Box office On opening day,
Mission: Impossible 2 made $12.5 million, making it the fourth-highest-grossing Wednesday opening, behind
Men in Black,
Independence Day and
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace. Playing at 3,653, it had the largest number of screenings of any film, beating
Scream 3. It grossed $57,845,297, crossing over
Toy Story 2 to have the third-highest-grossing opening weekend of all time, behind
The Lost World: Jurassic Park and
The Phantom Menace. The TV show opening weekend record would be held for seven years until
The Simpsons Movie was released in 2007. Additionally,
Mission: Impossible 2 would maintain the biggest opening weekend for a
Tom Cruise film for five years until 2005 when
War of the Worlds replaced it. Within its first eight days of release, it earned a total $100.1 million, not only making it the third film of the year to reach the $100 million mark, after
Erin Brockovich and
Gladiator, but the fourth-fastest film to do so as well. When
Mission: Impossible 2 first opened, the film was ranked
number one at the US box office, beating
Dinosaur,
Shanghai Noon,
Gladiator and
Road Trip. For the film's second weekend, it collected a total of $27 million, outgrossing ''
Big Momma's House in the process. It held on to the number one spot for a total of two weekends until it was overtaken by Gone in 60 Seconds. Mission: Impossible 2
was the most recent film to top the box office for multiple weekends until Hollow Man that August. During its third weekend, the film went on to become the highest-grossing film of the year in the US, surpassing Gladiator
. It would remain so until that December when it was dethroned by How the Grinch Stole Christmas''. It started its international release on June 1, 2000, and topped the
Australian box office with a gross of $3.7 million (A$6.4 million) in its opening 4-day weekend from 366 screens, a record for
United International Pictures. It was a big success in Japan, recording the second biggest opening ever behind
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace with a gross of $13.6 million from 356 screens, grossing over $50 million in just over three weeks and $94 million in total. It recorded the biggest July opening in Germany with a four-day gross of $7.9 million and had record openings in Austria ($1.3 million) and Russia ($0.3 million). At the end of its run,
Mission: Impossible 2 eventually grossed $215,409,889 in the United States and Canada and $330,978,216 in other territories for a total worldwide gross of $546,388,105, making it the highest-grossing film of 2000. The film was also the third-highest-grossing film of that year in the US, behind
How the Grinch Stole Christmas and
Cast Away. It is John Woo's highest-grossing film, surpassing
Face/Off, and was the highest-grossing film in the
Mission: Impossible series until the release of the fourth film,
Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol, in 2011.
Critical response Review aggregation website
Rotten Tomatoes indicates
Mission: Impossible 2 has an overall approval rating of 57% based on 209 reviews, with an average rating of 5.9/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Your cranium may crave more substance, but your eyes will feast on the amazing action sequences."
Metacritic assigned the film a weighted average score of 59 out of 100, based on 40 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale, down from the first film's "B+".
Roger Ebert of the
Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film three out of four stars, stating "if the first movie was entertaining as sound, fury, and movement, this one is more evolved, more confident, more sure-footed in the way it marries minimal character development to seamless action."
Shawn Levy of
The Oregonian gave the film a "B+", stating that "if you've ever wished that a really good action director -- John Woo, say -- would make a
James Bond film, you can stop wishing." J. Hoberman of
The Village Voice called the film "a vaguely absurd thriller filled with elaborately superfluous setups and shamelessly stale James Bond riffs." Dennis Harvey of
Variety said the film is "even more empty a luxury vehicle than its predecessor" and that it "pushes the envelope in terms of just how much flashy packaging an audience will buy when there's absolutely nada inside."
Jonathan Rosenbaum of the
Chicago Reader said that "no hero or villain winds up carrying any moral weight at all." In a retrospective commentary in 2012, Brad Brevet noted the film has significant similarities in plot and themes to
Alfred Hitchcock's 1946 film
Notorious.
Accolades Mission: Impossible 2 won both Best Male Performance for Tom Cruise and Best Action Sequence at the
MTV Movie Awards. However, it was also nominated for two
Golden Raspberry Awards at the
2000 ceremony, including
Worst Remake or Sequel and
Worst Supporting Actress for Thandiwe Newton as well as nominated for a
Stinker Award at the
2000 ceremony for Worst Song (Limp Bizkit's "Take a Look Around"). ==Sequel==