The Last Action Hero



buy Lyrica Tom Cruise once invited me to a Mission: Impossible set.

It was Mission: Impossible III, directed by J.J. Abrams. I had to drive a good 45 minutes into the California desert to get there. But when I arrived, there was nothing desert about it. There were crashed cars everywhere. A freeway overpass split in half by a controlled detonation. A helicopter hovering on standby.

Tom’s scene called for him to run full-speed through the debris, leap over the hood of a scorched-out car, and sprint away from a rising helicopter skimming a wrecked freeway set.

In the middle of the take, as blades chopped overhead and dust flew, Tom Cruise turned, locked eyes with me, grinned and shouted:

“Scott, are you having fun yet?”

I’ll never forget it. Because I knew he was.

Tom Cruise is the last action hero.

In a world of pixels, he bets his body.

In Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning (2025), Cruise walks the wing of a biplane mid-flight, upside down, no visible harness. He dives into a submarine in a 125-pound diving suit. He leads a full-speed sled chase through the Arctic. He throws fists on Paris rooftops with the Eiffel Tower in the background.

It follows what he did just one movie earlier: base-jumped off a cliff on a motorcycle. Held his breath underwater for six minutes. Skydived from 25,000 feet. Clung to a moving train. Hung off the side of an Airbus as it took off.

He’s not just starring in these. He’s building them.

Cruise produces these movies. He greenlights the stunts before the scripts. He’s the last actor in Hollywood designing blockbusters around physical action instead of digital illusion.

He’s an unadopted Wachowski. A man trying to make films that still make you say, How in the world did they do that?—not What software did they use?

And it’s working. Top Gun: Maverick hauled in $1.5 billion and helped pull theaters back from the brink. Even Dead Reckoning, in a crowded release slate, outperformed most green-screened franchises struggling to recapture relevance.

Because when you go to a Tom Cruise movie, you’re not just watching a character on a screen.

You’re watching a man still willing to sprint straight into danger—just to show you what movies can do.

And yes, Tom, I was having a blast.

Silensomg

http://vintagegoodness.com/category/news-updates/ Silensong

The bird does not sing because it has skill.
The bird sings because it has a melody.


It sings
because silence

too long held
becomes ache.

It sings
as rivers do—without purpose,
but with direction.


We keep looking for meaning
in the rhythm of wings,
in the cadence of chirps,
as if thesis hides there,
as if beauty were a proof
awaiting defense.


But the bird sings
the way fire glows,
the way tides reach:
not because it must,
but because it is.

’Mickey 17’ Kicks Buckets


The best way to enjoy Mickey 17 is to stop asking questions and let Robert Pattinson die as many times as he damn well pleases.

That’s not an insult. It’s actually the film’s entire premise—and its charm. Bong Joon-ho’s return to sci-fi absurdity, after the Oscar-winning Parasite, is less a follow-up than a flex.

Mickey 17 is visually gorgeous, narratively bonkers, and unapologetically weird. It’s also uneven and occasionally exhausting. But like a well-made clone, it keeps getting up and trying again.

The plot, adapted loosely from Edward Ashton’s novel, follows Mickey Barnes (Pattinson), a low-ranking worker designated as an “Expendable.” When Mickey dies, a new version is printed and sent back to work. That would be fine—except one version refuses to die, and another refuses to disappear, and suddenly there are two Mickeys running around trying to figure out who gets to be the real one.

If it sounds like Moon met Snowpiercer on an ayahuasca retreat, you’re not far off. Bong revels in the existential dread and bureaucratic lunacy of it all. He populates his ice-planet colony with oddballs, corporate overlords, and a suspiciously calm Toni Collette.

Pattinson, for his part, plays each Mickey with subtle distinction, creating layers of identity out of a man built to be disposable. His performance is more than game—it’s brave, and at times, hilarious.

But Mickey 17 isn’t for everyone. The satire is sharp but scattered, and the pacing buckles under the weight of its own cleverness. At two hours and change, the film starts to feel like a Russian nesting doll of ideas: fascinating, but hard to hold.

That said, it’s refreshing to see a studio science-fiction film with this much personality. In an era of algorithmic storytelling, Mickey 17 is defiantly odd, stubbornly human, and messily alive.

You’ll leave with questions, yes—but you’ll also leave with images and ideas that stick, like frostbite on the soul.

And if nothing else, you’ll get to see Robert Pattinson bicker with himself, which might be the most 2025 thing Hollywood has done yet.