Here’s why Hollywood directors tend to promote Tom Cruise ( Photo Credit – Instagram )

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Yes, you read that right, Tom Cruise didn’t just pick directors to helm his movies. Nope, he turned Hollywood’s top filmmakers into his personal image architects, fine-tuning every frame to make sure he looked like the ultimate action hero. From day one, Cruise had a knack for teaming up with heavyweights—Scorsese, Kubrick, De Palma. But here’s the twist: even these powerhouse directors felt like they were working for him, not the other way around. Their job? Craft a killer movie and a killer version of Cruise.

Take the Mission: Impossible franchise, for instance. Cruise played Ethan Hunt in over six films—a secret agent so mysterious that he barely had a personal life. Forget backstories or deep character arcs; Hunt was more an action figure than a person. That blank-slate hero let Cruise flex every muscle (literally and metaphorically), while directors like John Woo and Christopher McQuarrie tailored their styles to highlight his versatility.

Cruise wasn’t just jumping off buildings—he was proving he could fit into any cinematic vision. De Palma made him a master of espionage. Woo threw in slow-motion and motorcycle stunts. McQuarrie blended politics and mind-bending action. Each film became a sleek infomercial, selling “Tom Cruise: The Unstoppable Action Star.”

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