Plot spoilers for all 5 Mission Impossible movies below.
With Rogue Nation off to a great box office start and Paramount already moving forward with a sequel, it would appear as if the Mission Impossible franchise has officially become the American 007. To put it another way, until Matt Damon comes back as Jason Bourne the American James Bond of the moment is Tom Cruise’s Ethan Hunt, probably even more so than Bourne ever was. The original Bourne trilogy is exactly that – a story told over three movies. The classic James Bond model is to make standalone movies which barely, if at all, link up with the other franchise installments. That’s how you end up with the phenomenon of the Bond girls, the sexy love interests whose taming of Bond almost never extends beyond a single movie.
Well, the first 3 Mission Impossible movies don’t link up with each other at all, but now with Ghost Protocol and Rogue Nation they’ve made actual direct sequels for the first time in franchise history and have a supporting cast well established from this point forward – Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg and Ving Rhames. But where’s Paula Patton, who was so good in Ghost Protocol? How likely are we to ever see Rogue Nation‘s Rebecca Ferguson again? Why is it that the only female character to repeat in any of these movies has been Michelle Monaghan from MI:3 to Ghost Protocol, and even then it was an uncredited cameo at the very end? The Bond movies do this kind of thing with the Bond girls by design. It appears as if the Mission Impossible movies have set up their own brand of Bond girls on accident, a by-product of protracted development periods messing with actors’ schedules. Rogue Nation director ChristopherMcQuarrie says they wanted Paula Patton back; she simply wasn’t available. They even sought to bring back MI:3‘s Maggie Q, and she was similarly unavailable.
Bond girls got their own documentary as well as the cultural distinction of forever being known as a “Bond girl.” The women of Mission Impossible, on the other hand, appear to get quite the career boost (well, not so much Emmanuelle Beart), even if their time with the franchise is limited to the one movie. So, in honor of the women of Mission Impossible here’s breakdown of who they are and what they did after their time with the franchise:
Mission Impossible 1 – Emmanuelle Beart
What She Had Done Before: English-language? Pretty much just 1987’s Date With An Angel, in which she is a gorgeous, blonde angel who falls to Earth and falls in love with a guy (Michael E. Knight). Frech-language? Tons of stuff, most notably 1986’s Manon of the Spring, in which “A beautiful but shy shepherdess (Beart) plots vengeance on the men whose greedy conspiracy to acquire her father’s land caused his death years earlier.”
What She’s Done Since: She went straight back to working in French movies, racking up steady IMDB credits ever since. Her post-Mission Impossible years are probably more noted for her social activism. She’s been arrested multiple times while protesting France’s anti-immigration laws.
Mission Impossible 2 – Thandie Newton
What She Had Done Before: Oddly, she’s actually in Interview With a Vampire, playing a maid, but pre-Mission Impossible her most notable work was as the title character in 1998’s Beloved, the adaptation of Toni Morrison’s horror-drama novel about a possessed former slave shortly after the Civil War.
What She’s Done Since: I most remember her as Carter’s (Noah Whyle) for several seasons on ER, but she’s had big roles in loads of movie you’ve probably heard of, like The Truth About Charlie, The Chronicles of Riddick, Crash, The Pursuit of Happyness, Norbit, W. and 2012. Lately, she’s transitioned to TV, starring in the Canadian-British show Rogue and soon to star in HBO’s TV series remake of the old Michael Crichton movie Westworld.
Mission Impossible 3 – Michelle Monaghan
What She Had Done Before: A guest stint on Boston Public and small roles in movies like Unfaithful, It Runs in the Family and The Bourne Supremacy before scoring the lead female role in 2005’s Kiss Kiss Bang Bang, co-starring with Val Kilmer and Robert Downey, Jr.
What She’s Done Since: Most recently, she’s the one good part of Pixels, was Woody Harrelson’s memorably jilted wife in the first season of True Detective and is a Nicholas Sparks leading lady in Best of Me. However, immediately after Mission Impossible 3 she played the female leads in Gone Baby Gone and The Goodbye Girl, both in 2007. That was just the start of a string of high-profile roles, playing Patrick Dempsey’s best friend in Maid of Honor, Robert Downey, Jr.’s pregnant wife in Due Date, Shia Lebouf’s reluctant partner in Eagle Eye and the mesmerizing girl on the train in Source Code.
Mission Impossible 4: Ghost Protocol – Paula Patton
What She Had Done Before: That weird Andre 3000 musical Idlewild, a big role alongside Denzel Washington in Déjà vu, Gabourey Sidibe’s influential school teacher in Precious, and the third wheel in a love triangle with Queen Latifah and Common in Just Wright.
What She’s Done Since: Lead roles in African-American-leaning comedies like Jumping the Broom and Baggage Claim, a supporting role in About Last Night and playing Denzel’s ex in 2 Guns. She’ll have some kind of part in the upcoming Warcraft movie, and is currently filming The Do Over, the second of Adam Sandler’s four Netflix movies,
Mission Impossible 5: Rogue Nation – Rebecca Ferguson
What She Had Done Before: The Swedish actress started out as a model before moving up to soap operas which then led to a couple of Swedish movies before landing the lead role in the 10-part BBC mini-series The White Queen (2013), dramatizing the War of the Roses in 15th century England.
What She’s Done Since: She has a small role as Hugh Grant’s wife in Stephen Fear’s upcoming Meryl Streep biopic comedy Florence Foster Jenkins, about a New York heiress who became a famous opera singer.
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Honorable Mentions to Maggie Q and Kerri Russell in Mission Impossible 3.