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You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor

 You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor

You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor

Tom Cruise awakens as many hatreds as passions. His detractors accuse him of always doing the same thing lately. His fans, on the other hand, love it. He has already proven himself to be a good actor. Now it's time to have fun and have fun. He premieres The Mummy, a movie where he wants to save the world.


If you type in the search engine ‘most hated actors’, your name will appear very well positioned. It is a proven fact that Tom Cruise is one of those Hollywood actors that a lot of people dislike. Envy? Can be. It doesn't really matter. He doesn't care. And his followers, who number in the millions, too.


Because, as much as the protagonist of "Top Gun" is the worst thing for a lot of people, whether they are colleagues, spectators, netizens or the fishmonger on the corner, Tom Cruise is a good actor and that cannot be argued. Not only because he has been nominated three times for the Oscars (Sandra Bullock has one), but because he has a career that many cannot even dream of. With its ups, its downs and its reinventions.


Whoever started out as an idol of fifteen-year-old meat from a high school folder has managed to reinvent himself over the years until he becomes an action hero about to turn 55 - he will do so on July 

3 - who insists on shooting his scenes of risk for concern of the insurers.


This Syracuse kid, the son of a teacher and an engineer, with Roman numerals on his passport (his full name is Thomas Cruise Mapother IV), walked into Hollywood dressed in a salmon-colored shirt (or pale pink, some might say), no pants , with white boxers and socks and a chandelier as a microphone to the rhythm of 'Old Time Rock and Roll'.


I was 21 years old and, ladies and gentlemen, a star was born. It was 1982 and then many other emblematic roles came and that marked a whole generation that fell hopelessly in love with that young dark-haired man, with an angelic face and average height. He could have stayed at that, in a handsome man who took off his sunglasses, tearing his temple with papers like Maverick ('Top Gun') and Brian Flanagan ('Cocktail').


Cruise risked and won

You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor


But no, Cruise was always pure ambition. He did not want to be just that and he risked it. How? Measuring himself without complexes to established actors and of the stature of Paul Newman ("The color of money"), Dustin Hoffman ("Rain Man") and Jack Nicholson ("Some good men"). The guy put up with all of them with his toothpaste advertisement smile always on the side.


He did that and go ugly to the extreme to get into the skin of a Vietnam veteran under Oliver Stone in "Born on July 4th." That grimy, depressing, and devastating performance earned him his first Oscar nomination in 1990.


It was risky and the play was almost round. Almost because they didn't give him the award. If you are handsome, you have to look ugly to be taken seriously. It is a kind of law not written in Hollywood but known to all. Charlize Theron was rewarded for it when she did it in 'Monster'. And Leonardo DiCaprio was not given the statue until he rolled in the snow, the mud and a bear left him in tatters in "The Revenant." The list could go on forever.


By profession, savior of the world

You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor


And so he reached the nineties, combining films with a high romantic component with others with more dramatic content until agent Ethan Hunt crossed his path by posing him a ‘Mission Impossible’ and got the itch to save the world. Since then, he has faced criminal organizations, terrorists, aliens, the government, and now a mummy. Because Tom Cruise has become the quintessential American hero.


What's always doing the same role lately? Can be. But what's wrong with that if you do it so well? When a spectator fan goes to the cinema to see a Tom Cruise movie, he wants to see Tom Cruise running, jumping, shooting ... That he knows how to act, he has already shown it many times. He did it in the aforementioned ‘Born on July 4’, but also in ‘Magnolia’, ‘Jerry Maguire’ and ‘Lions for lambs’, for example.


Getting the industry to take it seriously has long since been unlocked. Now he is in the stage of doing what he wants, because he is Tom Cruise, he wants and can. And what he wants is to star in blockbusters one after another, action films in which his female partner is twice the age and in which he must face evil to save humanity while his followers have a great time in the armchair watching him in action.

You may hate Tom Cruise, but I really tell you he's a good actor


The world can continue to hate Tom Cruise if it wants to, but that doesn't stop him from being a good actor. Although in reality it is much more than that. He is a movie star like few others. Able to laugh at himself as he did in ‘On the Edge of Tomorrow’ playing a cowardly hero or with the paints with which that delirious dance was marked in ‘Tropic Thunder’.


Back from everything

At this point in his career, Cruise is back from it all. He only owes it to his fans. That is why when promoting a film he reduces the time dedicated to journalists to a minimum but does not hesitate to spend an hour and a half on a red carpet signing autographs, taking pictures with the people who crowd the billboards and letting them squeeze him over and over again. again.


It is due to his followers, who, after all, are the ones who fill (or not) the rooms. They forgive him for everything, even his eccentricities as a member of Scientology, one of the reasons Tom Cruise is persona non grata in some circles. Having a busy, controversial, and out-of-the-box personal life is also part of the resume of being a star.


He doesn't seem to care too much and avoids talking about his private life in interviews. After a few years of personal turmoil, making headlines on both sides of the pond, his biography seems to have calmed down in that sense. Or, at least, it is the image that it gives, that it lives for and to entertain and amuse the viewer. Dirty laundry or privacy is left at home. Well, in his mansion.

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