Mission Impossible Ghost Protocol Script -
On the page, this sequence is almost poetic in its minimalism. The action lines are tight, clinical, and terrifying: EXT. BURJ KHALIFA - DAY ETHAN launches himself into the void. The magnet fails. He falls three stories before it catches. His body SLAMS against the glass. 1,300 feet of empty air below his heels. The genius is in the silence. The script knows that the audience's breath will be held. It doesn't over-write. It simply places the character in the most vulnerable position imaginable and cuts the safety line.
Ghost Protocol delivers three masterful set-pieces, each serving a different dramatic purpose: mission impossible ghost protocol script
Ethan Hunt dangles from a skyscraper not because it looks cool—but because his team was disavowed, the magnet failed, and the door was locked. That's screenwriting alchemy: turning the impossible into the inevitable. On the page, this sequence is almost poetic
The script cleverly subverts expectations. The team successfully infiltrates the Russian archives... only to discover they've been set up. When the Kremlin explodes, the mission fails spectacularly. This is the "all is lost" moment placed at the end of the first act—a risky structural choice that pays off by throwing the audience into pure chaos. The magnet fails
In the pantheon of action cinema, few fourth installments have any right to be good. Fewer still have the audacity to be great. But when Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol exploded onto IMAX screens in December 2011, it didn't just defy expectations—it rewrote the rulebook for blockbuster storytelling.
This sequence is the screenplay's most famous contribution to action cinema. Trapped on the 130th floor of the world's tallest building, with a dead contact and a failing magnetic suit, Ethan Hunt must scale the exterior glass.