And to think they were thinking of killing off Luther in this one, or in the alternative Brandt
I disagree about the tone. First, I'd "cheat" a bit by EXCLUDING M:I-2 as a John Woo flick more than a Mission Impossible flick. Reasonable minds can differ, admittedly.
That done, the remaining movies have, as their "identity":
(1) a seemingly impossible mission (naturally)
(2) Ethan putting friends above the mission
(3) action scenes where Ethan is both superhuman and human (he feels pain, gets winded, etc. - case in point is Rogue Nation where he actually holds up a finger, asking his assailant to "wait a second")
(4) over-the-top stuntwork
(5) completing the mission while rogue or disavowed
(6) a lot of team interplay (in Rogue Nation, for example, I thought Brandt and Luther "bonded" by arguing over the four-by-four)
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