Ilsa Faust & Ethan Hunt appreciation blog ♥ M:I news, tributes, Tom Cruise and Rebecca Ferguson endless respect and love
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text

First look: Rebecca Ferguson as Olivia Walker in "A House of Dynamite" (2025) dir. Kathryn Bigelow.
45 notes
·
View notes
Text

5 notes
·
View notes
Text
Beauty inside and outside🤩🤩🤩🤩 Tom Cruise


60 notes
·
View notes
Text








The Mummy, Zero G plane stunt behind the scenes
His smile 🥰😍
34 notes
·
View notes
Text
Ethan Hunt would beat the Kobayashi Maru by immediately volunteering to sacrifice himself and then pulling out the most amazing and unbelievable stunt to win and then to everyone’s surprise, including himself, he actually survives
83 notes
·
View notes
Text







Rebecca Ferguson | Interview for Vogue Scandinavia |
54 notes
·
View notes
Text
These two... I swear to God guys (x post)
40 notes
·
View notes
Text





Rebecca Ferguson photographed by Lee Malone | Flaunt Magazine | 2024
21 notes
·
View notes
Text

31 notes
·
View notes
Text
Good luck🔑



52 notes
·
View notes
Text
guess who rewatched silo again
145 notes
·
View notes
Text

Rebecca Ferguson as Ilsa Faust and Tom Cruise as Ehtan Hunt | "Shoes Please" | Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation | 2015
37 notes
·
View notes
Text







What I would do to experience this whole movie again for the first time 💙
23 notes
·
View notes
Text
Man, The Final Reckoning really just serves as....a wholesale rejection of the entire idea of destiny.
The Entity insists that Ethan's destiny is to help it bring about the destruction of the world, no matter what he tries to do to stop it. Grace insists Ethan should take control of the Entity, that he is "meant to do this." The Entity says the humans will destroy themselves, believing they have no choice.
And then...none of that happens. They stop the Entity, they trap it. The President chooses not to press the button, not to sacrifice some lives for others, the exact same principle that has guided Ethan since the beginning. They push back against the very idea of destiny. They emphatically say, No, we make our own choices. Nothing is set. Nothing is written.
And Luther's final message to Ethan fully drives home that point. He says "this was your destiny," and then spends the rest of the message entirely redefining the very concept of destiny. It isn't inevitable. It wasn't "some quirk of fate." It's all about the choices we make.
The Final Reckoning was the perfect conclusion to a film series that is all about the power of choice.
124 notes
·
View notes