An uncomplicatedly bad villain used to feature in every action film worth its salt, but a more globalised industry has made the universally hated figure a tricky character to pull off

Early on in the new Mission Impossible film, a group of sharp-suited intelligence agents gather to discuss a grave new threat to national security. Their nemesis is apparently a “godless, stateless enemy” which is “everywhere and nowhere”, “a self-aware, self-learning, truth-eating digital parasite”. Your heart sinks slightly as you realise that Tom Cruise’s latest adversary is in fact a sentient computer code. An action movie without a real villain? Hans Gruber would be spinning in his grave.

Seasoned Cruise fans, though, will know not to panic. Last summer, Top Gun: Maverick pulled off the same trick, ticking every crowdpleasing action-movie convention except one: it had no bad guy. Instead – as with the original – “the enemy” was a carefully unspecified nation state, its only human representatives a handful of faceless fighter pilots who pop up in our heroes’ crosshairs at the end.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

‘I’m constantly fighting behind the scenes’ – Black comics on breaking down industry barriers

Gina Yashere, Stephen K Amos, Lenny Henry and Daliso Chaponda discuss rejecting…

French general in charge of Notre-Dame rebuild dies in mountain fall

Body of former chief of defence staff Jean-Louis Georgelin, 74, found on…

Victoria Lee cause of death

victoria lee death

Loto-vaccin quebec inscription

vaccination covid