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Fleet of BMWs Used in Mission: Impossible Fallout on Display at BMW Welt

BMW Welt showing Mission Impossible cars 14 photos
Photo: BMW
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It’s a while now since Tom Cruise’s latest spy adventures in the Mission: Impossible franchise hit the big screens, and the flic has already earned some $500 million from worldwide viewers. But, for some reason or another, interest in the movie is dropping.
Luckily for Cruise&Co, there are some willing to keep people coming to theaters, one month into the screenings, by any means possible. Like BMW, for instance, which has vested interest in the movie.

For some of the scenes in the movie, the producers decided, for the third time in a row, to go for a number of BMW cars to shoot some of the most spectacular chases in Fallout. These machines are as of this past weekend on display at the BMW Welt museum in Munich.

As a means to properly introduce the new stars of the museum, BMW invited over the weekend 800 people to attend a screening of the movie. And with it, learn a thing or two about the carmaker’s involvement with Mission: Impossible franchise that goes back to 2011.

“In the previous two films, Mission: Impossible Ghost Protocol and Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation, BMW used its collaboration with the movie franchise to showcase the future visions and technologies of tomorrow,” the carmaker said in a statement.

For Fallout, the Germans had to supply a 7 Series saloon, the new BMW M5 and a BMW R nineT Scrambler motorcycle. But the star of the movie is likely to be the M5 E28 from 1986, involved in a chase through the French capital while drifting around corners and leaping over steps.

All the models to be seen in the movie are now in Munich, shining alongside movie posters, TV spots, and clips of the chase sequences. They will all be available for visitors until the end of September, free of charge. As will the exclusive behind-the-scenes clip that will show on the premises.

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About the author: Daniel Patrascu
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Daniel loves writing (or so he claims), and he uses this skill to offer readers a "behind the scenes" look at the automotive industry. He also enjoys talking about space exploration and robots, because in his view the only way forward for humanity is away from this planet, in metal bodies.
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