After reading three, I personally think 1>3>2.
The highlight of the third part is the love line between Ethan and Julia, especially Ethan worried that Julia was caught, and a series of performances when he went to rescue her, racing, running, and designing some difficult plans with very low safety, you can see Out really cares about Julia.
A conversation that I find very touching:
Ethan: I'll see you back home.
Luther: You know they probabaly plan to kill you both.
Ethan: Then I won't see you back home.
Ethan very lightly revealed his determination to save his lover, even if he took his own life, if Julia died, he would die with her. People like Ethan also have a very tender side, love it.
Personally, I feel that the film is unreasonable, but I like it very much by changing the interpretation. Ethan electrocuted himself with a bomb in his head, believing that Julia could save him. Handing the gun to Julia to let her protect herself, the whole process of teaching the pistol was less than a minute orally, but Julia acted like she had been trained and had some rich experience, not like a novice at all. The bullet swept away the enemy. If I were to explain it, I felt that this was the infinite potential that was stimulated to protect the man I loved. In a peaceful environment, Julia must not have been able to do this without training.
Of course, in addition to the love line, there are still remarkable parts as a whole.
For example, the reversal of Brassel and Musgrave's villain identities. At first, because of the news that Lindsey brought back, he thought that Brassel was the villain. The character who brought him into the villain felt that he was suspicious everywhere, and Musgrave was always helping Ethan. I didn't expect that Musgrave was the one. The person who colluded with Davien.
Ethan is still the same Ethan who can only climb the roof and can complete all kinds of impossible tasks. Also, Benji is really cute hahaha ꈍ◡ꈍ
View more about Mission: Impossible III reviews