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Tom Cruise Drives an Electric Fiat in New 'Mission Impossible' Film

a yellow fiat 500 drifts over cobblestones in mission impossible dead reckoning part 1
Tom Cruise Drives An Electric Fiat in New Mission Paramount Pictures - Car and Driver
  • The unexpected start of Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part One is an electric-powered Fiat 500.

  • The seventh film in the Mission: Impossible franchise opens on July 12. Here's a teaser showing the behind-the-scenes filming of the car chases.

  • The unusual hero car is a vintage Fiat 500, built specially with electric power to be faster and wilder, and it's shot for visceral thrills with real, practical stunts rather than CGI effects.

Opening next month, Mission: Impossible—Dead Reckoning Part One looks to replicate the box office success of Top Gun: Maverick. Top Gun was all about real stunts over CGI, and this latest entrant in Tom Cruise's long-running thriller series looks to also have genuine vehicular carnage. The latest teaser goes behind the scenes of the centerpiece car chase set in Rome, and it also shines a light on the unlikely hero car: a cheeky little vintage Fiat 500.

Powered by a two-cylinder engine that never got a displacement bigger than a bottle of wine, even in the hottest Abarth-tuned models, the average 500 moves slower than a four-course Italian lunch. But in the world of Mission: Impossible, there's a trick up every sleeve. We first encounter the little yellow Fiat parked up beside a gray Ferrari F12 TdF. Having ditched a battered 5-series, Tom Cruise and Haley Atwell—handcuffed together for greater drama—head straight for the Ferrari as a potential getaway car. Ah, but wait, here comes the Fiat.

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Gone is the clattery two-cylinder engine, and based on the whir of acceleration, it seems to be powered by an electric motor. Judging by the tire-roasting antics as the Fiat 500 drifts over the cobblestones of Rome, there's significantly more power on tap here. The thing sounds like an enraged hand blender and goes like a wasp. In the teaser, Cruise describes the 500 as "wild."

yellow fiat 500 drifts around rome
Paramount Pictures - Car and Driver

It's not the first time a Fiat 500 has starred in a wild car chase. We see the choice of the 500 as a nod to one of the best animated car chases of all time. The 1979 film The Castle of Cagliostro marked the directorial debut of Japanese animator Hayao Miyazaki, who would go on to co-found Studio Ghibli. Notable for films like Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro, Miyazaki is as beloved in Japan as Disney is here.

yellow fiat parked in front of lupin poster
Stellantis - Car and Driver