‘Mission Impossible 7’ Gets Title Reveal at CinemaCon

Paramount unveiled first look at Tom Cruise’s upcoming mission as Ethan Hunt in the Mission Impossible franchise along with a title reveal: Mission: Impossible 7–Dead Reckoning Part 1.
The news broke during the studio’s CinecomCon presentation inside The Colosseum in Caesars Palace, shared by Cruise himself. But before he did that, Paramount chief Brian Robbins took the stage and complimented Cruise as the “hardest-working and most daring performer in Hollywood,” before confirming that the actor would not be in Las Vegas today as he’s filming. But he did deliver a “special message,” true to the compliment and his CinemaCon history.

A yellow plane then appeared with helmer Christopher McQuarrie inside and he instructed Cruise that it was time to go.
Before flying off, Cruise introduced the first look at the film’s trailer, followed by Top Gun: Maverick in its entirety.
“Let’s all try to have a great summer. See you at the movies!” The plane then veered left and took a steep drop down into the canyon in a death-defying stunt. The CinemaCon crowd loved it.
The seventh Mission: Impossible is due out July 14, 2023, with an eighth and final Mission picture due out June 28, 2024.
The cast for the new films includes Rebecca Ferguson, Hayley Atwell, Ving Rhames, Henry Czerny, Simon Pegg, Vanessa Kirby, Angela Bassett, Cary Elwes, Indira Varma, Rob Delaney and Charles Parnell.
Cruise’s Mission: Impossible stunts have become hallmark of CinemaCon, with the actor sharing footage of his latest death-defying feat.
At last year’s CinemaCon, he and Mission filmmaker McQuarrie showed off a motorbike jump off a massive cliff in a remote section of Norway.
The installment follows blockbuster titles:
Mission: Impossible–Fallout (2018), Mission: Impossible– Rogue Nation (2015), Mission: Impossible–Ghost Protocol (2011), Mission: Impossible III (2006), Mission: Impossible II (2000) and Mission: Impossible (1996).
Paramount presentation kicked off the final day of CinemaCon, the annual convention hosted by the National Association of Theatre Owners. This year is especially crucial for exhibitors as they try to emerge from the pandemic crisis and compete with streamers.
CinemaCon was canceled altogether in 2020, while last year’s event was a pared-down version held in late August, versus its traditional late-spring slot. This year, all five major Hollywood studios plus Lionsgate and Neon are touting upcoming slates during their time onstage inside The Colosseum at Caesars Palace.
CinemaCon 2022 runs April 25-28.