'A MASTERFUL FILMMAKER'
2 MORE ROLPH SAXON INTERVIEWS, AND MORE ESSAYS & ARTICLES ABOUT MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE
At
Slash Film,
Quinn Bilodeau discusses "Why The First Mission: Impossible Movie Is Still The Best In The Series" -
There's this hesitancy in contemporary adaptations to experiment with the legacy of the source material in fear of upsetting their fanbases. Phelps' turn was considered a betrayal of everything the character stood for, to which I say, that's what makes it so great. If you want what you enjoy about the television show, De Palma doesn't negate it. Voight's Phelps doesn't exactly conjure images of Graves' performance anyway. The twist plays into the larger picture of using familiar iconography and team tactics to lull the viewer into a state of security before kicking their chair out from under them. Phelps' sleight-of-hand was always there, such as the moment where he utilizes the IMF mission tape's self-destruction to mask his own puff of cigarette smoke. The audience, like Ethan, could never fathom the original series' ringleader as the domino to bring it all down for nefarious reasons. A common criticism I would hear lobbied against "Mission: Impossible" was the plot being too confusing, which is hilarious in hindsight. There's a lot going on, but De Palma is such a delicate craftsman who knows how to keep track of everything, even when he's not directly telling you. It's incredibly effective when De Palma, Hirsch, and Cruise display a metatextual recollection of events that show one thing while Ethan says another. By the time we get to the train chase, we have seen the truth in Ethan's perspective and are now fully onboard his crusade to fight for what's right.
The
Chicago Tribune's Michael Phillips interviews
Rolph Saxon:
Q: When the first “Mission: Impossible” came around, where were you in your career? A: I was doing the David Mamet play “Oleanna,” touring around Wales. I got a call from my agent, saying they wanted me to audition for a Tom Cruise movie. I said great, I took a three-hour train ride to Pinewood Studios near London and I met with Brian De Palma for three and a half, four minutes. I thought, well, that was a waste. I thanked the casting director for calling me in, but told her I didn’t think it went very well. And she said, “No, no. No! Oh, no. He loved you! You were in there the longest of anybody.”
Q: So you got the part. How long was the gig?
A: They offered me the gig, but I had another film job to finagle a little, to make them both work. It meant working three or four weeks, seven days a week, which was fine. Great, actually. Three weeks on “Mission,” then another week or so finishing up while I did this other film. I was younger then.
Q: At that point in your career were you thinking, well, good gig, small part, big movie? Or did you have anything like a hope of it turning into something more?
A: No! I mean, I got to do a Tom Cruise movie directed by Brian De Palma, and to be honest, if it hadn’t been for those two, I probably wouldn’t have gone in for the audition, because it meant six hours on the train back and forth from Wales and I had a show that night. Donloe was a tiny part, walk-on stuff. That’s how it started, although it did develop a little bit more as shooting went on.
Q: How so?
A: I was very at ease on set, having a good time, and I was sort of messing around one day, you know, cutting up, making people laugh. I don’t even remember how. But then I got a tap on the shoulder from the first assistant, who said: “Mr. De Palma wants to speak to you.”
Q: And he fired you.
A: (laughs) You’re joking, but believe me, that’s what I thought was happening. The look on the first assistant’s face — we’re still in touch today, a great guy — seemed to indicate exactly that. All he said to me, as we walked over to De Palma, was: “Watch me. Watch me when you’re talking to him.” So he stands behind De Palma and De Palma says to me, “I saw you messing around up there.” And I say, “Yes, sir.” And he says, not smiling at all, “Yeah. Everybody seemed to be enjoying that.”
And I started to say something, and right then Chris, the first assistant, who’s standing behind De Palma, just does this (holds his finger up to his lips in a “shush!” gesture). So I didn’t speak. De Palma says, “Uh, well, could you do that again, whatever it was you were doing?” And I said sure, and he said, “Because I have an idea for something. After lunch we’ll film for an hour or two.” So that afternoon, and then the next morning, we improvised all the throwing-up bits, and Donloe running to and from the bathroom. And that came from just messing around on set. Most of it ended up on the (cutting-room) floor, but it was fun.
Q: You barely talk in that entire scene, which for a lot of people was the best thing in the first movie. It makes Donloe seem like an accidentally crucial figure.
A: That’s De Palma. I’m forever in his debt for that scene. A masterful filmmaker.
Q: And you had no reason to hope, any time over the last 25 years, that Donloe might find some excuse to return to the “M:I” universe?
A: Only in my own mind (laughs). I did draft a letter years ago: “Dear Tom: What about if we did this?” Some ridiculous excuse to bring back Donloe, you know. Then I thought, who am I kidding? I crumpled it up and threw it away. And then years later this happens.
IndieWire's Mike Ryan also interviews Saxon:
Being only in the first movie and the last movie you have an interesting perspective. What’s the difference between a Brian De Palma-directed “Mission: Impossible” and a Christopher McQuarrie-directed “Mission: Impossible,” other than a lot less Dutch angles? Brian, from what I remember, was under a considerable amount of pressure. For a variety of reasons. He was dealing with technical aspects of the film rather than with the actors.
What do you mean by that?
He’s not a great people person. He’s a genius filmmaker. To say that I worked with him and to watch him work, that’s amazing. That’s a wonderful thing. And, of course, with my character there wasn’t a lot there. That was sort of left up to me. And that was great, I was happy with that. And Chris is a different kind of director.
In my experience, he’s very cerebral and in the weeds with filmmaking.
He’s also in the weeds when it comes to working with actors. It was a very unique experience working with someone like him. He improvises a lot. A lot of improvisation. It took me a minute to realize it’s not he didn’t like what I was doing, he just wanted to see what else could come up. And once I got a hold of that, it was great.
Speaking of the first movie, that has to be an odd scene to do with Tom Cruise just hanging above you the entire time.
Well, he’d been up there for quite a while, a couple of days. So I had seen him up there a lot.
You had to know that was going to be a showstopper of a scene, right?
No.
Really?
What happened with that sequence, I was messing around on set one day, just joking around, it was a long day. I got a tap on the shoulder from the first assistant director, Chris Soldo. And he says, “Mr. De Palma wants to see you.” “What?” He says, “I’m going to stand behind him, just follow my lead.” I’m going, oh shoot, this is not going to be good.
I came up to him and he said, “I saw you messing around over there.” I said, “I’m sorry, sir, if I was being distracting.” He says, “No, no, no. It was funny. People were laughing. People really seem to enjoy what you’re doing, can you do it again?” And Chris is behind him mouthing, “Say yes.” So we spent the whole day after lunch and the whole next day doing the vomiting thing. It wasn’t in there before. The thing with the knife I think was there, but the whole vomiting thing was brought in.
I’m glad Donloe kept the knife. A nice souvenir for him.
I love that. I did ask because it isn’t the real one. They said they had to remake it. They are like $100,000 now.
What?
They are really expensive, so they couldn’t get them. One of them is in a museum. So they just remade them.
Yeah, maybe you should have kept that knife like Donloe did.
No kidding! “What knife? I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
Last week,
The Ringer's Miles Surrey posted, "An Ode to ‘Mission: Impossible’
Premiering in 1996, the first Mission: Impossible had director Brian De Palma at the helm, which in and of itself was a statement of intent. De Palma’s work has frequently drawn comparisons to that of Alfred Hitchcock—albeit with a liberal sprinkling of sex and violence—and that sentiment carries over to Mission: Impossible. The film opens with Hunt and his team on a mission in Kyiv that ends with everyone other than our hero dead; in what becomes a recurring theme in the series, Hunt goes on the run, as his own agency mistakenly believes he’s betrayed them. While Mission: Impossible culminates with an explosive train and helicopter sequence, the film is more in its wheelhouse as an exercise in suspense—nothing if not on-brand for a Hitchcock heir. That willingness to make Mission: Impossible an auteur-driven tentpole extends to the three sequels that follow it. Mission: Impossible 2 is an unmistakable John Woo joint—all the way down to the white doves—in which Hunt becomes less of a traditional spy than a gun-wielding, motorcycle-driving martial artist. (Mission: Impossible 2 wasn’t for everyone, but I see the vision.) Mission: Impossible III hails from J.J. Abrams, who, taking some world-building cues from his work on Alias and Lost, adds some new dimensions to Hunt, including a fiancée in peril (played by Michelle Monaghan). Were it not for an all-time villain performance from the late Philip Seymour Hoffman, however, I suspect Mission: Impossible III would be viewed as the franchise’s low point, which is more indicative of Abrams’s limitations as a filmmaker than anything to do with the plot. Then came Ghost Protocol, wherein Brad Bird makes a seamless transition from the world of animation to live-action filmmaking. Indeed, some of the best set pieces in Ghost Protocol have a playful, cartoonish quality to them—in a good way.
Esquire's Chris Nashawaty ranks De Palma's
Mission at number six, only topping the John Woo and the J.J. Abrams - way low, if you ask me, but here's what Nashawaty has to say about the movie:
Hollywood is littered with the bloated corpses of movies that were made with the intention of kicking off long-lasting franchises (The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, John Carter, The Dark Tower, etc.). But it was obvious right out of the gate that Brian De Palma’s first Mission: Impossible would lead to a series of legs (even those legs wouldn’t be attached to De Palma). We were lured into the theater by the name-brand cache of the vintage TV series and, of course, Cruise’s star power. But we were immediately put on notice that the M:I movies wouldn’t really have all that much to do with the small-screen storytelling of the show—that these movies would be massive Rube Golberg-ian exercises in pyrotechnics and triple-cross pretzel logic. So this is really where it all begins. And now, it seems like a quaint throwback to a time when blockbusters could be…smart. Clearly, it’s hard to discuss this film without talking about the trickle-of-sweat hanging-spider break-in at the CIA’s Langley headquarters. Twenty-five years later, movie magic has come so far. But this set-piece really hasn’t been topped in terms of pure ingenuity and suspense. Over time, the M:I series’ trademark set pieces would get bigger and louder and more lavish and expensive, but nothing has yet come close to topping this economical masterclass in dangling, white-knuckle delirium.