“Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning” (2025) directed by Christopher McQuarrie; starring Tom Cruise, Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Esai Morales and Pom Klementieff / Z-View

Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning (2025)

Director:  Christopher McQuarrie

Screenplay: Christopher McQuarrie, Erik Jendresen; based on Mission Impossible by Bruce Geller.

Stars: Tom Cruise, Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Esai Morales, Pom Klementieff, Henry Czerny, Holt McCallany, Janet McTeer, Nick Offerman, Hannah Waddingham, Tramell Tillman, Angela Bassett, Greg Tarzan Davis, Charles Parnell, Rolf Saxon, Katy O’Brian, Sydney Cole Alexander and Shea Whigham.

Tagline:  None.

The Plot…

Ethan Hunt is contacted by the President of the United States.  The Entity (a powerful artificial intelligence) has  started taking control of each country’s nuclear arsenal.  In just a short period of time, the Entity will command every nuclear weapon in the world.  Including all those held by the United States.

The Entity, once secure in a bunker safe from nuclear and electromagnetic fallout will launch every country’s nuclear bomb.  This will wipe out almost all of humanity.  The few who survive will restart the world under the direction of the Entity.

Ethan Hunt has a key to the Entity’s source code.  But that is just part of the potential solution.  The President wants the source code key.

Ethan has another plan.  A plan that, if it works, would render the Entity powerless.  But, and this is a HUGE (pardon the pun) but, the odds of Ethan’s plan working are minute.  The lives of every person on the planet hang in the balance.

Light the fuse…

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

With Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning, Tom Cruise earned his second Guinness World Record.  The first was for being the actor with the most consecutive $100-million grossing movies.  The second was for the most burning parachute jumps by an individual (16).

The action is all-out and way over the top.  It matches the plot.  The expectation for every Mission Impossible movie is it ups the ante on both.  Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning succeeds.  Unless Ethan Hunt was to save the entire universe, it is appropriate that the series ends here.

Esai Morales makes a great villain.  He’s one cocky scoundrel.

Shea Whigham is always good.

Congratulations to Tom Cruise and Christopher McQuarrie the driving forces behind the success of the Mission Impossible franchise.  It was a great run.

Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning features breathtaking stunts, repeated last minute “saves”, a lot of running, ever mounting problems and death-defying solution after death-defying solution.  Too much of a good thing?  Maybe for some.  But just what I expected for the franchise finale.  They stuck the landing.

Mission Impossible: The Final Reckoning (2025) rates 5 of 5 stars

RIP: Michael Madsen

It was announced that Michael Madsen died today from cardiac arrest. Mr. Madsen was 67.

Michael Madsen’s mother Elaine Madsen was an author and Emmy-winning filmmaker. Michael and one of his sisters, Virginia went into showbusiness.  Virginia Madsen became an award-winning actress.  Mr. Madsen’s other sister, Cheryl became a business woman.

Michael began his career at the Steppenwolf Theatre Company in Chicago.  There he appeared in a a production of Of Mice and Men.  In 1982, Mr. Madsen began to get roles in television and feature films.  The roles kept coming for the rest of his career which was still going strong at the time of his death.  Michael Madsen had over 325 roles on his acting resume.

Some of the television projects that feature Michael Madsen include: St. Elsewhere (2 episodes); Special Bulletin; Diner; Cagney & Lacey; Miami Vice; The Hitchhiker; Our Family Honor (13 episodes); Crime Story (2 episodes); War and Remembrance; Almost Grown; Tour of Duty; Jake and the Fatman; Quantum Leap; The Outsiders; Gabriel’s Fire; Vengeance Unlimited (16 episodes); 44 Minutes: The North Hollywood Shootout; Tilt (9 episodes); Big Bug Man; CSI: Miami; 24 (4 episodes); Bob’s Burgers; Blue Bloods; The Mob Doctor (3 episodes); Golden Boy (2 episodes); Axe Cop; Hawaii Five-O;  Telltale’s the Walking Dead (3 episodes); Big Time in Hollywood, FL. (5 episodes); Real Detective; Those Who Can’t; Powers (10 episodes) and Explosion Jones.

Some of Michael Madsen’s feature film appearances include: Against All Hope; War Games; Racing with the Moon; The Natural; Kill Me Again; The Doors; Thelma & Louise; Reservoir Dogs; Free Willy; The Getaway; Wyatt Earp; Species; Free Willy 2; Mulholland Falls; Donnie Brasco; Species 2; Die Another Day; Kill Bill Vol. 1; Kill Bill Vol. 2; Sin City; Scary Movie 4; Hell Ride; Desperate Endeavors; The Hateful Eight; Papa; Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood; Outlaw Johnny Black and A Christmas Gamble.

I probably first saw Michael Madsen when he appeared on St.  Elsewhere.  If not there, then it would have been Miami Vice.  My favorite Michael Madsen roles were in Reservoir Dogs; The Getaway and both Sin City movies.  I loved seeing Mr. Madsen’s name in the credits of any movie or television show.  With well over 300 acting credits on Michael Madsen’s resume, I wasn’t the only one who felt that way.

Out thoughts and prayers go out to Michael Madsen’s family, friends and fans.

“She Rides Shotgun” (2025) starring Taron Egerton & Ana Sophia Heger – The Poster and Trailer are Here!

The poster and trailer are here for She Rides Shotgun starring Taron Egerton and Ana Sophia Heger.  The film is based on Jordan Harper’s novel.  I’ve read the book. It gets my highest recommendation.  I cannot wait for the movie.

Deal me in.

She Rides Shotgun – Watch the trailer now! In Theaters August 1.

Starring Taron Egerton, Ana Sophia Heger, Rob Yang, and John Carroll Lynch.

Where can you run when there’s nowhere to hide? Taron Egerton stars as newly released ex-con Nate in this gritty, explosive action-thriller. Marked for death by unrelenting enemies, Nate must now protect his estranged 11-year-old daughter, Polly (Ana Sophia Heger) at all costs.

Shy, precocious, and wary of her father, Polly is swept up in Nate’s dangerous plight as they flee to evade the corrupt sheriff and brutal leader of a gang who will stop at nothing to protect his criminal interests. With scant resources and no one to trust, Nate and Polly form a bond forged under fire as he shows her how to fight and survive — and she teaches him what unconditional love truly means in this intense, moving story about loyalty, strength, and redemption.

“Trouble Man” directed & starring Michael Jai White; co-starring Cliff Method Man Smith, La La Anthony and Orlando Jones – Two Posters & a Trailer are Here!

How about two posters and a trailer for Trouble Man directed and starring Michael Jai White; co-starring Cliff Method Man Smith, La La Anthony and Orlando Jones?

I like the first poster best.  Looks like a fun ride.

Deal me in.

TROUBLE MAN is in theaters and on digital platforms August 1.

Directed by Michael Jai White
Starring: Michael Jai White, Cliff Method Man Smith, La La Anthony and Orlando Jones

Jaxen, a former cop turned Atlanta PI, is hired to find missing R&B star Jahari. His investigation uncovers her disappearance is connected to a larger conspiracy, forcing him to question those around him and his own past.

“Afterburn” starring Dave Bautista, Samuel L. Jackson and Olga Kurylenko – The Poster and Trailer are Here!

Afterburn starring Dave Bautista, Samuel L. Jackson and Olga Kurylenko – The Poster and Trailer are Here!

After a massive solar flare destroys the Earth’s eastern hemisphere, an emboldened treasure hunter for hire adventures to Europe to uncover the coveted Mona Lisa, only to learn the world needs a hero more than it needs a painting.

#Afterburn Coming Soon, Only in Theaters.

“The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” (1966) directed by Sergio Leone; starring Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach & Lee Van Cleef / Z-View

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966)

Director:  Sergio Leone

Screenplay: Age & Scarpelli, Luciano Vincenzoni, Sergio Leone; story by Luciano Vincenzoni, Sergio Leone.

Stars: Clint Eastwood, Eli Wallach, Lee Van Cleef.

Tagline:  The Man with No Name Returns!

The Plot…

1862.  The Civil War continues to tear the country apart.  $200,000 in gold is buried in a secret grave in an unknown cemetery by a Confederate soldier named Bill Carson.

“Angel Eyes”, a sadistic mercenary has heard the rumor of buried gold.  He knows the name of the soldier who buried the loot, but not gold’s hiding place.

Tuco, a Mexican bandit, knows the name of the cemetery, but not the grave.

“Blondie”, a bounty hunter, knows the name on the grave, but not the name of the cemetery.

Blondie and Tuco form an uneasy alliance to get the buried gold.  They believe their biggest problem is neither trusts the other.  They will come to realize their gravest threat is Angel Eyes.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

Most think that The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was made as part of The Man with No Name Trilogy.  The truth is that Eastwood originally played different characters in each film.  It was Clint Eastwood’s idea to release the three films (A Fistful of Dollars; For A Few Dollars More and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly) in the US during the same year as a trilogy.  Changes to dialogue were made to never tell Eastwood’s character’s real name.

Sergio Leone originally wanted Charles Bronson to play Angel Eyes.  Bronson was committed to The Dirty Dozen, so Lee Van Cleef got the role.

Clint Eastwood came up with the name Angel Eyes for Van Cleef’s character.

Due to a miscommunication, the big scene where the bridge is blown up first happened when no cameras were rolling.  The bridge had to be rebuilt so it could be blown up on camera.

Eli Wallach improvised the line, “When you have to shoot, shoot, don’t talk!”

Ennio Morricone’s soundtrack album peaked at #4, but stayed on Billboards Album chart for over a year.

Although The Good, the Bad and the Ugly was released after A Fistful of Dollars and For A Few Dollars More, it is actually a prequel to the two films.

Eastwood’s character, labeled the Good actually kills more people than the Bad and the Ugly combined.  Angel Eyes, the bad, kills the fewest people in the film.

Angel Eyes is shown to be missing the tip of one of his fingers.  This is not a special effect.  Lee Van Cleef lost the tip of a finger in a carpentry accident.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly made Clint Eastwood a movie star.

The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1966) rates 5 of 5 stars

“Get Carter” (2000) directed by Stephen Kay; starring Sylvester Stallone, Rachael Leigh Cook, Miranda Richardson, Alan Cumming, Mickey Rourke & Michael Caine / Z-View

Get Carter (2000)

Director:  Stephen Kay

Screenplay: David McKenna; based on JACK’S RETURN HOME by Ted Lewis.

Stars: Sylvester Stallone, Rachael Leigh Cook, Miranda Richardson, Rhona Mitra, Johnny Strong, John C. McGinley, Alan Cumming, Gretchen Mol, Tom Sizemore, John Cassini, Mickey Rourke, Mark Boone Junior, Darryl Scheelar, Yan-Kay Crystal Lowe, Tyler Labine, Stephen Kay, Frank Stallone and Michael Caine.

Tagline:  The Truth Hurts

The Plot…

Jack Carter, a Vegas mob enforcer, returns to Seattle for his estranged brother, Ritchie’s funeral.  Ritchie was killed in a car crash after drinking.  Problem is Ritchie never drank.  As Jack digs deeper, he starts to believe Ritchie was murdered.

But why?

Clues point in several directions.  Ritchie’s death could have something to do with the club he managed.  Cliff Bumbry, the owner of the club has his fingers in other pies.  Did Ritchie have dirt on Cliff?

Rumor is Ritchie was having an affair.  Could that have led to Ritchie’s murder?

Some leads point to tech millionaire Jeremy Kinnear.  How were he and Ritchie linked?

Worse still, Cyrus Paice may be involved.  Paice was a rival of Jack’s when Jack was coming up.  There’s still bad blood.

As Jack digs deeper he will discover the truth.

The truth hurts.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

Get Carter (2000) is a remake of Get Carter (1971) which starred Michael Caine. Caine co-stars in the remake.  Stallone and Caine also appeared together in Victory (1981).  Caine was originally only supposed to appear in a one scene cameo.  The scene scored so high with test audiences, the film was adjusted to give Caine a bigger role.

When producers were hesitant to hire Mickey Rourke (because of his past behaviors), Stallone guaranteed a portion of his salary, to cover any delays caused by Rourke.  Rourke was on-time and ready every day.

Gretchen Mol plays an important role but is not listed in the film’s credits.

Tom Sizemore’s voice (also uncredited) is heard when Carter talks to his Vegas boss.

Director Stephen Kay appears uncredited as a party guest.  Get Carter features Stephen Kay’s second outing as a feature film director.  Kay would go on to direct multiple highly rated episodes of The Shield; Sons of Anarchy; Yellowstone; Mayor of Kingstown; Lioness and Landman.

Frank Stallone appears uncredited in the funeral scene.

Get Carter (2000) is one of my all-time favorite films.  The movie and especially Stallone’s character resonates with me.  In it you’ll see some of Stallone’s best acting (especially the roof top scene with Rachael Leigh Cook).  The film isn’t perfect or a classic, but it remains one of my go-to movies.  Your mileage may vary (a lot on this one).

Get Carter (2000) rates 5 of 5 stars

“Troll 2” – The Poster and Trailer are Here! 

Troll 2 – The Poster and Trailer are Here!  I found the original to be surprisingly fun.  I’m looking forward to another round.

Deal me in.

When a dangerous new troll is awakened, unleashing devastation across Norway, beloved adventurers Nora, Andreas and Captain Kris are thrust into their most perilous mission yet.

Troll 2 is coming to Netflix December 1, 2025. For more on Troll 2, visit https://www.netflix.com/troll2

PUT YOUR LIFE IN THE POT by James Maxwell

I love good great crime stories.  I don’t care if they are told in novel, comic, movie or episodic television form.  Just make ’em great.  James Maxwell’s PUT YOUR LIFE IN THE POT just might fit the bill.  Here’s the downlow…

This neo-noir tale renders San Jose, California, as a stage for crime, corruption, and the hope of getting that American dream you’ve always been denied. Recommended for fans of Dennis Lehane, Jim Thompson, and films like Before the Devil Knows You’re Dead.

You wanna go all in with me?

Tristian Sloan is a young man frustrated with his minimum wage job and dead-end life. Why hasn’t he made anything of himself? How come he always gets a raw deal? He just wants a way out. The plan is simple, and nobody’s supposed to get hurt.

Tristian and his so-called friend, Joey Patrone, are a pair of codependent liquor store monkeys who hate each other almost as much as they hate their boss. They work their days away for minimum wage and blow their money on booze and call girls.

Now they’ve had enough. Joey comes up with a plan to get rich quick by ripping off the mob who owns the liquor store. He just needs Tristian’s help to cover his neck. But Tristian doesn’t like how reckless his friend has gotten – the guy’s totally psycho, and no longer cares who gets hurt.

Tristian sabotages Joey’s plan to take the money for himself, but everything spins into bloodshed when the wrong people catch wind of the money. Now, he is caught between a vicious gang, a psychopathic schemer, and his own failures as a man.

PUT YOUR LIFE IN THE POT is sitting with a 4.8 Amazon rating.

Deal me in.

Sly Stallone as Deke DaSilva from “Nighthawks” by Pat Broderick!

I first met Pat Broderick at OrlandoCon 1977.  Pat was a young artist and I was an even younger fan.  I was impressed at how easy-going and friendly Pat was (and that’s not taking into consideration what a talented artist he is).  Over the years we became friends.  It’s always cool to see Pat at a show.  He’s still killing it with new art and comic series!

Back in 2005, at a Tampa Show, I got Pat’s take on Sly Stallone as Deke DaSilva from Nighthawks.