The Arizona Republic

Here are Tom Cruise’s 10 best performanc­es

- Bill Goodykoont­z

There aren’t a lot of Big Movie Stars anymore, but Tom Cruise is one of them.

Now, there’s a difference between being a star and being good, and Cruise is proof of this. He’s always a star, but he’s not always good. He’s never really bad, but he’s certainly willing to coast on his looks and his persona. But when he stretches, he’s a really good actor — underrated, in fact. Cruise is kind of in between in his latest film, “Mission: Impossible - Fallout.” He does the Tom Cruise thing — sprints, takes a punch, performs his own insane stunts, saves the world, etc. — and he does it well. But at this point, other than the difficulty of the stunts, this role isn’t surprising.

His devotion to Scientolog­y and his couch-jumping are too much for some people to get past. But if you can, you’ll see an actor who is sometimes willing to go beyond his image and find something a little deeper. With that in mind, here are 10 times Cruise nailed it.

10. ‘Rain Man’ (1988)

Early in his career, Cruise wisely worked with great directors and great actors, typically playing the young, cocky kid with something to learn (just like real life). Here, he’s teamed with Dustin Hoffman, who won an Oscar playing Cruise’s older, autistic savant brother, whom Cruise kidnaps in order to inherit a fortune. Cruise plays a jerk maybe too convincing­ly, but you come around on the guy.

9. ‘Risky Business’ (1983)

Where Tom Cruise becomes Tom Cruise. I hate the stupid scene where he dances in his underwear to Bob Seger. But man, is it effective in establishi­ng his character. He takes outrageous

risks, they pay off and, well, Cruise seemed to follow his character’s lead.

8. ‘Jerry Maguire’ (1996)

A romantic comedy with broad appeal, which is another way of saying football fans could love it. Cameron Crowe’s film about a cocky (there’s that word again) sports agent who develops a conscience and is punished for it before establishi­ng his own firm really captured audiences. Cuba Gooding Jr. won an Oscar as the only player who sticks with Cruise, although if I hear, “Show me the money!” one more time I’ll hurl. But Cruise is quite good at doing something he’s generally quite good at — a kind of stick-to-it-ness that pays off in the end.

7. ‘Collateral’ (2004)

When Cruise doesn’t live up to expectatio­ns, it’s typically because he refuses to take chances. Not so here, in Michael Mann’s thriller, in which he plays Vincent, a smooth hitman who kidnaps Jamie Foxx’s Max, a cab driver, and forces him to drive around for a night. Cruise doesn’t typically play bad guys, which is too bad, because here he’s good at it.

6. ‘Tropic Thunder’ (2008)

What were we saying about taking chances? Buried under pounds of makeup and originally supposed to be uncredited, Cruise goes full bore as fat, obnoxious studio head Les Grossman — in fact, he’s so unrecogniz­able and so fully committed, it takes a while to figure out who he is. And he’s hilarious.

5. ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ (2014)

This may be the ultimate Tom Cruise movie, because it hits on nearly every aspect of his profession­al persona. At the beginning of the film, he’s a smarmy military PR officer who’s never seen combat. He’s thrown into a suicide mission, promptly gets killed ... and comes back. This happens again and again; with the help of a heroic Emily Blunt, he improves himself until, by the end, he’s the heroic Tom Cruise we know and sometimes love.

4. ‘Eyes Wide Shut’ (1999)

Cruise again works with a legend, in this case Stanley Kubrick in the director’s last film. Cruise plays a doctor; he’s cast opposite his wife at the time, Nicole Kidman, who admits she almost cheated on him. He goes on a journey through New York City, winding up at a bizarre orgy. (It plays out a little better than that may sound.) Here, too, Cruise goes against type — it’s doubtful many people thought of him as the lead in an erotic mystery.

3. ‘Minority Report’ (2002)

And now he works with Steven Spielberg. This a great, underrated film in which Cruise plays John Anderton, a police chief leading a team that can predict crimes before they happen — and make arrests accordingl­y. It’s easy to think this is just another action role, but Anderton is also a grieving drug addict. Things go a little sideways at the end, but this is an example of Cruise working within his self-imposed limits and doing it well.

2. ‘Magnolia’ (1999)

Doubtless this would be at the top of many people’s list. Cruise shines in Paul Thomas Anderson’s ensemble piece. He’s good as misogynist­ic “motivation­al speaker” Frank Mackey; he’s great when he finally confronts his estranged, dying father. Cruise is capitalizi­ng on his image while sending it up, sort of.

1. ‘Born on the Fourth of July’ (1989)

Oliver Stone won an Oscar for directing this biopic of Ron Kovic, a soldier paralyzed in the Vietnam War who becomes an anti-war activist. Obviously the subject matter is intense, but Cruise is up to it. He sheds the cover-boy looks and digs deep into the role, showing all the aspects of Kovic’s character, and all the aspects of his own range and abilities. It’s a tough movie. It’s a terrific performanc­e, Cruise’s best.

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Tom Cruise
 ?? DAVID JAMES/WARNER BROS. PICTURES ?? Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt star in “Edge of Tomorrow” (2014).
DAVID JAMES/WARNER BROS. PICTURES Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt star in “Edge of Tomorrow” (2014).

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