Tom Cruise 2025: Why Mission Impossible star just can’t quit cult life
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There’s a well-known anecdote American Psycho director Mary Harron has told about Christian Bale’s inspiration for the titular sociopath.
By Harron’s account, Bale had seen an interview of Cruise on David Letterman, and he saw in Cruise this, “very intense friendliness with nothing behind the eyes”, and told the director this was the energy he wanted to channel.
Cruise has been a magnet of the silver screen since he backflipped off that car in The Outsiders, the only actor in the large ensemble of up-and-comers who could pull it off, according to his co-star Rob Lowe.
Lowe once shared a story of when they were teenagers auditioning for the Francis Ford Coppola movie, and when Cruise discovered they were to share a room at New York City’s Plaza Hotel, he went “ballistic”.
Lowe didn’t tell this story as a window into diva celebrity behaviour, but to score that Cruise, at 18 years old and with nothing more than minor roles in three movies to his name, already knew who he was and who he was going to be, that he was, as Lowe put it, “the real deal”.
That’s the kind of intensity that has marked Cruise’s career for more than 40 years. With the release of Mission: Impossible – The Final Reckoning nabbing a franchise-best opening box office, Cruise back on top. He is undeniably the world’s biggest movie star.
He sashayed down the Cannes Film Festival red carpet, grinned and posed at premieres in London and New York City. He was hailed as the saviour of the cinematic experience with his commitment to doing his own high-octane, eye-popping stunts, literally putting his body on the line so audiences can be entertained with a spectacle.
After 29 years as Ethan Hunt, it’s hard to tell where Cruise ends and Hunt begins. Tom Cruise is Ethan Hunt is Tom Cruise. That’s the mythology Cruise and his team have been since he dangled off the Burj Khalifa in the fourth film.
When the script of M:I8 thanks Hunt for saving the world time and again, and when multiple characters say that Hunt is only person who can defeat the blurry AI villain from destroying humanity in a nuclear holocaust, it’s a not-so-subtle nod reinforcing Cruise’s Messiah complex.
In case you missed it, Cruise is here to save the movie industry. As its self-appointed greatest champion, in an age when his compatriots straddle screens both large and small, Cruise has still never done TV or streaming, unless you count an episode of anthology series Fallen Angel he directed in 1993.
From HALO jumps to holding his breath underwater for six minutes, and hanging off planes, trains and automobiles, Cruise’s antics are reserved for the big screen. He’s not a compromise kind of guy – he fought Paramount when it threatened to release Top Gun: Maverick on streaming during the pandemic.
During Covid, he was photographed, mask on, at a cinema watching Christopher Nolan’s Tenet, and has posted pictures of himself holding tickets to see Barbie, Oppenheimer and Sinners. Steven Spielberg told him he saved cinema’s arse, after Maverick’s $US1.5 billion box office haul.
The way he eats popcorn goes viral. Everyone in Hollywood wants to be on his Christmas cake list.
He was easily forgiven for swearing and yelling at crew on the set of Mission: Impossible 7 for breaking Covid protocols, because it was in the name of cinema. It’s because he loves the movies so much, you know? That’s a cult we can get behind.
If that leaked audio had come out two decades ago and not five years ago, it would’ve been a different story.
Last Friday, it was 20 years to the day when Cruise jumped up and down on Oprah Winfrey’s yellow couch, declaring his unadulterated love for Katie Holmes. It was a moment of seeming pure adulation, but rather than sweet, it was cringe. It killed something in his allure.
A month later, in an interview with Matt Lauer, Cruise got into it with the now disgraced American broadcaster over anti-depressants. Earlier in the month, Cruise had criticised Brooke Shields, who said she used them to deal with post-partum depression, and when Lauer challenged him, Cruise got his hackles up.
With a defensive posture and a stern expression, he went in, “Matt, Matt, Matt, Matt, Matt, you’re glib, you don’t even know what Ritalin is”. He said Shields didn’t understand the history of psychiatry and that it was a “pseudoscience”.
These were defining moments in pop culture because no matter how charismatic Cruise was on screen, these two manic episodes brought to the fore the aspect of his celebrity the wider public were not so comfortable with – his Scientology faith.
The couch jump was one thing, and in isolation, might’ve just been that week’s punchline, although the timing of it coincided with the rise of YouTube.
But everything Cruise was filtered through the context of his association with the controversial religious sect. That Lauer confrontation was rooted in Scientology’s opposition to psychiatry and psychiatric drugs.
Content retrieved from: https://thenightly.com.au/culture/film/tom-cruise-2025-how-mission-impossible-star-just-cant-quit-cult-life-c-18827616.