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・ Imprint Records
・ Imprinted brain theory
・ Imprinted stamp
・ Imprinter
・ Impossible Foods
・ Impossible is nothing
・ Impossible Is Nothing (Iggy Azalea song)
・ Impossible Is Nothing (Tonic Breed song)
・ Impossible Is Nothing (video résumé)
・ Impossible Love EP
・ Impossible Man
・ Impossible Mission
・ Impossible Mission (2007 game)
・ Impossible Mission 2025
・ Impossible Mission II
Impossible Missions Force
・ Impossible Monsters
・ Impossible Motherhood
・ Impossible object
・ Impossible on Saturday
・ Impossible Pictures
・ Impossible Princess
・ Impossible Project
・ Impossible Ragtime Theater
・ Impossible Remixes
・ Impossible Spaces
・ Impossible Spell Card
・ Impossible syndrome
・ Impossible Things
・ Impossible to Miss You


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Impossible Missions Force : ウィキペディア英語版
Impossible Missions Force

The Impossible Missions Force (IMF) is a fictional agency that is depending on the media, an independent espionage agency in the television version or a governmental agency in the films version – used by the United States government. The IMF was introduced in the TV series ''Mission: Impossible'' that was broadcast from 1966 through 1973, and later in the revival TV series shown from 1988 through 1990. Beginning in 1996, the IMF has been featured in a number of motion pictures that starred Tom Cruise as Ethan Hunt, including ''Mission: Impossible,'' ''Mission: Impossible II,'' ''Mission: Impossible III,'' ''Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol,'' and ''Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation.
==Methods==
In the TV series, thanks largely to the involvements of William Read Woodfield (1928–2001) and Allan Balter as the producers, story editors, and scriptwriters, the IMF operated primarily by using confidence tricks, infiltration, and high technology devices on its targets. The agents of the IMF were able to deceive their targets into cooperating with them without detecting any kind of deception until the "impossible mission" was carried out. By that time, the IMF team members had all vanished from the scene and/or left the target country. In some cases, especially involving organized crime, the mission targets were actually killed as a direct result of the IMF's work, though never actually by any IMF agents themselves.
Woodfield was a devotee of the book ''The Big Con'', written by the linguist David W. Maurer, and Woodfield and Balter consulted it as one of the "testaments" in their "Bible" for the TV series. Its other "testament" was a short four-page outline that they based partially on the principles of the writing instructor Lajos Egri, the author of the book ''The Art of Dramatic Writing'' that Egri had published in 1946.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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