Tom Cruise turned 60 last summer, just as Top Gun: Maverick was becoming the biggest blockbuster of 2022. Maverick brought audiences back to movie theaters after the pandemic years, giving them the joy of a cathartic military and moral triumph. It also gave Hollywood hope for the future, even as it lost more than 2,000 movie screens during the lockdowns and $14 billion in gross revenue last year alone.
Maverick handed Cruise the greatest box office success of his career, rivaling the superhero movies that have dominated Hollywood for the last 15 years. It made more than $700 million in the U.S., the fifth greatest box office in U.S. history, and a worldwide total of almost $1.5 billion. Its smash hit status arguably makes Cruise the most successful movie star ever in America.
Of course, Cruise has been too busy to celebrate. Heâs been working on his next movie, the seventh Mission: Impossible extravaganza, flying motorcycles off cliffs in breathtaking landscapes and then parachuting his way back to Earth, all for your viewing pleasure. Tom Cruise has been a celebrity for four decades. In TikTok time, that’s 10,000 trends.
Eat your heart out, MrBeast!
Now, you might not believe it, but after a career spent on-screen saving America, civilization, and even the world, from the Cold War to the era of digital technology, Tom Cruise has never won an Oscar. Itâs as though Hollywood were ashamed of him.
Itâs not so elsewhere. Maverick screened at the Cannes Film Festival, where Cruise was awarded an honorary Palme dâOr for his career, continuing a French tradition of honoring Hollywood talent more than Hollywood itself does. Barton Fink, Wild at Heart, and Sex, Lies and Videotape all won the Palme dâOr too, but none of them got an Oscar nod for Best Picture. Youâd think the Academy would have learned its lesson by now.
Well, tomorrow, the Oscars have the opportunity to do justice to Cruiseâs indefatigable efforts and, though he isnât nominated as a star, they can give him the statue as a producer, since heâs nominated for Best Picture for Maverick. It would be a fitting victory, too. No other actor has produced his own career with more care and professionalism.
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Steven Spielberg, the father of the blockbuster film and Americaâs beloved techno-magician for an entire generation, seems to be the only guy who gets it. He congratulated Cruise on Maverickâs success at the recent Oscars nominee luncheon, declaring: âYou saved Hollywoodâs ass. And you might have saved theatrical distribution. Seriously. Maverick might have saved the entire theatrical industry.â
Not everyone feels this way. Hosting the Golden Globes, comedian Jerrod Carmichael mocked Cruise for returning his Golden Globe statue in 2021 in protest against the Hollywood Foreign Press Associationâs lack of ethnic and gender diversity. Carmichael reminded the audience that Cruise is a Scientologist with a joke about Shelly Miscavige, wife of David Miscavige, Chairman of the Board of that cult. (Shelly has not been seen in public since 2007.) And at the Directors Guild of America Awards, Judd Apatow pilloried Cruise for being short and doing dangerous stunts at his age, calling that an âad for Scientology,â and reminding everyone that Cruise once embarrassed himself by jumping up and down on Oprahâs couch.
Itâs true: Scientology is a crazy cult, and it should not have tax-exempt status. But no one would accuse all Hollywood actors of being especially sane, or, Iâm guessing, paying their fair share of taxes.
The Oscars are supposed to reward art more than entertainment, and thatâs another reason for a Tom Cruise win. No other star has tried so hard to work with the most talented directors in Hollywood.
After Risky Business made him a celebrity in 1983, Cruise signed up to work for Ridley Scott, who had just made Blade Runner. The result, 1985âs Legend, a fairy tale about princesses, unicorns, and devils, is one of Scottâs weaker movies, but it was an artistic risk, not a crowd-pleasing money grab. More importantly, Cruise was undeterred by failure. After his sensational success with Top Gun in 1986, helmed by Ridley Scottâs brother Tony, Cruise made The Color of Money with Martin Scorsese. Cruise played a pool hall hustler with his usual cocky charm, but without the advantages of heroism. Itâs a movie that shows what made him a star, since it trades dazzle for the romance of poverty.
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Cruise kept up this pattern: Rain Man was a blockbuster and Oscar success in 1988, and in 1989 he signed up for Oliver Stoneâs Vietnam drama Born on the Fourth of July. Cruise got his first Oscar nomination for the portrayal of a veteran who turns to drugs and then anti-war protests because he cannot make sense of his crippling injuries. Like other talented directors, Stone saw the intensity behind the handsome smile and pretty features and brought it out to amazing effect.
Then in 1996, Cruise became a producer and star of Mission: Impossible, which turned into a multibillion-dollar franchise that is now almost 30 years old. After Spielberg introduced Cruise to Brian de Palma, the actor was so amazed by the filmography of the master of horrors and thrillers, he hired him to helm the first film. De Palmaâs Mission: Impossible was a big success, making almost half a billion dollars worldwide. It was also the most stylish espionage thriller of that decade, proving that great cinematic talent can also draw huge audiences.
The â90s were full of hits for CruiseâInterview with the Vampire and Jerry Maguire (another Oscar nomination) on the romantic side, A Few Good Men and The Firm on the thriller side. For most of that decade, Cruise showed a gift for playing underdogs defined by moral earnestnessâthe staple of American cinema since Frank Capra pioneered it.
He also continued to work with impressive directors. Paul Thomas Andersonâs Magnolia (1999) earned him his third Oscar nomination for playing a guru whose misogynyâretailed as self-help to weak guys confused by third-wave feminismâturns out to be a self-loathing fear going back to his childhood. Who else but Cruise could show that charm and vulnerability, that aggression and fear, and turn it into the will to succeed?
Stanley Kubrickâs last movie, Eyes Wide Shut, came out the same yearâan art movie that made more than $100 million internationally, showcasing Cruiseâs subtlest performance. He plays a striving Manhattanite, devoid of the advantages of celebrity, showing his weakness to temptation when faced with a Jeffrey Epsteinâstyle mystery, which could be anything from rich people indulging in prostitution to a cult. Cruise shows all over again why he became a star, bringing fear of failure back into his performance, this time without playing on the sympathy of the audience.
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In the second part of his career, Cruise transformed into the action hero we now knowâindeed, the last action hero. His best artistic achievement in the genre is Steven Spielbergâs 2002 science fiction thriller Minority Report, the movie that brought Cruise closest to the noir hero, and to tragedy. Cruise plays the champion of an order that aims to replace humans with robots in the name of safetyâuntil he becomes its victim. Eventually, he learns to love all-American freedom and to endorse it over the surveillance state.
This is the career the Oscars should honor. And the Best Picture award is the prime opportunity. Top Gun: Maverick is the pinnacle of Cruiseâs career as an entertainerâand as an icon who has uttered some of cinemaâs most memorable lines. Back in 1996, playing Jerry Maguire, he declared his undying love to RenĂŠe Zellweger by saying, âYou complete me.â
Nor would American cinema be complete without Tom.
Will Hollywood say it back?