Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
LIVING UNDER THE RADAR
Bangkok Post
|May 29, 2025
A Mission: Impossible fan favourite returns 3 decades later — even he’s surprised
When Rolf Saxon first auditioned to play William Donloe in Brian De Palma's 1996 Mission: Impossible, he didn’t think he had gotten the role of the bumbling CIA analyst who is outsmarted by Tom Cruise's Ethan Hunt during a break-in at Langley headquarters.
He waited an hour-and-a-half for De Palma, who then saw him for just five minutes. Saxon figured that was it. But not only did he get the role, making him a crucial player in what would become an iconic scene, he’s now back playing that same character nearly 30 years later in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning.
It’s a return that distinctly raises the profile of the self-described “jobbing actor”, who spent the past 10 years mostly doing theatre in the San Francisco Bay Area.
“When this came along, it was like, ‘Wow, are you kidding?,” he said in a video interview. “This is fantastic. This is a nice little cherry on top.”
In the first film, Donloe has only a few minutes of screen time. He’s a working stooge who is poisoned by Ethan's team in its quest to steal a list of covert agents off his computer housed in a secure vault. While Donloe goes back and forth to the bathroom to throw up, Ethan drops down from a ceiling vent to pull off his caper.
When Donloe returns to the vault, he finds a knife on his desk and realises he messed up big time. His fate is sealed by Kittridge, the Impossible Mission Force official, who says: “I want him manning a radar tower in Alaska by the end of the day.” Donloe’s main role is collateral damage.
Bu hikaye Bangkok Post dergisinin May 29, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Bangkok Post'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Bangkok Post
Banpu consolidation drives clean energy transition
Nickel investment, Al to boost efficiency
2 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
WTA players divided on 'best-of-five' Slam proposal
World No.1 Aryna Sabalenka on Tuesday voiced her support for a proposal to make women's matches best-of-five sets during the later stages of Grand Slam tournaments.
2 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Curb online hate now
As Thailand and Cambodia observe a truce, a group of social media users is pursuing aggressive online campaigns to incite hatred between the peoples of the two countries.
2 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Govt offers visa relief after flights canned
Immigration waives overstay penalties
1 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Adidas shares fall as 2026 profit outlook disappoints
Adidas shares sank as much as 7% in early trading after the German sportswear group issued a profit outlook for 2026 that missed market expectations, overshadowing news that it extended CEO Bjorn Gulden's contract to the end of 2030.
1 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Pundits push for productivity
Economists urge the incoming government to focus on improving the country's productivity and addressing corruption to better support Thai GDP growth amid uncertain times over the next four years.
2 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Microsoft backs local AI-driven legal reform
Balanced approach to Al regulation crucial
3 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
32 sailors rescued from Iran frigate
Sri Lanka rescued 32 “critically wounded” sailors aboard the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena, which sank yesterday just outside the island’s territorial waters, Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath said.
1 mins
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Tinted screens
Re: “We don't need Seven Dangerous Days”, (Opinion, Feb 27).
1 min
March 05, 2026
Bangkok Post
Fuel price rises start to bite
Ripple effect goes nationwide amid panic-buying, stockpiling, write Assawin Pakkawan, Prasit Tangprasert and Panumet Tanraksa
4 mins
March 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
