Mission: Impossible 8 Underwater? Submarine Malfunction Delays Filming Again
Christopher McQuarrie’s eighth “Mission: Impossible” film has been hit by bad luck again with the reasoning this time due to, of all things, submarine malfunction.
The Daily Mail reports that the production has been using a $25 million submarine for scenes, but the gimbal used to lower it in water jammed under its weight and is in need of weeks of repair.
This has led to the shoot, which already saw a nine-month delay due to the strikes and only just began filming again in March, pushed back further and sending the rising costs of the film even higher.
World of Reel is reporting that the film’s current budget is said to be nearing $400 million though that certainly hasn’t been confirmed in any way.
If true, it’s not a good number after Paramount reportedly lost close to $100 million on the seventh film when it underperformed at the box-office last summer.
Prior to the strikes, McQuarrie stated that around 40% of the new and likely final ‘Mission’ movie was shot including its big set pieces in Africa and the Arctic.
Much of the production has filmed in the UK at Longcross Studios, but the film’s biggest action sequence has yet to be shot.
Tom Cruise, Ving Rhames, Simon Pegg, Hayley Atwell, Vanessa Kirby, Esai Morales, Holt McCallany, Nick Offerman, Janet McTeer, Hannah Waddingham and Lucy Tulugarjuk co-star in the new entry which is currently slated for May 2025.
As Trump teases new tariffs aimed at punishing studios for filming overseas, California is quietly trying to win back Hollywood’s business the old-fashioned way: with a boatload of cash.
Governor Gav...
Hollywood power players aren’t waiting for the next Trump tweet to figure out what comes next. On Friday, studio execs from the likes of Netflix, Disney, Amazon, and Warner Bros. quietly dialed in to ...
The Aussie film industry has a message for Mel Gibson: Call your friend Trump and tell him to cool it with the movie tariffs. After Donald Trump’s May 4 announcement of a 100% tariff on all films prod...
It’s official: New York State has supercharged its production incentives. With Gov. Kathy Hochul signing the delayed state budget into law, producers can now count on a significantly sweeter deal to s...
PIXOMONDO (PXO), the award-winning virtual production and VFX powerhouse behind House of the Dragon, The Boys, and Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, has officially launched its newest LED Volume in Vanco...
In a pitch that’s part federal incentive playbook, part retro syndication revival, and part tariff-laden curveball, Jon Voight — actor, Trump ally, and self-declared Special Ambassador to Hollywood — ...
In a plot twist no one saw coming, California Governor Gavin Newsom has signaled he’s ready to join forces with none other than Donald Trump on a potential $7.5 billion federal tax credit for the U.S....
As Hollywood continues to navigate rising costs, lingering strike aftershocks, and the looming threat of Trump-era tariffs on foreign-made films, a surprising new player is stepping more firmly onto t...
A proposed 100% tariff on all movies "produced in Foreign Lands?" In a surprise Truth Social post, the President called runaway production a “National Security threat,” claiming foreign incentives and...
With productions fleeing California and American soundstages sitting idle, Jon Voight is stepping into a new role—not as an actor, but as a self-appointed ambassador trying to rescue domestic film pro...