Arte: Tom Cruise, the Man Who Didn’t Want to Get Old, an Exciting Documentary on a Top Gun Maverick Star

Arte: Tom Cruise, the Man Who Didn’t Want to Get Old, an Exciting Documentary on a Top Gun Maverick Star

While he is currently in theaters at “Top Gun: Maverick,” Tom Cruise is at the center of an exciting documentary that went on art this Sunday night. A portrait exploring the dark side of a Hollywood star.

But who really is Tom Cruise, this planetary star, this giant of the seventh art that has fascinated viewers around the world for more than four decades? French director Reggie Broschier tries to answer this question with the documentary Tom Cruise: Body and Soul, which airs Sunday night at Arte. By drawing a portrait that in no way hides the most tortured sides of the Top Gun hero: Maverick.

Tom Cruise: The body and soul question the true myth of today’s cinema. Dense, rich in archival imagery, Arte’s documentary is clearly reminiscent of the American actor’s incredible career, from the beginning of Risky Business to the cult Top Gun, with Brian de Palma, Stanley Kubrick or even Martin Scorsese.

But this documentary, which chronologically recalls the amazing career of Tom Cruise, an actor who is revered by the general public for being the best but never duplicated in the profession, also offers a rather bold bias. The attempt to go beyond it, to decipher a star whose secret is quite unknown.

Tom Cruise: The body and soul thus awaken the darkest aspects of this lonely and never deciphered actor, his tormented life, Scientological beliefs, his taste for mystery and control, and his desire to never grow old. So here is a very classic documentary, but also a part in which psychology is the focus and allows us to discover another Tom Cruise. A total star, sort of probably the last representative of pure Hollywood “entertainment”. A charming and impossible artist. Exciting.

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Source: allocine

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