Get us in your inbox

Top Gun:Maverick
Photograph: Courtesy Paramount Pictures

The 23 best Tom Cruise movies

Over more than 40 years, the Hollywood icon has been in a shocking number of decent films – and a few truly great ones

Joshua Rothkopf
Matthew Singer
Written by
Joshua Rothkopf
Contributor
Matthew Singer
Advertising

Tom Cruise might be the world’s last true movie star. It’s been roughly three decades since he became one of Hollywood’s most bankable names, and in his sixth decade, there’s still hardly another actor out there that can slot into just about any movie and feel quite as confident in the results, in terms of both performance and box office.

At this point, the man’s done it all: big-budget popcorn flicks, intense character studies, violent actioners, Oscar-winning dramas, even ribald comedies where he’s purposely played against his image. There have been a few stumbles along the way, sure – not to mention all the Scientology stuff – but the guy’s batting average remains remarkably high. With Cruise having worked magic yet again with
Top Gun: Maverick – easily the best post-pandemic blockbuster and maybe the best legacy sequel ever – we decided to take a deep dive into his long, iconic career and rank his best movies to date. Was the mission impossible? No. But we wouldn’t say it was easy.

Tom Cruise movies

Austin Powers in Goldmember (2002)
  • Film
  • Comedy

It's the tiniest of cameos, so consider this a bonus pick. But in less than a minute of screen time, Cruise makes the film’s opening gag work, combining a glossy Hollywood version of Austin’s British befuddlement with his own maniacal grin. Cruise murmurs, “Shall we shag now…or shag later?” and turns it in a passable piece of Bond dialogue.

Legend (1985)
  • Film
  • Fantasy

As Chris Isaak sang, Cruise did a “bad, bad thing” in Eyes Wide Shut. Here’s another bad, bad thing he did: a dumb yet enjoyably dorky fantasy adventure in which Cruise plays an elfin sprite out to save a princess from Tim Curry’s Lord of Darkness. It’s not exactly director Ridley Scott’s finest moment (especially right after Blade Runner), but you can’t blame his leading man.

Advertising
  • Film

Francis Ford Coppola may not have done his best work in the ’80s, but he hadn’t lost his eye for new talent. This moody adaptation of S.E. Hinton’s novel featured the little-known Cruise (in a tiny supporting role) alongside the likes of Matt Dillon, Patrick Swayze, Rob Lowe and Ralph Macchio, the latter who gets to utter the immortal “Stay gold, Ponyboy.”

Taps (1981)
  • Film

Even from the start (this was Cruise’s second film role), he had dramatic ambitions in mind. In this thriller about a military academy gone rogue, Cruise is basically a bad guy—an uptight, deranged cadet captain—but his craziness registers deeply: “It’s beautiful, man—beautiful!” he screams, firing his rifle at innocent people. A supporting part, but a promising one.

Advertising
War of the Worlds (2005)
  • Film
  • Action and adventure

Cruise’s work with Steven Spielberg is curious: The films have an undeniable sci-fi panache but the actor himself is guarded. Spielberg, a genius director, can’t coax warmth or realness from Cruise, who here plays a divorced dock worker who awakens to a greater sense of responsibility during an alien attack. Dakota Fanning runs away with this movie.

  • Film
  • Action and adventure

This one’s the turning point: the moment when Tom Cruise became the biggest star on the planet, with a year-end No. 1 movie to prove it. Seen in the cold light of day, Tony Scott’s movie is ridiculous: endless aerial dogfights, tons of shirtless bro brooding, a soundtrack on steroids, Cruise playing volleyball on the beach—in jeans. He’s better in other movies.

Advertising
Interview With the Vampire (1994)
  • Film
  • Fantasy

The role of the vampire Lestat in Ann Rice's  treasured horror novel was pursued by several A-list actors. When it finally went to Cruise, the author was said to be crushed. Still, while the movie has its problems, Cruise isn't one of them. He's lacquered, mysterious, and mroe alive than Brad Pitt, a little out of his depths. Both were outperformed by 10-year-old Kristen Bunst.

  • Film

This dark psychodrama is mainly remembered as being the film that emptied out Times Square for a so-so fantasy scene—it was also the beginning of the end for writer-director Cameron Crowe, once a critic’s darling with movies like Almost Famous and Jerry Maguire. But Cruise, scarred behind a white plastic mask, fully commits to his character’s unraveling.

Advertising
Mission: Impossible (1996)
  • Film
  • Action and adventure

Should you choose to accept it? Sure. Auteur-for-hire Brian De Palma makes the first entry in Cruise’s espionage series thrilling (if occasionally a little workmanlike) and the movie has a classic scene with Cruise suspended from the ceiling by wires that’s part of the actor’s legend. But there’s not a lot of room here for subtlety. Shouting and running? Plenty of room for that.

Minority Report (2002)
  • Film
  • Science fiction

Radically adapted from a Philip K. Dick short story published in 1956, this sci-fi thriller is an elaborate whodunit, with detective Cruise tagged as a potential murderer by the Pre-Cogs (mutant psychics who foresee potential homicides before they occur). Like Harrison Ford in Blade Runner, Cruise goes a little mopey; much of the film’s kick comes from Spielberg.

Advertising
A Few Good Men (1992)
  • Film

Can you handle the truth? Remember: It’s Cruise who gets Jack Nicholson to that place, yelling “I want the truth!” As a crusading military lawyer, Cruise doesn’t quiet drop his smooth playboy side, but at least he’s attempting something a little more ambitious. He’s not the best mouthpiece for Aaron Sorkin’s word spew, but this shouty role was a step in the right direction.

Looking for a horror movie?

Recommended
    You may also like
    You may also like
    Advertising