It’s turning out to be quite a summer for superspies and supercomputers.
A month after the action feast of Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part I, in which Tom Cruise faced off with an AI supervillain called “the Entity,” comes a very MI-like international espionage thriller with an equally fancy and powerful machine.
Heart of Stone stars Gal Gadot as Rachel Stone, an agent for an elite and clandestine intelligence agency called the Charter. Like Mission: Impossible, Heart of Stone hits glamorous global destinations (the Italian Alps, Lisbon, Senegal, Iceland) and features lengthy action sequences including a wingsuit skydive.
Whereas Dead Reckoning pushed old-school filmmaking to extremes for a gripping theatrical experience, Heart of Stone revels in its digital wizardry, feels vaguely algorithm-y in its conception and was made for Netflix. Both films, interestingly, are products of the same production company, Skydance.
Mission: Impossible was born out of the Cold War, but Heart of Stone conjures a peacekeeping spy unit outside of nationhood in the hopes of kickstarting a new franchise uncluttered by governments — a globetrotting spy movie without all those pesky geopolitics; a borderless intelligence agency for a borderless streaming era.



