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![]() by Paul Fischer |
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He is one of the biggest stars of the planet, fiercely private
and a passionate filmmaker. Rarely Tom Cruise may indeed be one of the world's few superstars, but don't expect any airs and graces from the man who's been on top of his game for a decade. Casually attired, Cruise seems in remarkable spirits. Good natured and always laughing, one expresses surprise that this fiercely guarded actor has decided to do more press than usual, in promoting his latest film, the highly complex new work by Cameron Crowe, Vanilla Sky. "I always try to support the pictures and I just felt like I wanted to communicate something about it - I really haven't felt like I haven't done this; it feels like I have a pretty full press schedule", Cruise insists laughingly. "Thinking back if I haven't done these, I feel like I have." The truth be told, he gave a press conference in support of Crowe's Jerry Maguire, but little since. The 39-year old Thomas Cruise Mapother IV is philosophical when asked to equate his fame with any specific lessons he may have learnt from last year and the whole media-hyped divorce. "I don't think that has anything to do with 'fame.' I think there are always lessons about life. I try to live my life as best I can. I have two kids, a company and I care about people very much. I am different, really, than David, my Vanilla Sky character, in that I think about other people and how they feel and think about the effects I create around. So that doesn't mean I'm perfect but in the last year, have I learned a lesson?" The hardest lesson he has learned, Cruise adds, was his surprise "as to the level that people, so-called 'friends' would go in terms of writing things about us and the things that were said especially because I've always been protective of my family, Nicole included. Even after, we're still a family including our kids. At the same time I was producing The Others and finishing that, producing Vanilla Sky and acting in that. I had Minority Report on the other end with Steven Spielberg, and I was averaging, some nights, three hours [of sleep]. I'm also the kind of person who doesn't believe in making my problems other people's problems. Certainly, as a parent, I don't want to make my problems my kids' problems. I'm just not a complainer." Cruise concedes that he lives "a blessed life and it's something I've been very aware to not take advantage of, and I love my work." Much was written about him in the wake of his marriage, but always the professional, Tom tries not to let that 'stuff' get in the way. "I don't spend a lot reading what's written about me, except. When the lawyers bring something to my attention. I've got too much responsibility with my family and got kids. I try to keep that stuff off as much as possible. I'm not a person who indulges in gossip." |
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Vanilla Sky is based on the surreal Spanish film Open your Eyes.
Cruise recalls why he felt this passionate need to buy the US rights for the film.
"By the time I got to the credits, I remember just being on the edge of my
seat, calling and saying: 'Look - just buy this movie. Buy this movie.' And I
had to sit down and think about what this movie was about. I found myself discussing
it with people who hadn't even seen it and wanting to talk about it, and some
of the questions it was asking. When I showed it to Cameron we sat down and started
having a dialogue about the film. It was one of those films that, in deals, you
have - we just bought it." Cruise didn't see it as uniquely Spanish. "The
thing that was fascinating to me about the film is that it's not culturally-based.
When you look at Open Your Eyes, it's kind of dealing with universal themes
and those characters could have been anybody. It also left it open-ended Talking about love: Cruise had several hot scenes with leading lady Penelope, but insists they "got together" only after wrapping. He cleverly skirts around the question of on-screen chemistry between Cruise and Cruz. "Cameron [Crowe] is incredible when you look at Renee Zellweger, for instance, in terms of casting. As a filmmaker, you look at his characters and where that chemistry is needed, I think he casts so well and his writing of those scenes is wonderful, extraordinary, actually, coupled with his ability to direct it. You can have two people who might have chemistry together but is it captured? There are so many different elements that come into play that can make something romantic or real, and the story really pivots on that point, on that pinhead, one night. The audience has to feel that relationship and want to enjoy that relationship. It's very much in the filmmakers' hand," says the actor. Cruise is a workaholic, whether he is movie star or producer, there is no stopping him. Tom will continue to publicize the film, and will even spend a few days in Australia. "That's still my second home; after all, my kids are Australian." Then he begins work on Sydney Pollack's Cold Mountain, and Tom is excited about next year's Minority Report. "Have you seen the trailer? It's Spielberg on fire. I can't wait. I haven't seen the whole picture. I saw about fifteen minutes of it and the trailer." Asked if he found it refreshing to let his hair down on Minority Report and just act, the actor laughingly replies: "Well, I'm bald in the movie." It's good to see that superstar Cruise tries not to take himself too seriously. December 2001 | |||