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Before Tom Cruise became famous for running with the intensity of a cheetah, he was known for being the spy who never said no to a mission. The first Mission Impossible movie, which pretty much made Cruises career, had one scene that really sealed the fate of the franchise. Whats more impossible than breaking into a CIA vault, anyway?! The scene features Ethan Hunt (Cruises character) descending into a vault with a myriad of sensors. Suspended by a harness, Hunt is lowered down into the vault by his accomplice Luther (played by Ving Rhames), and the entire anxiety-inducing scene involves Hunt carefully hacking into a computer without getting caught up until a bead of sweat falls from his brow, triggering the intruder alerts.Built as a LEGO Ideas submission, this set recreates the pulse-tightening vault descent from Mission: Impossible (1996), a film that rebooted the spy genre with quiet intensity and a very committed Cruise. You dont need to rewatch the scene to remember the tension: the sweat, the silence, the sudden rat in the air duct. What LEGO fan MoniBricks has done is distill all of that stress-inducing elegance into a diorama that fits neatly on a shelf but still messes with your nerves.Designer: MoniBricksThe core of the build centers on the vault itselfa claustrophobic white chamber with just enough detail to hit you with flashbacks. The ventilation shaft, the computer terminals, the slick floor that can detect a feathers landing its all there. But the star of the show is undoubtedly LEGO Ethan, outfitted with a micro harness and cable, frozen mid-drop. The minifigs arms are flailed just enough to suggest his desperate balance, echoing Cruises own gymnastic tension as he hovers millimeters above disaster.Zoom in closer, and the micro-details keep delivering. The computer terminal Ethan hacks into looks like it was stolen from a vintage 90s labblocky, overengineered, and exactly right. The tiny floppy disk piece hes holding? Thats not just LEGO cleverness, its historical accuracy. This isnt a modern spy caper with sleek digital clouds and retinal scans. This was 1996tech was tactile, interfaces were clunky, and stealing data looked like copying a Word doc off an office desktop.The set even includes the adjoining briefing room, complete with two CIA agents one a receptionist, the other a scientist with credentials to access the vault. It gives the entire model a kind of dioramic richnessyoure not just looking at one scene, youre witnessing a covert operation unfolding in parallel spaces.For fans of the film, the build is a joy. For LEGO fans, its a technical treat. I think it could become a special Lego set because it does justice to a masterpiece film and because the details inside the set will entertain anyone who has the opportunity to build it, says LEGO master builder MoniBricks. With over 1,000 votes and a Staff Pick badge, this MOC (My Own Creation) is inching towards the 10,000 vote mark, following which it gets sent to LEGOs internal team to review and (hopefully) get turned into a retail box set. You can vote for the LEGO Ideas Mission: Impossible (1996) build on the LEGO Ideas website here.The post LEGO Recreates The Legendary Mission: Impossible Scene with Tom Cruise breaking into the CIA Vault first appeared on Yanko Design.