Mission: Impossible 7 Director Christopher McQuarrie FINALLY Opens Up On Accusations Of Blowing Up A 111-Year-Old Monument For The Film (Photo Credit: IMDb)

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As major Hollywood production companies re-enter the production of their stalled projects, one of the major projects set to resume is Mission: Impossible. Writer-director Christopher McQuarrie and star Tom Cruise collaborations are widely known for numerous jaw-dropping stunts and major practical setpieces. The duo’s collaboration is once again set to continue that tradition with the upcoming sequels of the franchise.

Over the past few months, controversy emerged about a sequence for Mission: Impossible 7 set in Poland, which includes attempting to destroy a historical bridge in the country. Several media reports had picked up on the story and pushed it to the forefront of the conversation. The controversy has resulted in an unwanted headache for a production that had to vacate Italy in the early days of the coronavirus epidemic and has yet to resume.

Christopher McQuarrie, director of Mission: Impossible 7, released a statement to Empire to set the record straight regarding the reported inaccuracies and placing the proposed sequence of the partial bridge destruction in Poland. He plainly stated that there was never a plan to destroy the 111-year-old protected monument. However, as storyboarded by the great Mark Bristol, there was an early sequence where part of a bridge was destroyed. The production team choose the bridge in question involving a body of water after a broad search for a non-functioning bridge in Poland. He further stated that it was Poland that suggested the bridge as they were looking to clean up the area to promote tourism and needed to update the bridge. This means part of it would have to be destroyed to make way for the new upgrades.

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