guard stepping out from the comfort room before Ethan can.
The perspective rendering has become reality. I have seen eye-head movement tracking combined with perspective rendering for virtual pinball machines elsewhere on youtube already a year ago.
Haha I love this movie, the door @ 3:50 would never be that quiet, either a loud buzz for the card reader, and no way something that big is gonna be deaf silent haha. I wish all my doors at work were that quiet!
"R&D, we need cutting edge equipment for infiltrating mission. What do you get?" "A water droplet sound maker, sir!" "Impressive. Let's put it into work"
Too bad that this scene has been less believable in recent years. We all know there wouldn't be a guy sitting there and taking phone calls, he'd be passed out drunk under the table.
Isn't that Maverick supposed to be flying an f 14 tomcat fighing against the Russians with an su 57? How did he got inside the Kremlin that easy? And why was Rooster wearing glasses?
Possibly an unpopular opinion, but I liked the Mission Impossible films best when the tech was less impressive and more simplistic. It was more interesting then.
Fun fact. Doors within the kremlin are rarely oiled so that they make as much noise as possible in an effort to oust people trying to use them without permission. This practice goes all the way back to Tsarist Russia.
Hi everyone! Which other scene from this movie would you like to see?
This isnt the best scene. The best scene are any of the action stunts take your pick
@Rerum Trading ⁵⁵5555t55⁶⁶
the one where you steal a scene and upload it to youtube, get 1.2Mil views and still dont put in the info below the video which mission impossible movie this is from.
oh, I think the scene where the Russians plant Hunter Biden's laptop in the garage would have looked more interesting and would have complemented the MI series nicely.
put the whole movie on here!
What I like about this scene is how painfully quiet it is. Music is very low or nonexistent, no one speaks, they just let the intensity of the scene speak for itself
Yeah it seems to be the latest trend in movies. Emphasising quietness, lack of soundtrack etc.
This has to be the first time in any movie that an electronic keypad doesn't make a beeping/confirmation sound. 😂
It is very much in spirit of the first movie's Wire Heist
bro shut up
Still the most "fun" Mission Impossible scene of any of the films. Not including Tom Cruise' death-defying stunts.
I work in a military installation, and this scene is exactly why I punch my way down any hallway that I have to walk through. Just air-punching like a training boxer.
Well, you never know. ☺️
@@fluffyseal8782 or it's because ignorant people vote in terrible, spineless presidents who don't actually want to win
@@fluffyseal8782 I love how Americans almost always assume everyone else is American.
@@Mediados Bro, some americans still think that the soviet block still exists
Promote ahead of peers
This is my favorite Mission Impossible movie for 2 reasons:
1) all the gadgets fail, even the _coat,_ and the characters have to find inventive ways out of their situations
2) Tom Cruise gets hurt A LOT.
And the action, never ends
They got the gadgets from AliExpress...
I’d say the hallway screen worked swimmingly.
@@mung01re until the other guards showed up.
@@IamMeHere2See Well sure but that’s not the fault of the device.
There’s nothing in any MI films that beats the ingenuity of this scene. Mind blowing
CIA vault comes close. Mission Impossible 1996, where all it takes is just one drop of sweat to trigger an alarm.
THis is also used to hilarious effect in Toys, from 1992.
i get that it's a movie and it's supposed to be fun, but you could just convince a guy who already works there to just walk down the hallway and do what they had to do instead of inventing a weird eye tracking projector device that only works when one person is looking at it
AKORT PER KAQ GRIV KAQ PER AQ=? FORSE NO VALE...............................
@@RemTV Or like, just shoot him. Or knock him out with a tranquiliser dart.
Good scene though, no doubt.
As a guy who used to work for DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) this was an idea one of my colleagues had a number years ago, and we started the research on the concept of a retractable, one way, holographic screen that could conceal friendly personnel, but we abandoned the project, because we didn’t have the funding to conduct test trials for application in the field, but it warms my heart to see that it was brought to the big screen. Granted, the movie is fiction, but the idea is the same.
Technical details and solutions like that are few and far between nowadays. They usually resolve it with something like: "its future tech", don't ask questions.
I also liked how they played the flaw of the machine, the guard knows something is not right. Reason is that even with a perfect image the focus distance would shorten which is easily observable in closer proximity... genius scene
Explain what is focus distance and how someone would notice that.
@@thienbaongo7997 Well ok, if you are, let's say looking at a tree which is 30 meters away, there is a certain angle both your eyes turn to, 89.905 degrees. if you are seeing a perfect image from your perspective which is 5 meters away that shows a tree appearing the same distance as befor then your eyes turn to 89.427 degrees... even this small deviation can be percieved by some. Your brain knows it should be close to 89.9 deg but you see 89.4 it is a bit unnerving.
Focus distance is entirely different, your eye's lens are stretched and pulled together by the muscles behind the iris, this changes the properties for the lens to create the perfect image on the cornea.
If the distance is shorter than it should be, the muscles automatically contract to the proper size and the brain can "smell" that something is not right. Like contraction in case a 30m tree is around 68.9% but now we have 70.1% looks a bit weird...
This is all I meant by the "focus distance". Doing some experiments with people and using static images would be really interesting in this case. We could calculate the "visual" precision of the brain. :)
@@amoeb81 Not sure I completely understand this but I think I get the jist of it and I love it. The idea that we can tell things are wrong by these almost imperceptibly small amounts - possibly even instinctively/unconsciously - is quite incredible. Shows how clever our brains and senses really can be sometimes
@@andrewpepper3145 it’s not that complicated to explain with drawings but here it’s text only :)
You got the essence and that’s the most important.
@@amoeb81 I would argue he also heard the slight noises they made but there was "nothing" there and so he was confused.
3:17 If I ever get to witness a giant face in an empty hallway irl, I'd get a heart attack.
Typical Silent Hill 4 moment
@@pedoncule1419 ellen xd
No, don’t do that. Just change your meds.
Naaaah, just make a religion!
That'd be actually easier way of taking out this guard. He'd get locked in a asylum aswell because nobody would buy his history of a giant ass face appearing on a corridor out of nowhere.
This is why if you're the commander of some base storing secret files, it is crucial to never oil any of the important doors so they all screech like hell when Tom Cruise comes and tries this.
Doors in a high security area such as this are fitted with equipment with cat whisker sensors wired to at least three guard positions
I liked how they used the absolute silence to intensify the tension of the scene
Is this the first and only movie you’ve ever seen
@@maxuabo ikr, he should watch the 2 A Quiet Place movies.
Exactly, if this scene had a suspenseful score it wouldn't have worked half as well. It is crucial that the audience understands how quiet the characters have to be not to give themselves away
I work as a Soviet security guard and I must say the amount of times this old trick has been pulled on me is TRUELY baffling!!!
Even MORE baffling
@drewsmith8829 Yes, that's what they wanted you to think
I am also Soviet security guard also. I have gotten my pants stolen off me with this sneaky American trick
@@taviorivera4859 hahahaha
So what
Love how this gadget is so situational, like it was specifically made for this exact hallway and if it has just a bit wider or had obstacles it wouldn't work
It is custom made by the Kingsmen tailor 🤣
The only unrealistic thing about this scene is that archive door didn't creak like an old piece of junk that it is. Kremlin is *old*.
realistically, he wouldnt be able to even get near it....
Realistically it’s just a movie as well. Also the vault scene in the first movie will never be beaten……let alone the chopper scene. People just forget high quality cinema. Most movies are total shit in the “woke” era
@@abhabh6896realistically anyone with a handful of prisoners turned mercenaries can just waltz into the Kremlin
Sure. This steel door with electronic lock was built in 15th century 😅
It sounds almost like you are a real spy and that you've been inside the Kremlin :O
This is when the Mission Impossible series really went to the next level.
Not really, the real thing was when Ethan Hunt infiltrated the Führerbunker as a Wehrmacht officer speaking German with American accent. That’s Mission impossible.
bro shut up
Actually the original Mission Impossible from the 1970s were brilliant in their own way. The tech was far more approachable and believable because they did not have magical level of capability. It was all mechanical or simple electronics, but the gumption and planning is what made those missions exciting and full of tension.
@@iche9373🤓 it wasnt the furherbunker, which is located in berlin, it was the Wolfschanze, the german army headquarter located in eastern Prussia
@@unsuisseegare1291 Fair point
very well done and memorable scene. I don't think the water drip gadget gets enough praise though
I definitely want one of those!
Is there such a thing in real life?
@@anthtan It's a tiny directional loudspeaker. Like a laser pointer but for sound. This sound then bounces off the wall and gets scattered across the room, making it sound as if the sound came from the place where you're pointing at. Sony's soundbars use this same concept for simulated surround sound.
3:55 extremely lucky that that door lock doesn't beep when it's opened
ACCESS GRANTED!!!
@@alexneuron4188 "Welcome major general Chadov Wojakov."
1. No wall lights
2. No switches
3. Nobody came out of the side rooms
4. Just perfectly smooth and empty hallway
but girls dont really like this scene though
One could argue, in-universe, those are the reasons why this solution was selected.
Lll o
1.Because there are lights on top
but the silent heavy steel door of the archive is cool)
never pulled CQ before bud?
The part where he stands in front of the camera. Never laughed harder when I saw that the first time lmao
Yeah sure "never laughed harder", exaggerating a bit are we?
@@osasunaitor🤓
@@osasunaitor 🤓
@@osasunaitor 🤓
To me as a Russian, it's generally funny!
How can you watch this at all? Fairy tales for children..🙊
The most unbelievable bit is simply the screen perfectly unfolding to fit the width and height of that corridor lol, the rest I can believe quite easily
well, I haven't seen the movie, but presumably it was purpose-built for this task
Maybe they had the building plans beforehand
@@danrono9725 but that buliding is presumably Soviet! Due to the lack of laser levellers and such, Soviet bulidings are often not perfectly rectangular (as it would be planned). You often need a perforator and some foam to install modern doors or windows in a soviet house bulit even in 1970s or 80s for this reason - to make the holes actually rectangular, not having 89° 92° something angles.
The place they show looks WAY yoo modern in general if it's supposed to be the Kremlin. The Kremlin's newest buliding was opened in 1961 with no major construction works afterwards. This one is and has always been a concert hall open to the general public, and it also used to be the place Soviet communist party gathered. It's known to hold New year celebrations every year since 1961. It used to be open to journalists since the very beginning. There's also a banquet hall where they welcomed diplomatic delegations too. Generally speaking, there would rather be ballet costumes then secret documents. It's also the only concrete buliding in Kremlin.
As for "what's below it? Well, the 6000 person concert hall is mostly underground itself. It's highly unlikely there's anything apart from it's service rooms below.
All the other bulidings date back to XVI- early XIX centuries, and most of them aren't perfectly vertical to the eye of a trained engineer with perfect eyesight.
What's below the other parts of Kremlin? Well, it's likely to be ancient fundaments and undergrounds dating back to XIV century at least. If you want to hide something below Kremlin - you're likely to just use these: Ivan the Terrible had his whole library hidden there, it's still not found. And what's shown doesn't look like a medieval dungeon, right? And doesn't look like it's 200 years old bricks. Nah, it's modern concrete. It's way too modern.
Also, magnetic card keys. Magnetic card keys are both way too modern of a technology and are known to be unsafe since the very beginning they came to Russia. What is it, a modern hotel? Soviets would stick to something more classic and reliable.
See why it's hilarious? Imagine them saying it's inside the Tower of London. Kremlin is an actual MEDIEVAL CASTLE first of all.
Most doors look too lightweight and flimsy for Russia, too. And too quiet. Take any soviet buliding and the foors are heavy and noisy.
@@annasolovyeva1013 comprehesive answer :-)
I imagine the frame and "screen" might have been made in a way so it can adjust to a space within a certain limit. Although it could have been made specifically to only fit that hallway near perfectly.
Am I crazy, or did they clearly make Simon Pegg's hat a little wider than Tom Cruise, purely to make him look goofier in this scene.
If so, hats off to the wardrobe department for reinforcing the character.
It was because of the ranks. Lower officer ranks have different insignias and wider.
@@8bitchiptune420 too…make them look goofier than their superiors?
@@IamMeHere2See"hats off" i'm calling this intentional
Reminiscent of that, what was it scary movie? Where they have the sheriff with the hat and literally every scene they increase the size of her hat by a couple inches until it’s like 5 feet wide
Imagine if after all that a couple of armed guards just came up behind them.
I thought the opposite, all this effort instead of carrying a ladder and a few good bottles of vodka.
The real hero is the spy that had to infiltrate the kremlin to measure that hallway so this gadget could fit it perfectly
It's Russian government, 50 bucks to a guard and he'd measure it for you.
@@poppinlochnesshopster3249 as if US or any country is any different
@@poppinlochnesshopster3249lol.no guard will trade his life for 50bucks.
@@Viraj_31872 my government is different :))
@@poppinlochnesshopster3249 then why not paying 55 bucks and getting the necessary info from the archive brought to you directly?
This scene indeed is brutal and screams "classic mission impossible"
I have watched all mission impossible movies over and over. Waiting for the upcoming movie.
Really?
No loud music, no obnoxious scary moments. This is how you build tension.
With the amount of money they spent on those gagets it would've just been simpler and cheaper to bribe the guard
I like to think that the guards inside the Kremlin are a bit harder to bribe than the usual bunch.
Finally someone who understands the Russian mentality :D
Or like, kill him.
Nah, you won’t bribe nobody in places like that nowadays
Bribe them with food
I love the naivety of these movies. Like anyone would trust ONE guard to keep top secret stuff safe. No redundancy with a second pair of eyes, no redundancy inside the room with cabinets through CCTV cameras. If that guard is sitting at the desk, what the hell is he looking at the whole day? LOL
It's actually not that bad - doors would beep loudly and there would be more guards, but CCTV is not inside secure spaces generally - having a video feed of your secret goings on tends to make them less secret 😂
Keep crying over a Mission Impossible film lol. If you watch these films for realism, then you need to stop.
So high security doors should make lots of noise when they open XD
How the projector adjusts to the vision of the guard as it gets closer, making him feel its at original distance is mind blowing. It could be already in use. 👍
Ever had a rat?
They are capable of this lol.
@@Zeithricapable of projecting a fake image?
Yes of course it is available in all bull shite shops world wide.
3:16 When I turned on my face cam during Zoom meeting
"Bell, Belikov got the bunker key for us. We've got work to do."
-Adler, probably
This scene was on par with the OG vault scene in just how tense it all was.
It would have been cheaper to just place a few bottles of vodka in the break room then sneak past when you hear snoring
Or a Ukrainian toilet, they really love those
Love how this is being recommended to me now that the Russian coup is underway
This scene taught me on how to distract people into something.
First time they really don’t give attention.
Second time when they see or hear the same thing, the human brain gets curious enough to know what could it be.😂
that 15 Seconds is so precious and it could pull off a great mission. (If they hadn’t got the piggybacking frequency from the intruder , this mission would have been the most fastest military heist in the world)😂
This movie vastly overestimates a security guard's willingness to check for plumbing problems instead of continuing to sit.
Imagine if the guard suddently would decide to do a deadsprint down the hallway
Gotta get my reps in!
You'd have thought that after Samantha Carter pulled that stunt with the holoprojector in the Tel'tak that the guard would be wise to tricks like this.
A Snargate reference will never fail to make me smile
Simulating a drip to distract a guard is brilliant because as we all know the Russian military is very keen on proper maintenance
Love that Simon Pegg got into this series.
Mission has really outclassed Bond at their own game.
Tom's hair system is just the best
Let's be real if that drip sound effect machine was real we'd only use it just to mess with people all the time
As if basic motion sensors and simple door contact switches don’t exist in this universe. “Let’s build a key coded vault door, but never mind the 15 ruble contact switch, comrade.”
Tom Cruise is the perfect person to play that character
This scene was brilliant and hilarious and suspenseful it's fantastic in every way.
I really don't want to nitpick on a Mission:Impossible movie, but shouldn't Benj be the one signaling when to stop?
He can see the guard stepping out from the comfort room before Ethan can.
I think it is about hearing the movement i think.
My guess is because Benji is inexperienced on field mission..
This is what prigozin should’ve done
I like the classy jazzy music at the end of the video.
this is how you do modern cinema. no flat gimmicks, pure mastery of craft in suspense
imagine going through all that trouble just to fool one guard XD
The key Background music of Mission impossible and Terminator is Unbeatable. Simply outstanding.
This scene is from the film:
Mission: Impossible - Ghost Protocol
OMG, thank you! No mention of it anywhere.
The perspective rendering has become reality. I have seen eye-head movement tracking combined with perspective rendering for virtual pinball machines elsewhere on youtube already a year ago.
A simple motion detector would have defeated this.
Even a cctv at the other side of the hallway will do
Haha I love this movie, the door @ 3:50 would never be that quiet, either a loud buzz for the card reader, and no way something that big is gonna be deaf silent haha. I wish all my doors at work were that quiet!
I was in the theater watching that scene and at the end my wife leaned over and said, 'Your mouth is wide open.' It was, too.
Such an unforgettable movie overall, best MI ever imo. ❤
Guard hears false water drops 💦 guard can’t here solid steel door open 😂
I love this scenes, brilliant..
That's why I would always make sure the doors in my facility make a noise when they are opened
This scene stands as the perfect summarization as to why Mission Impossible is my favorite spy/action franchise
Memories of thing that never happend these are always the hardest to forget.
OmG! Tom can do it! He can infiltrate Kremlin and convert Putin fearology to scientology! Go Tom! ®️
Fearology? Putin has steel balls.
Not with his horrible Russian.
@@williamwilde5241 lol, that's why he's not been spotted sunbathing since january 2020
Best M:I heist scene since the original. Tense and equally funny. Brilliantly realistic while also exhibiting future tech.
The absolute most clueless guard ever. In history.
Everytime i see this scene ,the tension rises slowly.❤❤❤❤
tom cruise is always trying to overthrow a regime lmao
The wall is cool & all, but the "make a sound somewhere" pen is waaay more fun tbh!
I know this is over a year old but this scene looks so trashy like a cutscene from Command & Conquer Red Alert. I am loving it
Moral of the story, if you feel something is off, then something is off.
I don’t care who you are, you have to admit it. This is one of the best movie series ever
Sure, for an 11 year old.
I don't care who you are either
They are better written than many movies today, save for a couple of issues with MI2.
Its better than the Bond films more entertaining stunts
"R&D, we need cutting edge equipment for infiltrating mission. What do you get?"
"A water droplet sound maker, sir!"
"Impressive. Let's put it into work"
I want one of those drip sound thingies :D
This movie- such a rollercoaster
From start to end
One of the greatest action thrillers
MI4= MI6 > MI5> MI7
Should’ve called him when the war started
Oh and the expendables too lol
And the Fast and the Furious FAMILY 😂
Benji is my favorite character (maybe I am just biased because I am an IT guy).
They could simply have sent a gas release thing that then knocks the guy down temporarily 😂😂😂 but then we would not have this scene 😂
Awesome scene, with a hilarious touch of humor.
I never saw this in theaters. Did the crowds' laughter break up the near silence?
Good to see Ewan Bremner still getting work.
now I know this video was made a year ago
but for now, the cliff driving take the spot of best MI scene
WHAT? That's absurd. I love it.
Too bad that this scene has been less believable in recent years.
We all know there wouldn't be a guy sitting there and taking phone calls, he'd be passed out drunk under the table.
Needed this in MGS V 😢
No joke this scene gives me some good lvl of ASMR.
Mkbhd and cleo abram's video on screen tracking for multiple view using higher refresh rate screen might be useful in this scene.
Probably best Mission Impossible movie.
This is pretty slick devising!
Isn't that Maverick supposed to be flying an f 14 tomcat fighing against the Russians with an su 57? How did he got inside the Kremlin that easy? And why was Rooster wearing glasses?
LET ME GUESS? YOU FOUND FRED HADDAD?
3:17 someone should turn Benji’s face into a nextbot😂💀💀💀
One of the most creative scene in MI franchise 😆😆
Not really
They’re very lucky the door doesn’t squeak and the lock doesn’t beep
Possibly an unpopular opinion, but I liked the Mission Impossible films best when the tech was less impressive and more simplistic. It was more interesting then.
The most impressive thing is that all of this runs on a 1st geh iPad. xD
2:43 dude on the left's shoes going straight through the wall lol
The thing I like about this movie is all of it.
Fun fact. Doors within the kremlin are rarely oiled so that they make as much noise as possible in an effort to oust people trying to use them without permission. This practice goes all the way back to Tsarist Russia.
I don't think the real Kremlin would be this sophisticated
you should put the name of the movie in the description: ghost protocol
Still my favourite MI... The tech in this one was really well thought through..