Mission: Impossible 2 Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

69 =
Based upon 12 Critic Reviews
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Entertainment Weekly | Owen GleibermanAdd Critic to Favorites

It's eye candy that detonates.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kenneth TuranAdd Critic to Favorites

The power of film to irrationally transform and exalt is almost a religion to Woo, and another reason why he was the natural go-to guy for this lucrative movie franchise.Read the full review

Rolling Stone | Peter TraversAdd Critic to Favorites

Keeps the pulse pounding without sacrificing laughs or logic.Read the full review

Washington Post | Desson ThomsonAdd Critic to Favorites

The real deity of the movie is director Woo, who takes complete command of the latest technology -- hyperspeed editing, breathtaking cinematography, 10-out-of-10 stunt work -- to create brilliant action sequences.Read the full review

Washington Post | Stephen HunterAdd Critic to Favorites

Such a feast of outlandish pleasures it'll send you home steam-cleaned and shrink-wrapped.Read the full review

Chicago Sun-Times | Roger EbertAdd Critic to Favorites

More evolved, more confident, more sure-footed in the way it marries minimal character development to seamless action.Read the full review

USA Today | Susan WloszczynaAdd Critic to Favorites

There's also a nice cheekiness to the material written by Robert Towne ("Chinatown"), and the usual cool high-tech toys are deployed.Read the full review

Slate | David EdelsteinAdd Critic to Favorites

At his best (Woo)'s too promiscuous with the slow motion; and once those doves start fluttering in he enters a new dimension in self-parody.Read the full review

Boston Globe | Jay CarrAdd Critic to Favorites

Hard-driving and propulsive as it is, the film is unable to hide the fact that Woo seems not only to be repeating himself, but parodying his earlier films on a much bigger scale, more crudely and coarsely.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

The stagy emotionalism Mr. Woo specializes in is not ideally suited to his gifts, and Mr. Cruise, his jaw churning to indicate ambivalence and pain, mostly registers confusion and fatigue, soon amply shared by the audience.Read the full review

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