Log in or sign up for Rotten Tomatoes

Trouble logging in?

By continuing, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from the Fandango Media Brands .

By creating an account, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from Rotten Tomatoes and to receive email from the Fandango Media Brands .

By creating an account, you agree to the Privacy Policy and the Terms and Policies , and to receive email from Rotten Tomatoes.

Email not verified

Let's keep in touch.

Rotten Tomatoes Newsletter

Sign up for the Rotten Tomatoes newsletter to get weekly updates on:

  • Upcoming Movies and TV shows
  • Trivia & Rotten Tomatoes Podcast
  • Media News + More

By clicking "Sign Me Up," you are agreeing to receive occasional emails and communications from Fandango Media (Fandango, Vudu, and Rotten Tomatoes) and consenting to Fandango's Privacy Policy and Terms and Policies . Please allow 10 business days for your account to reflect your preferences.

OK, got it!

Movies / TV

No results found.

  • What's the Tomatometer®?
  • Login/signup

tom cruise movie private cage

Movies in theaters

  • Opening this week
  • Top box office
  • Coming soon to theaters
  • Certified fresh movies

Movies at home

  • Fandango at Home
  • Netflix streaming
  • Prime Video
  • Most popular streaming movies
  • What to Watch New

Certified fresh picks

  • Challengers Link to Challengers
  • I Saw the TV Glow Link to I Saw the TV Glow
  • Música Link to Música

New TV Tonight

  • The Veil: Season 1
  • Hacks: Season 3
  • The Tattooist of Auschwitz: Season 1
  • A Man in Full: Season 1
  • Acapulco: Season 3
  • Welcome to Wrexham: Season 3
  • John Mulaney Presents: Everybody's in LA: Season 1
  • Star Wars: Tales of the Empire: Season 1
  • My Next Guest Needs No Introduction With David Letterman: Season 4.2
  • Shardlake: Season 1

Most Popular TV on RT

  • Baby Reindeer: Season 1
  • Fallout: Season 1
  • Shōgun: Season 1
  • Dead Boy Detectives: Season 1
  • Knuckles: Season 1
  • The Sympathizer: Season 1
  • Goodbye Earth: Season 1
  • Ripley: Season 1
  • Them: Season 2
  • 3 Body Problem: Season 1
  • Best TV Shows
  • Most Popular TV
  • TV & Streaming News

Certified fresh pick

  • Dead Boy Detectives: Season 1 Link to Dead Boy Detectives: Season 1
  • All-Time Lists
  • Binge Guide
  • Comics on TV
  • Five Favorite Films
  • Video Interviews
  • Weekend Box Office
  • Weekly Ketchup
  • What to Watch

Best Horror Movies of 2024 Ranked – New Scary Movies to Watch

30 Most Popular Movies Right Now: What to Watch In Theaters and Streaming

What to Watch: In Theaters and On Streaming

Awards Tour

The Most Anticipated Movies of 2024

Poll: Most Anticipated Movies of May 2024

  • Trending on RT
  • Challengers
  • The Fall Guy
  • Play Movie Trivia

Edge of Tomorrow

Where to watch.

Watch Edge of Tomorrow with a subscription on Apple TV+, rent on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV, or buy on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

What to Know

Gripping, well-acted, funny, and clever, Edge of Tomorrow offers entertaining proof that Tom Cruise is still more than capable of shouldering the weight of a blockbuster action thriller.

Audience Reviews

Cast & crew.

Major William Cage

Emily Blunt

Rita Vrataski

Brendan Gleeson

General Brigham

Bill Paxton

Master Sergeant Farell

Jonas Armstrong

More Like This

Movie news & guides, this movie is featured in the following articles., critics reviews.

Find anything you save across the site in your account

A Spoiler-Filled Review of “Edge of Tomorrow”

tom cruise movie private cage

By Richard Brody

A SpoilerFilled Review of “Edge of Tomorrow”

It’s rare that the art of movies and the business of their distribution coincide as closely as they do with “Edge of Tomorrow,” the director Doug Liman’s new science-fiction vehicle for Tom Cruise. It opens this Friday, June 6th, the seventieth anniversary of D Day—and that massive and decisive Normandy landing, tweaked to fit the movie’s futuristic premise, is also its main dramatic event. The metaphorical overlay of fantasy and history is the best thing “Edge of Tomorrow” has to offer—and, for much of its running time, that overlay is enough to lend the movie a shiver of curious power.

“Edge of Tomorrow,” as everyone already knows, is a sci-fi war film with a “Groundhog Day”-like premise: Cruise plays a soldier who, after being killed in combat, awakens the day before the battle and must relive, over and over, the moment of his death. Yet the movie hidden behind “Edge of Tomorrow” isn’t “Groundhog Day” but, rather, “Saving Private Ryan.” The terrifyingly gory opening sequence of Steven Spielberg’s film—the landing at Omaha Beach—poses a fundamental question about war: If the D Day combat had been reported in real time and in detail, if the uncensored newsreel footage that it generated played like Spielberg’s realistic scene—with its dismembered limbs, dangling viscera, incinerated bodies, cries of agony, scattered corpses, and waves of blood—would the American public have tolerated the pursuit of the war until the enemies’ surrender? And would sufficient numbers of American men have fought in it willingly?

That question is the premise of “Edge of Tomorrow”: the world is battling alien creatures who have killed hundreds of millions of people in Europe, and the allied army, known as the United Defense Force (U.D.F.), is planning a colossal and top-secret mobilization to cross the English Channel and gain a beachhead in France in order to reconquer the continent from the invading organisms. On the eve of the great mission, Major William Cage (Cruise), a U.D.F. information officer, is ordered to be embedded in a combat battalion in order to “sell the war” to the citizenry.

Because the setup is the source of much of the movie’s pleasure, more or less any discussion of the story is a spoiler. “Edge of Tomorrow” is a movie that offers primarily the glee of its telling—the well-crafted delight of a tall fantasy that’s as shallow as it is clever—and I’m going to indulge in the pleasure of this well-wrought yarn by simply telling it.

Cage, a former advertising executive who has no military training or background, wants no part of the fight, and he refuses the order from the general in command (Brendan Gleeson). He tries to flee, and is tased into submission—only to awaken in the staging area, demoted to private, and forced into a front-line combat unit under the hard-nosed command of Master Sergeant Farell (Bill Paxton). But the beach landing goes horribly awry. The troops are being massacred by the superfast, thrashing, whip-tentacled monsters, and Cage, confronting an especially big and mean creature, is himself quickly killed. Then, in a brashly effective and simple cut from one shot to another, Cage comes instantly back to life, restored to the way he was at the start of the day of battle, at the moment of his reawakening after being tased.

The crucial and delicious detail is that Cage’s curse, to die again endlessly (though, somehow, seemingly painlessly), affords him a limitless capacity to learn on the job—each return to battle is both another lesson in warfare and another chance to probe the enemy’s vulnerabilities. Soon, reawakening at the British base, Cage chooses a martial mentor: Sergeant Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), a commando fighter who was the heroine of the U.D.F.’s one prior military victory on the continent (she’s nicknamed the Angel of Verdun, extending a metaphor one generation back). Vrataski trains Cage and accompanies him into battle. They are both helped by a discredited physicist (Noah Taylor), whose speculative simulations reveal the enemy’s deft deceptions and hidden weakness.

The idea of the movie (based on the novel “ All You Need Is Kill ,” by Hiroshi Sakurazaka) is a corker, which is why it’s worth reëmphasizing the spoiler alert. At the same time as Cage’s reiterated lives allow him to master the monsters, we learn that the monsters’ central brain has allowed Cage to be regenerated on purpose. The monster brain is using Cage to learn how humans fight. Vrataski was also similarly chosen. As it turns out, she offered humanity a Pyrrhic victory at Verdun: the aliens allowed her troops to win there in order to observe and master her tactics. When Cage and Vrataski figure this out, they recognize that they have to get one step ahead of the aliens on the learning curve, and must anticipate their play one move in advance, in order to make their decisive advance toward Paris. (The story deals with the sci-fi problem of parallel worlds by making each new iteration ontologically supersede the previous one: last world, definitive world.)

“Edge of Tomorrow” conveys its ingenious, historically resonant premise but never develops it. The narrative is high-concept gimmickry realized with efficiency and energy but not much imagination. The engineering of the intricate story, and the deft dovetailing needed to iterate multiple lives in rapid succession, seem to have taxed Liman’s art, as does the effort to simulate chemistry between Cruise and Blunt. She’s an active and alert performer who, throughout, seems to want more—a character with a life story to sink her interpretive teeth into—whereas Cruise takes Cage’s one-note backstory, the cowardly out-of-work ad man, and expands it, and himself, to the breaking point. Cruise’s eternal sheen of callow youth is integrated into the very substance of the film. As Cage is converted by circumstances into a hardened and capable fighting machine (veering toward superhero territory), the story tracks his dramatic transformation, in under two hours, from a raw trainee into a military hero. “Edge of Tomorrow” turns out to be the movie that Cage was ordered to make: his greatest recruiting film.

What difference would it make to such a juicy tale if Liman had brought more imagination to its direction? If he had parsed the action with more detail and more nuance or had conceived and encapsulated the characters with more insight? The problem with a good story that’s nothing more than a good story is that it exhausts itself in the telling, as this one does, and never makes the leap from idea to experience. “Edge of Tomorrow” requires Cage’s heroism to be simultaneously physical and intellectual, a matter of calculation and anticipation as well as of courage and execution. What’s missing from the movie is the existential adventure that it implies—the confrontation with death, the overcoming of pain. Liman offers war leached of horror—death without pain, memory without trauma—and narrows Cage to a stick figure emptied of the fascinating and disturbing psychological implications of his adventure. The movie is also humorless—at least, devoid of intentional humor. Yet the demands of the international movie-distribution marketplace seem to be responsible for a howlingly funny clinching line of dialogue, capping the heroes’ success: “Russian and Chinese forces are marching across Europe without resistance.” It promises an utterly unintended sequel.

By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement and Privacy Policy & Cookie Statement . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

The Scholar of Comedy

By David Remnick

Donald Trump’s Sleepy, Sleazy Criminal Trial

By Benjamin Wallace-Wells

How to Eat a Rattlesnake

By John Paul Brammer

Are We Living Through a Bagel Renaissance?

By Hannah Goldfield

The Unexpected Pleasures of Edge of Tomorrow

Director Doug Liman imbues the  Groundhog-Day -meets- Starship- Troopers  Tom Cruise vehicle with wit and panache.

tom cruise movie private cage

Tom Cruise lands on a French beach, D-Day-like, and is torn apart by a glowing, tentacled alien.

Tom Cruise lands on a French beach, D-Day-like, and has a hole punched through his chest while protecting another soldier from enemy fire.

Tom Cruise lands on a French beach, D-Day-like, and is squashed by a helicopter falling from the sky.

It’s not, in short, a good day to be Tom Cruise—or rather, Private William Cage, the character he plays in his new film Edge of Tomorrow . Nor does his day get any better: blown to smithereens, run over by a jeep, shot in the head—you name it, he suffers it. Forget last week’s critically reviled Seth MacFarlane comedy-western . It’s Cruise’s film that might all too plausibly have been titled A Million Ways to Die in the Future .

Recommended Reading

An illustration of an old man picking smiley faces off a tree.

Why So Many People Are Unhappy in Retirement

Red office chair on a mountain top

Hot Streaks in Your Career Don’t Happen by Accident

tom cruise movie private cage

How Air-Conditioning Invented the Modern World

If you’ve read anything at all about Edge of Tomorrow , it is likely that two of the words you’ve read have been “ Groundhog Day ,” and there’s good reason for this. Director Doug Liman’s sharp, infectiously entertaining sci-fi thriller offers a lethal spin on Harold Ramis’s 1993 high-concept comedy : Rather than overcome existential ennui, a la Bill Murray’s Phil Connors, Cage must embrace the certainty that before his very long day ends—if in fact it ever does—he is certain to die many, many more times, in many, many more ways.

To rewind a bit: Edge of Tomorrow (based on the Japanese novel All You Need Is Kill ) is set in a near-future in which a methodical alien species dubbed “Mimics” has touched down in Germany and, over the course of five years, gradually overtaken most of Western Europe. The sole human victory over the invaders has been at Verdun—yes, that Verdun —where a heroic soldier in a robotic exoskeleton, Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), single-handedly killed more than 100 Mimics and in the process became an icon of the resistance.

Enter Cruise’s character, the callow William Cage. When first we meet him, he is an Army major, a principal TV spokesman for the war effort, and an exceptional coward. But after an ill-considered run-in with a superior officer, he finds himself demoted, sent to the frontlines, and, soon enough, accidentally imbued with the peculiar ability to reset his day the moment he dies. From there, the general contours of the plot are largely set: By a process of trial and (inevitably lethal) error, Cage must find a way to defeat the Mimics, learning more and making it slightly farther with each attempt. He’s aided in his efforts by Vrataski, the “Angel of Verdun,” who has her own insights into the nature of his powers.

The conceit may sound constricting, but Liman (like Ramis before him) gets exceptional mileage out of it. The director is in top form here, presenting his ever-revolving tale with visual style, narrative velocity, and a wonderful dose of dark humor. There are echoes of Cruise’s last sci-fi outing, the less-bad-than-it’s-remembered Oblivion , and still more of Duncan Jones’s excellent 2011 time-travel whodunit Source Code . But Liman ( Go , The Bourne Identity , Mr. & Mrs. Smith ) lends the proceedings a more playful edge, and directs the action sequences with true panache. The early battle scenes on the beach, in particular, are a riveting ballet of blood and sand and fire and metal. (And aliens.) And despite the inevitable inanities underlying its time-travel premise, the movie does a relatively good job of adhering to its own internal logic.

Blunt offers a clearer display of the big-screen charisma she hinted at way back in The Devil Wears Prada than she has at perhaps any time since. Moreover, the film is a nice exception to the customary damsel-in-distress narrative: this time out, it’s Blunt who plays the battle-hardened vet.

Cruise, too, is better than he’s been in a long while. As an actor, he’s always relied overmuch on sheer intensity: a fiercer stare, a sharper grin, a more zealous commitment to performing his own stunts. But under Liman’s direction, he takes it easier—at least on occasion—than he has in years. Having experimented with broad comedy ( Tropic Thunder , Rock of Ages ) following the couch-jumping-and-Scientology derailment of his superstardom, he offers flashes here of a quieter, more ironic wit. There are even a few moments of understated tenderness (two words rarely associated with Cruise) between him and Blunt.

In its final act, unfortunately, Liman’s movie veers a bit off course. To belabor the analogy: If the first three quarters of the film reinvent Groundhog Day , the final quarter recalls, ever so slightly, the saggy conclusion of Stripes . (The script went through many iterations, and the ending was reportedly always considered problematic.)

That said, Edge of Tomorrow remains one of the pleasant surprises of this summer season to date, boasting magnetic leads, a wickedly looping plot, and bravura direction. It might not be quite the cinematic experience you want to re-live over and over again, but it’s well worth at least one go-round.

Movie Reviews

Tv/streaming, collections, great movies, chaz's journal, contributors, edge of tomorrow.

tom cruise movie private cage

Now streaming on:

"Edge of Tomorrow" is less of a time travel movie than an experience movie; that statement might not make sense now, but it probably will after you've seen it. Based on Hiroshi Sikurazaka's novel "All You Need is Kill", it's a true science fiction film, highly conceptual, set during the aftermath of an alien invasion. Maybe "extra-dimensional being invasion" is more accurate. The fierce, octopod-looking beasties known as Mimics are controlled hive-mind style by a creature that seems able to peer through time, or rupture it, or something. When the tale begins, we don't have exact answers about the enemy's powers (that's for our intrepid heroes to find out), but we have a solid hunch that it can see possible futures through the eyes of specific humans, then treat them as, essentially, video game characters, following their progress through the nasty "adventure" of the war, and making note of their tactical maneuvers, the better to ensure our collective extermination. 

Tom Cruise , who seems to be spending his fifties saving humanity, plays Major William Cage, an Army public relations officer. Cage is a surprising choice for the role of hero. He's never seen combat yet inexplicably finds himself thrown into the middle of a ferocious battle that will decide the outcome of the war. The film begins with Cage en route to European command headquarters in London, waking up in the belly of a transport chopper. The rest of the movie may not be his dream per se, but at various points it sure feels as though it is. The world is wracked by war. Millions have died. Whole cities have been reduced to ash heaps. The landscapes evoke color newsreel footage from World War II, and much of the combat seems lifted from that era as well. 

When Cage meets the general in charge of that part of the world's forces, he's told he's being sent right into this movie's version of D-Day and is to report for duty immediately. No amount of protest by Cage can halt this assignment, and soon after he joins his unit and learns the rudiments of wearing combat armor (this is one of those science fiction films in which soldiers wear clumping bionic suits festooned with machine guns and other weapons) he dies on the battlefield. Then he wakes up and starts all over. Then he dies again and starts over again. He always knows he's been here before, that he met this person, said that thing, did that thing, made a wrong choice and died. Nobody else does, though. They're oblivious to the way in which Cage, like "Slaughterhouse Five" hero Billy Pilgrim, has come unstuck in time. 

Cage's only allies are a scientist ( Noah Taylor ) who believes the creatures are beating humanity through their mastery of time, and Rita Vrataski ( Emily Blunt ), an Audie Murphy or Sgt. York type who's great for armed forces morale in addition to being an exceptionally gifted killer. Rita has experienced the same temporal dislocation that Cage is now experiencing, but at a certain point it stopped. She recognizes his maddening condition but can no longer share in it. She can, however, offer guidance (and a key bit of information that defines his predicament), and speed up the learning curve by shooting him in the head whenever it becomes obvious that they're going down a wrong road that'll lead to the same fatal outcome. 

Although the film's advertising would never dare suggest such a thing, for fear of driving off viewers who just want the bang bang-boom boom, Cage is a complex and demanding role for any actor. It is especially right for Cruise, in that Cage starts out as a Jerry Maguire-type who'll say or do anything to preserve his comfort, then learns through hard (lethal) experience how to be a good soldier and a good man. He changes as the story tells and retells and retells itself. By the end he's nearly unrecognizable from the man we met in the opening. 

Cruise is hugely appealing here, not just in the early scenes opposite Gleeson in which he's in Tony Curtis mode—he's always fantastic playing a smooth-talking manipulator who's sweating on the inside—but later, where he exhibits the sort of rock-solid super-competence and unforced decency that Randolph Scott brought to Budd Boetticher's westerns. He was always likable, sometimes perfect in the right role, but age has deepened him by bringing out his vulnerability. There's an existential terror in his eyes that's disturbing in a good way, and there are points in which "Edge of Tomorrow" seems to simultaneously be about what it's about while also being about the predicament of a real actor trying to stay relevant in a Hollywood universe that's addicted to computer generated monsters, robots and explosions. Cruise deserves some sort of acting award for the array of yelps and gasps he summons as he's killed by a Mimic or shot in the head by Blunt and then rebooted into another version of the story.

The rest of the cast has less to do because this is Tom Cruise's movie through-and-through, but they're all given moments of humor, terror or simple eccentricity. Taylor often gets cast as brilliant but haunted or ostracized geniuses, and he's effective in another of those roles here. Gleeson, as is so often the case, invests a rather stock character with such humanity that when the character's motivations and responses change, you get the sense that it's because the general is a good and smart man and not because he's just doing what the script needs him to do. Emily Blunt is unexpectedly convincing as a fearless and elegant super-soldier, and of course a magnificent camera subject as well. Director Doug Liman is so enamored with the introductory shot of her rising up off the floor of a combat training facility in a sort of downward facing dog yoga pose that he repeats it many times. The film's only egregious flaw is its attempt to superimpose a love story onto Cruse and Blunt's relationship, which seems more comfortable as a "Let's express our adoration for each other by killing the enemy" kind of thing. 

There's no end to the number of films and novels and other sources to which "Edge of Tomorrow" can be likened. " Groundhog Day " seems to be everyone's reflexive comparison point, but Liman's elaborately choreographed tracking shots and unglamorously visualized European hellscapes evoke " Children of Men ," the creatures themselves have a touch of the Sentinels from the "Matrix" films, and the monsters-vs.-infantry scenes will remind you of James Cameron's " Aliens " and its literary predecessor " Starship Troopers ." ( Bill Paxton , one of the stars of "Aliens," plays Cage's drill sergeant, a mustachioed Kentucky hard-ass with an amusingly sour sense of humor.)   It's also an exceptionally brutal film, so bone-and-skull-crushingly violent and fairy-tale frightening that its PG-13 rating is stupefying. Parents should avoid taking young children who'll be both confused by the fractured narrative and terrified of the Mimics, nightmare creatures that look like razor-tentacled squid and roll across the landscapes like tumbleweeds.

In all, though, "Edge of Tomorrow" is its own thing. One of its most fascinating qualities is its keen judgement of the audience's learning curve. The early sections of the film repeat scenes and dialogue until you get used to the idea of the story as a video game or movie script, but just when you start to think, "Yes, I get it, let's move on," the film has in fact moved on and is now leaving things out because they're not necessary. By the end of the movie the script—which is credited to Christopher McQuarrie and Jez and John Henry Butterworth—has gotten to the point where it's tactically withholding information and waiting for us to figure things out on our own. It repeats key images and lines near the end as well, but always for good reason. When you see the familiar material again you feel different about it, because its meaning has changed. The movie has an organic intelligence and a sense that it, too, exists outside of linear time. It seems to be creating itself as you watch it.  

Matt Zoller Seitz

Matt Zoller Seitz

Matt Zoller Seitz is the Editor at Large of RogerEbert.com, TV critic for New York Magazine and Vulture.com, and a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in criticism.

Now playing

tom cruise movie private cage

Dusk for a Hitman

Robert daniels.

tom cruise movie private cage

Brian Tallerico

tom cruise movie private cage

Carol Doda Topless at the Condor

Marya e. gates.

tom cruise movie private cage

The Fall Guy

tom cruise movie private cage

The Long Game

Film credits.

Edge of Tomorrow movie poster

Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi action and violence, language and brief suggestive material

113 minutes

Tom Cruise as Lt. Col. Bill Cage

Emily Blunt as Rita Vrataski

Brendan Gleeson as General Brigham

Bill Paxton as Master Sergeant Farell

Jonas Armstrong as Skinner

Tony Way as Kimmel

Kick Gurry as Griff

Dragomir Mrsic as Kuntz

Charlotte Riley as Nance

Noah Taylor as Dr. Carter

  • Hiroshi Sakurazaka
  • Christopher McQuarrie
  • Jez Butterworth
  • John-Henry Butterworth
  • Christophe Beck

Cinematography

  • James Herbert

Latest blog posts

tom cruise movie private cage

Speed Kills: On the 25th Anniversary of Go

tom cruise movie private cage

Joanna Arnow Made Her BDSM Comedy for You

tom cruise movie private cage

The Movies That Underwent Major Changes After Their Festival Premiere

tom cruise movie private cage

Netflix's Dead Boy Detectives Is A Spinoff Stuck In Limbo

Edge Of Tomorrow Ending Explained: Ready Player Tom Cruise

Tom Cruise wearing a helmet

Audiences have grown accustomed to watching Tom Cruise risk life and limb for his movies, whether it requires him to swing around the outside of the tallest building in the world or belt Foreigner tunes to his co-star's butt . But as un-killable as Cruise seems to be in real-life (or thinks he is, anyway), he's got nothing on his character from 2014's "Edge of Tomorrow."

Directed by Doug Liman, the sci-fi thriller (a loose adaptation of the Japanese novel "All You Need Is Kill") takes place in an alternate 2020 that's somehow worse than the actual one , in which an army of aliens known as Mimics have crash-landed in Germany and quickly conquered much of Europe. Cruise stars as Major William Cage, a selfish PR officer with no real combat experience who's demoted and forced to participate in an invasion against the Mimics, only to find himself trapped in a time loop after being covered in the blood of an unusually large Mimic, and dying in battle.

Confounded about what's happening, Cage gets some clarity from Sgt. Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), a war hero who was formerly stuck in her own Mimic-induced time loop. For the most part, "Edge of Tomorrow" is pretty cohesive in the way it lays out the story's rules for time travel, at least until you get to the movie's somewhat baffling ending.

The Ending of Edge of Tomorrow

As Cage soon learns, the larger Mimics are known as Alphas and exist as part of a super-organism controlled by the Omega: a creature that resets the day when an Alpha is killed in combat, allowing the Mimics to keep re-fighting the same battle until they win. Rita, like Cage, discovered this after being exposed to an Alpha's blood, allowing her to tap into the Omega's power until she got a blood transfusion.

Much of "Edge of Tomorrow" consists of repeated scenes of Cage training and trying to find the Omega with Rita. This also necessitates Cage dying, over and over, allowing him to learn from his mistakes in the same way someone playing a video game has to keep tackling the same challenges until they can beat them without getting their avatar killed. Along the way, Cage grows more selfless and empathetic, much like Bill Murray's uncaring weatherman Phil Connors did in the classic time loop comedy "Groundhog Day."

Eventually, Cage and Rita do locate the Omega, only for Cage to lose his time-travel abilities after he suffers a severe injury and gets a life-saving blood transfusion before he can kill himself. As such, Cage seems to die permanently while sacrificing his life to kill the Omega before unexpectedly making contact with the creature's blood, sending him back not one, but two days to a reality where Cage was never demoted and humanity is winning the war against the Mimics.

Wait, What?

While critics and audiences mostly liked "Edge of Tomorrow" when it first came out, its ending left many perplexed, given the way it seemed to blatantly violate the film's established rules about the Omega's powers. As co-writer Christopher McQuarrie explained, the original plan was to end the movie on a darker note. However, as the film evolved and began to play up the comedy inherent to Cage getting killed time and time again, those plans had to change with it:

"... We really struggled to deliver what the movie needed to be emotionally. I know the ending was somewhat controversial, with some people who didn't like it, but I think the only way to make those people happy would to end the movie in a way that wasn't happy. We weren't interested in doing that. It needed to end in a way that wasn't harsh."

Shaky logic aside, the ending is satisfying when it comes to Cage's arc. At the start of "Edge of Tomorrow," Cruise's character is self-serving and hasn't done anything to earn the respect afforded to his ranking in the army. So, when soldiers snap to attention as he walks by in the movie's last scene, it feels like he actually deserves it. What's more, Cage is so happy to see Rita alive that he doesn't care that she no longer remembers him or what he did, cementing the idea that he's more concerned about people beyond himself and less fixated on personal glory.

So, About That Sequel...

Interestingly, McQuarrie has said " Edge of Tomorrow 2 " will clear up all the questions about the first movie's ending ... if it ever happens. The sequel has been in the pipeline since 2015, based on an idea Cruise pitched to McQuarrie. Several rewrites later, the script is now apparently done, with Cruise, Blunt, and Liman all ready to return as soon as Warner Bros. says "Yes."

Therein lies the problem: "Edge of Tomorrow" grossed $370.5 million at the box office against a $178 million budget, which was enough to make it profitable (going by the old rule that a movie needs to gross double its budget in theaters to break even), but nowhere near enough to guarantee a sequel will happen. Not helping matters, Cruise and McQuarrie are still buried deep in the world of "Mission: Impossible," not to mention Cruise and Liman planning to shoot a movie in outer space (you read that right) at some point.

Blunt has admitted that scheduling is a big reason "Edge of Tomorrow 2" keeps getting postponed. The other factor , as Blunt noted, is the budget. In the Covid era, studios often only spend $150-$200 million on surefire bets, as far as their theatrical releases go. And unless everyone involved agrees to take a hefty pay cut, the odds are against Warner Bros. greenlighting "Edge of Tomorrow 2" as a Max exclusive.

Does Edge of Tomorrow Hold Up?

For all the questions its ending raises, "Edge of Tomorrow" works perfectly well as a standalone film. It presents the mythology of the Mimics with as few exposition dumps as possible, there are no attempts to set up sequels, and it recycles the tropes of the time loop sub-genre to tell a new story with a proper message. Compared to the modern landscape, where tentpoles that primarily exist to launch franchises reign supreme, "Edge of Tomorrow" is a breath of fresh air.

Not only that, the action in "Edge of Tomorrow" is genuinely inventive in the way it uses montages as visual shorthand for Cage cycling through his time loop over and over. The spectacle is equally captivating; as often as the movie plays Cage's injuries and deaths for darkly comedic effect, it also makes his pain tangible. You can't help but feel sorry for the schmuck and want to cheer him on, even if the whole situation is kinda his fault. Because of this, there's a real sense of stakes whenever Cage and Rita are in danger, more so than in a lot of recent blockbusters.

That's not to say "Edge of Tomorrow" is without its faults. Its conclusion is still nonsensical, and the quasi-romance between Cage and Rita falls flat, in part because Cruise and Blunt have zero onscreen romantic chemistry. Still, "Edge of Tomorrow" has only gotten better over time, much like a great video game with endless replay potential.

Movie Review: 'Edge of Tomorrow,' Starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt

Should you see the film starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt?

Emily Blunt, left, as Rita and Tom Cruise as Cage, in Warner Bros. Pictures' and Village Roadshow Pictures' sci-fi thriller "Edge of Tomorrow."

June 6, 2014 -- Starring Tom Cruise , Emily Blunt

Rated PG-13

Four out of five stars

I’ve always said it: if only there could be an epic sci-fi version of Groundhog Day. OK, I never said that, but I’m glad there is one: it’s called "Edge of Tomorrow."

The movie takes place in the near future. And when I say the near future, I mean CNN’s Wolf Blitzer makes a brief appearance and doesn’t look a day over the age he’s looked for the last 20 years. Aliens have attacked Earth and are conquering it, country by country. We now have a world army, and its public relations spokesman is Officer William Cage, played by Tom Cruise. He’s assigned to the pending invasion of France, a massive attack the army’s commander thinks is going to be a big victory for the humans. He wants Cage there for the battle’s aftermath, to paint a rosy picture for the world. But Cage has no interest in risking his life and attempts to blackmail the commander into keeping him away from the battle.

It backfires. Cage is arrested, knocked out, and wakes up a private in the army, with orders to fight. He’s strapped into an exo-suit -- that’s powered, full-body armor -- and dropped into Normandy, to do battle with the aliens. The humans are slaughtered, as if the aliens knew they were coming. Cage doesn’t make it either but just before he dies, he kills an alien that looks a little different than the rest -- and then wakes up in the previous day, once again to do battle and die Over and over again.

Also Playing? "The Fault In Our Stars"

In the process, Cage notices Rita (Emily Blunt), a battlefield soldier known both as “The Angel of Verdun” and “Full Metal Bitch,” because she’s killed more aliens than anyone else. Each day, Cage tries and fails to save her life. He finally explains to her what’s been happening to him: “Come find me when you wake up,” Rita says, and dies again.

Turns out, Rita once possessed the same ability to live over that Cage does, but lost it. Now she’s going to train Cage, every day he dies and returns, to stop the aliens once and for all.

Director Doug Liman ("Swingers," "The Bourne Identity," "Fair Game") does great work with Cruise and Blunt. In particular, he draws out Cruise’s natural humor, lending a sense of fun to this character that we don’t get to see when Cruise plays Ethan Hunt in the "Mission: Impossible" movies, or indeed any other character Cruise has played in the various action and sci-fi movies he’s done over the past decade. But it’s Blunt who seems almost a revelation here, as she directs her considerable talents to tackling an unaccustomed action role.

Minor continuity issues and a few trite moments do little to diminish "Edge of Tomorrow," a generally super-smart sci-fi action thriller that’s mostly unpredictable, and a pleasure to watch.

  • Skip to main content
  • Keyboard shortcuts for audio player

Movie Reviews

A lively 'tomorrow,' lived over and over.

Ian Buckwalter

tom cruise movie private cage

Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage, a soldier who's woefully unprepared for battle, in Edge of Tomorrow . Warner Brothers Pictures hide caption

Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage, a soldier who's woefully unprepared for battle, in Edge of Tomorrow .

It's rarely a compliment to say that a movie is video game-like. That's usually shorthand for effects-heavy, narratively lightweight, CGI shoot'em-ups. Don't get me wrong: Edge of Tomorrow has no shortage of big effects set pieces, a lot of invading aliens getting shot at, and the seemingly ageless Tom Cruise performing death-defying acts on a battlefield. Except that he doesn't defy death, and that's where the film borrows an important quality of video games to anchor its story: Death is never the end.

Death in a video game means rebooting, going back to the last save point and trying again, this time presumably ready for what killed you last time. That's the situation facing Maj. William Cage (Cruise), a weaselly military PR flack who gets railroaded onto the battlefield by a hardened general (Brendan Gleeson) who feels a soldier's wartime duty is to spend at least a little time on the front lines. In this case that means putting on a mechanized exoskeletal battle suit and going up against a horde of "mimics," fearsome alien creatures that have already conquered much of the earth.

Cage, woefully unprepared for battle, can't even figure out how to turn the safety off on the suit's guns when he gets dropped, D-Day-style, onto a French beachhead, only to die a few minutes later, and then awake the day before, back on the base just when this nightmare began. So begins his own video game, in which he eventually lives on the battlefield long enough to meet Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), a soldier he only knows by reputation, because he'd been using her image in recruiting efforts following her heroic efforts in humanity's only victory in the war so far.

Turns out, her skill at that battle grew out of becoming caught in a loop similar to the one Cage is in now. Hers ended, but when she realizes Cage is going through the same thing, she instructs him to meet up with her after the next time he dies so they can work together.

And die he does, many, many times — often at Vrataski's own hand. Before they can take on the enemy together, she must train him, and she's harder than any drill sergeant. Once she's injured him beyond the point of usefulness, she kills him so he can start again. It's like Phil Connors' piano lessons in Groundhog Day , if the kindly piano teacher put a bullet in Phil's head every time his fingers started to get sore.

Given the world-in-peril stakes, it would have been easy to make this into a grim affair; gritty is the zeitgeist for sci-fi and superheroes these days, after all. But the script (written and rewritten by a number of people over the past few years, but credited to Christopher McQuarrie and Jez & John-Henry Butterworth) has a knowing comedic edge, and director Doug Liman embraces those lighter elements, particularly in the early scenes of Cage caught in the loop at the base, dealing with a comically tough-as-nails sergeant played by Bill Paxton.

Liman has gone the all-business route before with The Bourne Identity , and he's done far-too-glib with Mr. and Mrs. Smith , but this strikes an immensely winning balance between the two. Blunt plays it straight, the hardened supersoldier to Cruise's inept coward. He might get most of the laughs, but she puts the violent period on every punch line.

Ironically, Cage's functional immortality actually ends up highlighting just how fragile humans are. It's contrary to action movie dogma, where the hero's invincibility tends to defy logic. Here, his overall invincibility is a plot point, facilitated by just how easy he is to kill.

That makes most of Edge of Tomorrow refreshing and unexpected, both for its humor and for its upending of action norms. That also makes how badly it misses the landing all the more disappointing, because the climax falls so eye-rollingly back into those same conventions. Suddenly Cage has to become all but invincible to survive the big boss fight at the end of the game.

Of course, tradition also dictates that obviously we can't have a male and a female enduring these trials without them developing feelings for each other. Wouldn't it be even better if Cage and Vrataski weren't just fighting side by side, but kissing a little too?

No. While it might make sense for him, since he's been spending hundreds of repeated days with her, for her he's still new, as he's always been, and they've been spending most of their few hours together just trying not to die. Earlier versions of the script had Cage as a younger man, before Cruise was cast; the shoehorned-in romance is especially exasperating now that he's old enough to be Vrataski's dad.

Edge of Tomorrow does so much so well up to that point that it ends up being a minor disappointment, though. Cage's journey in the film is from cowardice to bravery; it's just too bad the film's convictions end up running the other way.

Edge Of Tomorrow's Most Confusing Moments Explained

Emily Blunt as Rita Vrataski in Edge of Tomorrow

Though considered a box office disappointment upon its release in 2014, "Edge of Tomorrow" (a.k.a. "Live Die Repeat") remains one of the decade's most underrated sci-fi movies. Directed by Doug Liman and starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt, "Edge of Tomorrow" is a futuristic action-adventure twist on "Groundhog Day," following a reluctant soldier who lives out the climactic battle against alien invaders over, and over, and over again.

The past ten years have seen an explosion of new movies and TV shows about characters trapped in time loops, from "Happy Death Day" to "Russian Doll," but "Edge of Tomorrow" is particularly fun for the way the development of Tom Cruise's Major William Cage parallels the way players develop skills and experience in a video game. Many viewers can relate to the character's experience of grinding through a seemingly impossible task again and again, using the advantage of unlimited tries to build confidence in your skills and a better understanding of the challenge ahead. "Edge of Tomorrow" pairs this familiar feeling with a funny and engaging story of a character who, through a bizarre twist of fate, must keep playing this impossible stage forever.

It's possible to get overwhelmed by the mechanics and minutiae of the movie's science fiction plot — here's hoping we can clear up all of your concerns without repeating ourselves.

Is the movie called Edge of Tomorrow or Live Die Repeat?

The film — whatever you call it — is based on a novel by Hiroshi Sakurazaka entitled "All You Need Is Kill." According to an interview with Variety , Warner Bros. President of Marketing Sue Kroll found that audiences were put off by movies with the word "Kill" in the title, leading to the project's rebranding. Director Doug Liman, on the other hand, later told Den of Geek that the film was renamed to accommodate the film's tone, which is significantly lighter than that of the source material. He suggested that the film be renamed "Live Die Repeat" instead. Someone at Warner Bros. wasn't fond of this title, and bequeathed the project the more generic-sounding title "Edge of Tomorrow," against Liman's objections. "Live. Die. Repeat." was used as a tagline for the movie instead. Liman feels that this contributed to the film underperforming at the box office despite critical acclaim.

Someone must have listened, because when the movie was released on home video months later, "Live. Die. Repeat." was suddenly the larger print on the box , and digital marketplaces listed the full title as "Live Die Repeat: Edge of Tomorrow." Depending on when you purchased a physical copy of the movie, it may feature the two titles in a different order. Doug Liman told Den of Geek that the sequel's working title is "Live Die Repeat Repeat," and that its release would canonize "Live Die Repeat" as the title of the first film.

Has the UDF really turned the tide of the war?

In the film's opening montage, we learn that a meteor has crashed to Earth, bringing with it an invasive extraterrestrial species that humans call "Mimics." They've been spreading across Europe for years, easily overcoming all conventional military defenses. To combat this alien menace, the world's governments join together to form the United Defense Force, or UDF, and begin manufacturing suits of powered armor for their infantry.

When the UDF has their first victory at the Battle of Verdun, the belief is that the new mech suits have proven their worth. After all, Sgt. Rita Vrataski was able to use one to perform incredible and daring feats despite limited experience, proving that (as Major Cage will repeat to the media dozens of times) anyone with minimal training can operate one efficiently. In actuality, Rita's apparently instant mastery of the armor and the battlefield were the result of her ability to repeat any day in which she dies, giving her unlimited replays of any deadly scenario. Since the UDF is unaware of this (and refused to believe it in any of Rita's previous lives), they move forward confidently with an aggressive invasion of France, Operation: Downfall.

However, Rita and her ally Dr. Carter suspect there's still another layer to the Battle of Verdun. They believe that the Mimics eventually allowed the UDF to win at Verdun in order to lend them a false sense of confidence, prompting an all-out assault that would allow the Mimics to annihilate the UDF in a single stroke. It's also possible that the Mimics accepted the result of the Battle of Verdun that ended with Rita losing her ability to reset, deciding that this was victory enough.

Why are the aliens called Mimics?

Throughout the story of "Edge of Tomorrow," the shape-shifting alien menace that's conquering Earth is always referred to as the "Mimics." It's a cool-sounding name that helps to uniquify the film's villain, avoiding the constant reuse of the words "alien" or "enemy." However, although the Mimics do look and move in a strange, ever-changing way, it's never exactly clear who or it is they're "mimicking."

To find an answer to this question, you'd have to go back to the source material, the light novel "All You Need is Kill" by Hiroshi Sakurazaka. There, it's explained that the aliens based their earthly shape on the first life form they encountered after crash-landing on our planet: a starfish.

This idea isn't really represented in the film, with the Mimics receiving a totally original design that doesn't map easily onto anything in our animal kingdom. Their forms are constantly changing, their metallic tentacles forming into legs or sharp spikes, or unraveling so that they can rest flat in the dirt beneath their prey. Since the Mimics' bodies are incredibly fast and perpetually reshaping themselves, the audience rarely gets a good, long, look at them. Ironically, this makes them one of the more interesting and memorable alien designs in recent memory, since we get an idea as to what they look like, but would struggle to describe them to another person. "Starfish" doesn't really cut it, and neither does any other comparison. "Mimic" will have to do.

How many times does Cage die?

When cowardly publicity officer Maj. Cage attempts to blackmail his way out of combat duty, he's demoted to Private and forced onto the front lines of the UDF's invasion of France. After seeing the rest of his squad slaughtered, Cage grabs a claymore mine and blows apart both himself and a particularly imposing Mimic, intermingling their blood as he dies. He awakens the previous day, having acquired the ability to essentially respawn from the same save point every time he's killed, retaining all his memories and skills from all of his previous attempts. Once he realizes that there's no way to convince his superiors of what's happened to him, Cage uses his foreknowledge of the events of the day to experiment with different ways to potentially win the battle.

Though we follow Cage all the way through his first two lives so that we can observe him coping with his new reality, the film quickly falls into a stride in which the audience only sees the most relevant or successful cycles in Cage's time loop. Nearly every time we see him from this point on, it's evident that his latest life is informed by dozens, if not hundreds of unseen repetitions of whatever he's currently attempting. This means that, even though we see him die a mere 26 times in the film, the real number is probably upwards of 1000.

How does Rita know that she can't reset time anymore?

When Cage rescues Sgt. Rita Vrataski on the battlefield, demonstrating a clear foreknowledge of the dangers around them, Rita realizes that he must be on a time loop and instructs him to "find [her] when [he] wakes up." In his next life, Cage finds Rita and learns that, months earlier, she also absorbed the blood of an Alpha Mimic, gaining the ability to start the day over upon her death. However, she lost that ability on her last loop, during which she managed to win the Battle of Verdun but also suffered serious, non-lethal blood loss. When she received a transfusion of new, normal blood, she lost the ability to reset the day.

Upon hearing this, we can't help but ask one logical question: How can Rita possibly know that she no longer resets time when she dies, unless she died and didn't come back? This, unfortunately, is something the viewer simply has to accept in order for the movie to work. To patch up this potential plot hole, we're forced to accept that Rita (and later, Cage), can simply  feel that their ability to reset time is gone. We see it happen to Cage, after he suffers his own similar injury and blood transfusion in the final loop of the film.

Is it beyond belief that Mimic Alphas would have such a sixth sense that allows them to know whether or not they're detached from the time stream? Not entirely. One can imagine that such an instinct might have evolved within Mimics in order to alert an Alpha that it's lost its metaphysical save state. Still, it's certainly convenient for our heroes — and for the audience.

How does the time reset work?

Dr. Carter does a pretty solid job explaining the mechanics of "Edge of Tomorrow's" time travel during his initial meeting with Cage. While most Mimics are of the animalistic soldier variety, there are two special kinds of Mimic that, together, give them their unique advantage over humanity. Their movements are governed by a massive Omega Mimic, a strange and stationary creature with the power to skip backwards in time by about one day. However, the Omega can only do this when its counterpart, the Alpha Mimic, is killed. This is basically a defensive reflex. While the Omega remains hidden, the Alpha goes into battle. If the Alpha is killed, that means a battle has not gone as well as possible and should be attempted again, with the benefit of this experience. In short: the Mimics are save-scumming the war for Earth.

When Cage is infused with the Alpha's blood on the battlefield (as Rita was before the Battle of Verdun), he acquires the Alpha's ability to trigger the Omega's time reset. The Omega is still the one altering time, but its reflex is kicked every time Cage dies, instead of when the Alpha dies. Cage gets the added benefit of countless replays and accumulated experience, giving him an advantage in battle. Like Rita before him, Cage only loses this power once enough of his blood has been replaced.

Can the Mimics still remember previous loops?

Because the Mimics' activities and motivations are kept a mystery from the audience, we never definitively learn what effect Cage's blood infusion has on the Mimics' own abilities. Whether or not the Alpha's death would still trigger a time reset while Cage has the power is never totally clear, since we don't see an Alpha killed between the first and final versions of Operation: Downfall. However, since the Mimics' behavior remains predictable in the time loop, we can safely assume that they are not retaining knowledge from each reset.

The only changing factor is Cage's psychic visions from the Omega, which grow stronger after each loop. This is how the Mimics eventually figure out that Cage has become the new reset trigger, setting a trap for him with a fake vision of the Omega's location. In this loop, the Mimic Alpha corners Cage and deliberately keeps him from killing himself, apparently trying to capture him alive as not to lose this progress. Cage manages to reset anyway, and the Mimics never seem to pay special attention to him again. This implies that they only know of his unique nature on loops in which he gives it away.

Why does Rita kiss Cage?

Before their final charge towards the Omega during their final loop, Rita and Cage share a brief moment during which Rita commends Cage on his bravery during their work together. Just before charging into battle, Rita kisses Cage on the lips, saying that she wishes she'd gotten to know him better.

It's not totally unreasonable to think that Rita might want a last kiss before dying, especially when the available, willing partner is a fellow soldier who looks like Tom Cruise. However, the moment rings a little false when you consider that, while Cage has known Rita for years through the repetition of the time loop, Rita has only known Cage for about a day and a half. True, there have been loops during which Cage and Rita have grown close over the course of a long road trip, but even then, Rita remains an emotionally guarded person who hesitates to let herself feel for Cage. Because each loop implies the repetition of some but not all of the routines that Cage and Rita follow on their usual paths, we actually don't see very much of Cage and this version of Rita, which is one of the reasons that the kiss raises some eyebrows.

In an essay for The Wire , film critic Esther Zuckerman described the last-second romantic twist to be a betrayal of the character for the sake of offering Cage a sort of reward for his personal growth over the course of the film. Indeed, the moment plays as if it's more about demonstrating that Cage is no longer the loathsome, unlovable weasel that we meet at the start of the film than it is about Rita learning to trust again.

Why does time reset further back at the end?

Once Cage has lost the ability to reset time, he and Rita lead a suicide mission to destroy the Omega, which is hidden under the Louvre museum in Paris. Their mission is successful, as Cage is able to drop a belt of live grenades into the Omega's mouth. Cage and the Alpha are caught in the blast as well, and it appears that Cage lives long enough to absorb some of their blood. Then, he wakes up at an earlier point in the timeline than he's accustomed to, before his disgraceful demotion to Private, and learns that the Mimics have lost their capacity to fight the war. Instead of a bloody trench battle, Operation: Downfall will now be met with minimal resistance from the extraterrestrial menace.

This seems awfully convenient for Cage, who has now saved not only the world but his own career and reputation. The film didn't give us a clear explanation as to why this has happened, but we can extrapolate one from the logic of the film. It may be that Cage absorbing the Omega's blood has a different effect than just absorbing the Alpha's, giving him more control over the time stream than he had as merely the trigger for the reset. He may have instinctively selected a moment in time to return to that would put him in the best possible position.

Co-screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie promised in a since-deleted Tweet that the sequel will concretely answer this question.

Why wasn't Edge of Tomorrow considered a hit?

Before the film was even released, the press was already prepared to write off "Edge of Tomorrow" as a flop."Nobody really knows what this film is," entertainment analyst Doug Creutz told Variety in May 2014, weeks before it hit theaters. Whether this is the fault of the generic-sounding title, or the marketing campaign's failure to convey the high concept or comedic tone of the film, or some combination of other factors is still up for debate. In any case, "Edge of Tomorrow" opened at #3 at the box office , losing the weekend to tear-jerking romance "The Fault in Our Stars" and the live-action Disney fantasy "Maleficent."

It's important to put the supposed failure of "Edge of Tomorrow" in perspective. The film grossed about $100 million at the US box office and another $270 million overseas, which is nothing to sneeze at until you consider its reported budget of $178 million. That budget was put to excellent use on screen, crafting practical mech suits for the cast and generating unique and stunning aliens via VFX, but studios make such investments under the expectation of at least doubling their budgets, not picking up table scraps from a teen-oriented drama that cost a rival studio only $12 million to make .

It's also worth noting that projecting "Edge of Tomorrow" to be a failure fit into a popular narrative that Tom Cruise's star was fading in the United States. His previous three films, "Oblivion," "Jack Reacher," and "Rock of Ages,"  were all considered to have underperformed domestically, so it's possible that the atmosphere around the film's release was already poisoned. 

To revisit this article, visit My Profile, then View saved stories .

  • Backchannel
  • Newsletters
  • WIRED Insider
  • WIRED Consulting

Angela Watercutter

Tom Cruise Respawns Into Alien War in New Edge of Tomorrow Trailer

Image may contain Tom Cruise Human Person and Face

There are probably better ways to be reborn than having Emily Blunt shoot you in the face, but none of them seem nearly as cool. Want proof? Look above.

The new trailer for director Doug Liman's Edge of Tomorrow takes us a little bit further into his Groundhog Day -meets- Call of Duty sci-fi epic in which Tom Cruise plays Lt. Col. Bill Cage—a man fighting an alien war on a loop where he dies only to wake up and fight the same battle again and again. How and why he gets stuck in this constant respawn cycle is a bit unclear, but apparently the way to get out is to be trained by special forces hero named Rita Vrataski (Blunt), who—again—might just off Cage in order to get him to come back in better shape than the one she's left him in.

This latest trailer is still fairly light on details beyond the basic premise that Cage is stuck in this constant battle and must find (or fight) his way out. However, it does show off some pretty amazing action sequences and tease the possibility that Cruise and Blunt could maybe, possibly make out. Hey, as long as they make a solid exoskeleton-enabled effort to save humanity while they're at it, we're down.

Edge of Tomorrow hits theaters June 6.

The Mysterious ‘Dark’ Energy That Permeates the Universe Is Slowly Eroding

Charlie Wood

I Tried These AI-Based Productivity Tools. Here’s What Happened

Juliane Bergmann

The Showdown Over Who Gets to Build the Next DeLorean

Kathy Gilsinan

Motorola Finally Made an Interesting Moto G Again

Julian Chokkattu

tom cruise movie private cage

Eric Ravenscraft

1994 Was the Last Good Year&-and It's Still Going

Jason Parham

The 47 Best Shows on Netflix Right Now

Jennifer M. Wood

'Edge of Tomorrow' Works Because Tom Cruise Is Playing a Coward

Major William Cage is not like Ethan Hunt!

The Big Picture

  • Tom Cruise's role as Major William Cage in Edge of Tomorrow showcases his comedic talent and his range beyond typical action hero roles.
  • The film allows Cruise to have a genuine character arc, demonstrating self-sacrifice and bravery.
  • Cruise and Emily Blunt's dynamic chemistry enhances the film's narrative and adds depth to their characters.

Tom Cruise has been one of the biggest movie stars in the world for four decades, but he’s somehow having a new renaissance in his career over the past decade. While Cruise’s string of hits in the 1990s emphasized his ambition to work with auteur filmmakers and give versatile performances, it seems like Cruise’s current work is only in service of the audience. Cruise continues to push himself to deliver outrageously entertaining maximalist spectacle , and the success of the last few Mission: Impossible films and Top Gun: Maverick indicate that audiences will follow him no matter where he goes. Interestingly, one of the more underrated films from this era is the sci-fi action flick Edge of Tomorrow , in which Cruise took a completely different type of challenge — he had to play a coward.

Edge of Tomorrow

A soldier fighting aliens gets to relive the same day over and over again, the day restarting every time he dies.

What Is 'Edge of Tomorrow' About?

Directed by Doug Liman , Edge of Tomorrow takes place in 2015 when a group of alien invaders known as “Mimics” have taken control of Europe, forcing troopers to head to the frontlines in mech-suits to ward off their seemingly brilliant opponents. Major William Cage (Cruise) is simply a “public affairs” officer with no combat experience who aims to use his superior position to avoid duty, but he’s punished and sent directly to the frontlines. After attempting to desert, Cage finds himself squarely under the command of the no-nonsense veteran Sergeant Rita Vrataski ( Emily Blunt ). Although they’re initially at odds, Cage finds that he must seek Rita’s help if he’s to escape the time loop he’s been caught in, wherein he keeps dying and coming back to life only to repeat the same day over and over .

Edge of Tomorrow sets up a premise that borrows from both Groundhog Day and Independence Day , but Cruise’s performance is a lot closer to Bill Murray ’s Phil Connors than Will Smith ’s Steven Hiller. He’s a reluctant hero who doesn’t even want to be a hero, which couldn’t be more different from Ethan Hunt or Pete Mitchell. The use of the time loop trope allows Cruise to have a genuine character arc where he has to prove himself, learn new skills, and discover the value of self-sacrifice and bravery. It also allowed him to flex his comedic chops in a way that he hadn’t been able to since his work in the 1990s. Cruise’s dynamic performance as a lovable loser makes Edge of Tomorrow rank among the most entertaining original blockbusters in recent memory.

'Edge of Tomorrow' Shows Off Tom Cruise's Comedic Abilities

Despite being one of the biggest box office draws in history, it’s easy to forget that Tom Cruise is already an acclaimed performer . This is someone who has worked with Oliver Stone , Steven Spielberg , Stanley Kubrick , Michael Mann , and Paul Thomas Anderson , so he’s picked up a few things about playing a nuanced character. What’s brilliant about the writing of Cage is that the script doesn’t go over the top in making him unlikeable; he’s simply the product of an unfair system that risks the lives of those who can’t afford to luxuriate in a comfortable corporate position like he can. He may be blissfully mean-spirited, but he’s not necessarily a war-mongering militarist like his superior, General Brigham ( Brendan Gleeson ).

It’s also easily forgotten how funny Cruise can be. We see an awkward, goofy side of him in Edge of Tomorrow that’s been absent in his performances (except for a little detour in Tropic Thunder ) since Jerry Maguire . This is exemplified when he’s awkwardly introduced to his new team of companions in the barracks and desperately tries to escape from duty. Seeing Cage demolished and killed in different ways as he tries to find any means to avoid actually doing anything productive allows the film to have a morbid, dark sense of humor. While it’s quite similar to a sequence in Groundhog Day when Phil continues to attempt suicide, it’s even funnier here as a self-aware reference to Cruise’s history of performing dangerous stunts . Cruise even helps shed light on the supporting cast as Cage begins to mess with his fellow soldiers by predicting their activities each time he’s reincarnated.

However, Cage’s cowardly nature also gives the film a direction, and it makes him a more inspirational character. There’s a bit of The Twilight Zone magic within the story about an ordinary man called on to do extraordinary things, and Cruise gets to show how Cage slowly learns about his own abilities as he trains with Rita. Having an inexperienced character allows the film to provide exposition in a naturalistic way, as Cage is hilariously unprepared for all elements of combat . These scenes would all be infinitely less interesting if Cruise was playing an action hero like Ethan Hunt , who already knows how the gadgets work.

Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt Are a Dynamic Duo in 'Edge of Tomorrow'

There’s a good deal of the Alien legacy in Edge of Tomorrow, and Blunt certainly gives a performance worthy of Sigourney Weaver ’s Ellen Ripley . In a reversal of roles, Rita is the hard-edged, cynical veteran tasked with helping Cage. The film sets off a fun dichotomy where Rita obviously wants to figure out the aliens’ plan herself, but must train a goofball like Cage because he’s been infected and can retain his memories. There’s a plot-centric reason for them to stay together, and the chemistry between Cruise and Blunt steadily convinces the viewers that they’re learning to appreciate each other.

Having Cage initially be a cowardly deserter gives him a sensitivity that makes this relationship more interesting. Cage isn’t just learning about how to fight in a mech-suit and pick up clues about alien biology, but also how to improve himself and reflect on his life choices. He’s forced to open up to Rita and finds a newfound respect for the soldiers he wouldn’t have thought twice about before. There are some quiet moments of intimacy in which we see how much Cage has grown , particularly when Rita reveals how she was once caught in a traumatic moment, reliving the death of her lover.

The 10 Best Tom Cruise Action Movies, Ranked

Edge of Tomorrow was an anomaly for many reasons. Although it was loosely based on the graphic novel All You Need Is Kill , it felt like a completely original work of science fiction that didn’t intend to start a franchise or launch a universe. Those looking for a generic sci-fi action movie may have been surprised to find a surprisingly earnest, hilarious, and emotional story about the planet’s most unexpected hero. Through Cage's unexpected journey in Edge of Tomorrow , Tom Cruise manages to convince us that he’s still a hero — he just has to learn how to be.

Edge of Tomorrow is available to rent on Prime Video in the U.S.

RENT ON PRIME VIDEO

Den of Geek

Edge of Tomorrow review

Tom Cruise battles aliens and spins around in time in his latest sci-fi excursion, Edge of Tomorrow.

tom cruise movie private cage

  • Share on Facebook (opens in a new tab)
  • Share on Twitter (opens in a new tab)
  • Share on Linkedin (opens in a new tab)
  • Share on email (opens in a new tab)

Major William Cage (Tom Cruise) is kind of a jerk when we first meet him in Edge of Tomorrow , the new sci-fi action thriller from director Doug Liman ( Swingers , The Bourne Identity ). A public relations rep for the military during an unprecedented and devastating worldwide war against alien invaders known as “Mimics,” Cage has never seen a day of combat and isn’t exactly hungry to get out there and start fighting. But thanks to a cowardly exchange in which he tries to clumsily threaten the four-star general (Brendan Gleeson) in charge of Earth’s United Defense Force (UDF), Cage finds himself headed directly for the front line on a French beach — where he is thrust unceremoniously into battle and quickly slaughtered with the rest of the troops.

That is, until he suddenly wakes up and finds himself inexplicably reliving the entire day — not just once, but over and over again, starting from scratch every time he is killed on the battlefield and fruitlessly trying to convince his master sergeant (Bill Paxton) and fellow soldiers of what is happening. Every time out, however, Cage gets a little better at fighting and eventually crosses paths with top Special Forces warrior Rita Vrataski (Emily Blunt), who seems to have knowledge of Cage’s situation. He finds out from her that he is caught in a time loop connected to the Mimics, which may hold the only key to defeating the invaders and saving the human race.

Based on a Japanese “light novel” by Hiroshi Sakurazaka called All You Need is Kill , Edge of Tomorrow is, in its simplest form, a cross between Groundhog Day and Starship Troopers . But it works hard to find the best attributes of both those stories, melding them into a smart and often very funny sci-fi scenario. Cruise and Blunt are given genuine character arcs to play, a rarity in today’s summer action/genre blockbusters, and the movie finds time to ponder questions about fate, destiny and personal responsibility amidst a barrage of visceral and intense battle scenes.

Liman directs at full throttle, giving a frightening intensity to the action sequences and the numerous confrontations with the Mimics, who are hideous biomechanical whirling dervishes. But his secret weapon is the script by Christopher McQuarrie, Jez Butterworth, and John-Henry Butterworth, which finds new, inventive and humorous ways to show Cage endlessly reliving the same day mostly without repetition that could become quickly tedious. And when the narrative moves forward and Cage begins expanding the parameters of his single day, the script finds ways to drop us further along in the story while economically catching us up at the same time.

Ad – content continues below

All of this plays to superb effect in the movie’s first half, which features a number of genuine laugh-out-loud moments despite the grim horror of the situation that Cage and the rest of the human race is in. Even when the time loop is pushed almost to the breaking point in the movie’s third act — which starts to feel a bit long thanks to the now-standard overstuffed climax we are getting served up in all big-budget films of this sort — it never loses cohesion or breaks its own rules. The ending gave me pause as well — until I realized that if you think about it, it works as well.

Imagine that: a Hollywood summer sci-fi blockbuster that actually makes you think a little. Combine that with the fact that Edge of Tomorrow is — while based on an existing literary property — not a franchise launcher, not part of a comic book universe and not a sequel, and the movie’s many accomplishments seem even more impressive. And what about Cruise? Not only does he give his usual excellent performance as Cage evolves from jackass to savage yet humane warrior, but he has provided the common element for several of the best big-budget sci-fi movies of the past 15 years, including Vanilla Sky (2000), Minority Report (2002), War of the Worlds (2005), the underrated Oblivion (2013) and now this.

I’m not going to get into speculation about the origins of or reasons for Cruise’s seeming fascination with the genre, but he has certainly picked stories that at least attempt to find the right balance between the modern action requirements of today’s blockbusters and the more cerebral concepts that sci-fi can offer at its best. Are you a science fiction fan who wants to see fresh genre material make it to the screen? Then you owe it to yourself to go out and see Edge of Tomorrow and support it with your dollars. Heck, you might even want to experience the whole thing again when it’s over.

Edge of Tomorrow is out in theaters Friday, June 6.

Like us on Facebook and follow us on Twitter for all news updates related to the world of geek. And Google+ , if that’s your thing!

Don Kaye

Don Kaye | @donkaye

Don Kaye is an entertainment journalist by trade and geek by natural design. Born in New York City, currently ensconced in Los Angeles, his earliest childhood memory is…

Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

  • User Reviews

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews

  • User Ratings
  • External Reviews
  • Metacritic Reviews
  • Full Cast and Crew
  • Release Dates
  • Official Sites
  • Company Credits
  • Filming & Production
  • Technical Specs
  • Plot Summary
  • Plot Keywords
  • Parents Guide

Did You Know?

  • Crazy Credits
  • Alternate Versions
  • Connections
  • Soundtracks

Photo & Video

  • Photo Gallery
  • Trailers and Videos

Related Items

  • External Sites

Related lists from IMDb users

list image

Recently Viewed

Screen Rant

This 20-year-old tom cruise movie can lay the blueprint for his future after mission: impossible.

Tom Cruise won’t be able to do Mission: Impossible movies forever, but one of his old movies may have paved the way for his acting future.

  • Tom Cruise's action star status faces a challenge as he ages, so exploring villain roles could be the key to his future success after Mission: Impossible .
  • A return to the character depth of his role in Collateral could provide Cruise with exciting new opportunities in his career.
  • Practical stunt work sets Cruise apart in action films, but taking on antagonistic roles could help him stay relevant in the industry.

Tom Cruise has been a movie star for over forty years, and one of his most underrated films could be the key to the next phase of his career after Mission: Impossible . Cruise, in his most recent star era, has become synonymous with daring stunt work and large action set pieces in his blockbuster films. The two most notable examples are his long-running Mission: Impossible franchise, which is currently filming its eighth installment, and Top Gun: Maverick , which was the highest-grossing film of 2022 .

In many ways, Cruise is as popular as he's ever been and remains one of the last examples of a true movie star. There's just one issue he faces, and it's one that will only get worse with time: he's now in his 60s. He's still in amazing shape for his age and can still perform all the stunts his action roles require of him. Yet, at a certain point, Cruise just won't be able to physically accomplish these feats anymore , and the question will arise of what he will do to define the next era of his career.

10 Movies That Defined Tom Cruise's Career

Tom cruise should follow collateral's blueprint after mission: impossible.

The answer regarding a future after Mission: Impossible lies with one of Cruise's most memorable roles as the cold-blooded hitman Vincent in Michael Mann's Collateral . Collateral follows a single night in the life of cab driver Max (Jamie Foxx), who is forced to transport Vincent around L.A. as he crosses off targets on his hit list. The film doesn't just feature excellent action scenes but also a fascinating back-and-forth between the two leads. Many long exchanges of dialogue happen within Max's cab, and the audience sees him and Vincent argue philosophically about the value of human life and their differing ideologies.

Cruise's movie star charisma brought layers of charm to Vincent's sociopathic demeanor

Cruise had to train for Collateral since it was an unexpected role, as the actor had never played the main villain of a film before, and to this day hasn't done it again since. The uniqueness of this notion paid off, as Collateral proved to be a healthy hit. It grossed $220 million worldwide from an estimated $65 million budget (via Box Office Mojo ). Cruise's movie star charisma brought layers of charm to Vincent's sociopathic demeanor, and it is still widely considered one of the best performances of Cruise's long and illustrious career. A return to this type of role would be an exciting prospect for the actor.

Every Michael Mann Movie, Ranked Worst To Best

Villain roles can help tom cruise stay relevant.

As Cruise gets older, it'll become more challenging for him to remain at the center of these action franchises. Unlike films like Indiana Jones and The Dial of Destiny , which heavily relied on CGI to assist 81-year-old Harrison Ford with the action scenes, Cruise's movies use their practical stunt work as a selling point. Top Gun: Maverick had Cruise flying real jets , and Mission Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One had him jumping off a massive cliff on a motorcycle. Too much CGI would cheapen the impact of these stunts, which have become a big part of Cruise's brand.

However, if Cruise takes on more antagonistic parts in movies like Collateral going forward, h e could not only avoid putting his body at risk in as many huge stunts but also access an untapped well of potential film roles . Cruise would still be a selling point in whatever franchise he chooses to be a part of, and he'd be able to explore the darkness he displayed as Vincent all those years ago. It'd be an exciting development for fans to witness, full of possibilities, and could prove to be the key to Tom Cruise staying relevant through the 2020s and beyond.

Source: Box Office Mojo

Tom Cruise produced a movie in Eugene during the summer of 1996 about Steve Prefontaine

tom cruise movie private cage

In 1996 a film crew descended on Eugene to make a movie about Steve Prefontaine.

The film followed the relationship between record-breaking distance runner Steve Prefontaine and his coach Bill Bowerman.

Prefontaine was a star athlete from Coos Bay who ran for the University of Oregon and later competed in the Olympics in the 1970s.

He died in an automobile accident in Eugene on May 30, 1975, at the age of 24.

The film was written and directed by Robert Towne and produced by Tom Cruise.

Hundreds of locals appear as extras in the film at locations around Oregon, Lane Community College and Hayward Field.

The $25 million movie was released and distributed by Warner Bros. in 1998.

Cruise himself visited Eugene in 1998 for a screening of the film at the McDonald Theater.

The movie was well-received by critics but ended up grossing only $777,000 at the box office.

Contact photographer Chris Pietsch at [email protected] , or follow him on Twitter @ChrisPietsch and Instagram @chrispietsch

IMAGES

  1. Edge of Tomorrow: How Many Times Tom Cruise's Cage Dies In The Movie

    tom cruise movie private cage

  2. Tom Cruise's 10 best movies

    tom cruise movie private cage

  3. Sinopsis Film Edge of Tomorrow, Aksi Heroik Tom Cruise Akhiri Invasi

    tom cruise movie private cage

  4. 'Mission: Impossible' at 25: Tom Cruise set the bar for action movies

    tom cruise movie private cage

  5. Tom Cruise

    tom cruise movie private cage

  6. Las 13 mejores películas de Tom Cruise

    tom cruise movie private cage

COMMENTS

  1. Edge of Tomorrow

    Edge of Tomorrow is a 2014 American science fiction action film directed by Doug Liman and written by Christopher McQuarrie and the writing team of Jez and John-Henry Butterworth, loosely based on the Japanese novel All You Need Is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka.Starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt, the film takes place in a future where most of Europe is occupied by an alien race.

  2. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    Edge of Tomorrow: Directed by Doug Liman. With Tom Cruise, Emily Blunt, Brendan Gleeson, Bill Paxton. A soldier fighting aliens gets to relive the same day over and over again, the day restarting every time he dies.

  3. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    An alien race has hit the Earth in an unrelenting assault, unbeatable by any military unit in the world. Major William Cage (Cruise) is an officer who has never seen a day of combat when he is unceremoniously dropped into what amounts to a suicide mission. Killed within minutes, Cage now finds himself inexplicably thrown into a time loop ...

  4. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    Rita Vrataski : Ten minutes. Cage : Okay. Rita Vrataski : And then I'm killing you. Cage : Fine. Cage : [Being put into his 'new jacket' suit] Listen, man, I've never been in one of these. Griff : Yeah, well, I've never been with two girls at the same time before. But you can bet, when that day comes, I'll make it work.

  5. Edge of Tomorrow

    Mar 18, 2024. Rated: 3.5/4 • Feb 15, 2023. Jan 24, 2023. When Earth falls under attack from invincible aliens, no military unit in the world is able to beat them. Maj. William Cage (Tom Cruise ...

  6. A Spoiler-Filled Review of "Edge of Tomorrow"

    On the eve of the great mission, Major William Cage (Cruise), a U.D.F. information officer, is ordered to be embedded in a combat battalion in order to "sell the war" to the citizenry.

  7. The Ending Of Edge Of Tomorrow Explained

    One of the best sci-fi movies of the last decade, Edge of Tomorrow (aka Live, Die, Repeat) hit theaters in 2014, starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt, and while the film is a highly enjoyable ...

  8. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    Doug Liman. Hiroshi Sakurazaka. Christopher McQuarrie. Jez Butterworth. John-Henry Butterworth. Written by AstroNoud on February 26, 2022. Major Bill Cage is an officer who has never seen a day of combat when he is unceremoniously demoted and dropped into combat. Cage is killed within minutes, managing to take an alpha alien down with him.

  9. The Unexpected Pleasures of Edge of Tomorrow

    It's not, in short, a good day to be Tom Cruise—or rather, Private William Cage, the character he plays in his new film Edge of Tomorrow. Nor does his day get any better: blown to smithereens ...

  10. Edge of Tomorrow movie review (2014)

    Tom Cruise, who seems to be spending his fifties saving humanity, plays Major William Cage, an Army public relations officer.Cage is a surprising choice for the role of hero. He's never seen combat yet inexplicably finds himself thrown into the middle of a ferocious battle that will decide the outcome of the war.

  11. Edge Of Tomorrow Ending Explained: Ready Player Tom Cruise

    Audiences have grown accustomed to watching Tom Cruise risk life and limb for his movies, whether it requires him to swing around the outside of the tallest building in the world or belt Foreigner ...

  12. Movie Review: 'Edge of Tomorrow,' Starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt

    Emily Blunt, left, as Rita and Tom Cruise as Cage, in Warner Bros. Pictures' and Village Roadshow Pictures' sci-fi thriller "Edge of Tomorrow." David James/Warner Bros. Pictures/AP Photo June 6 ...

  13. A Lively 'Tomorrow,' Lived Over And Over : NPR

    Tom Cruise as Maj. William Cage, a soldier who's woefully unprepared for battle, in Edge of Tomorrow. Warner Brothers Pictures It's rarely a compliment to say that a movie is video game-like.

  14. 'Edge of Tomorrow' Ending & Time Travel Explained

    Based on the Japanese novel All You Need is Kill by Hiroshi Sakurazaka, Edge of Tomorrow tells the story of Major William Cage (Tom Cruise), a man who is forced onto the front lines for a major military operation against invading aliens known as "Mimics." Untrained and unprepared for combat, Cage is killed within minutes - only to wake up 24 hours earlier with no choice but to relive (and die ...

  15. Edge of Tomorrow

    Lt. Col. Bill Cage (Tom Cruise) is an officer who has never seen a day of combat when he is unceremoniously dropped into what amounts to little more than a suicide mission. Killed within minutes, Cage now finds himself inexplicably thrown into a time loop—forcing him to live out the same brutal combat over and over, fighting and dying again…and again. But with each battle, Cage becomes ...

  16. Edge Of Tomorrow Featurette

    Subscribe to TRAILERS: http://bit.ly/sxaw6hSubscribe to COMING SOON: http://bit.ly/H2vZUnLike us on FACEBOOK: http://goo.gl/dHs73Follow us on TWITTER: http:/...

  17. Edge Of Tomorrow's Most Confusing Moments Explained

    The past ten years have seen an explosion of new movies and TV shows about characters trapped in time loops, from "Happy Death Day" to "Russian Doll," but "Edge of Tomorrow" is particularly fun ...

  18. Tom Cruise Respawns Into Alien War in New

    The new trailer for director Doug Liman's Edge of Tomorrow takes us a little bit further into his Groundhog Day -meets- Call of Duty sci-fi epic in which Tom Cruise plays Lt. Col. Bill Cage—a ...

  19. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    Master Sergeant Farell : Something tells me it won't be nearly that long. Master Sergeant Farell : I see everyone is having a productive morning. You know it gives me a swell of pride knowing soldiers of your... caliber will be leading the charge tomorrow. Tip of the spear. Edge of the knife. [Sees the card game sticking out under the sheet ...

  20. Edge Of Tomorrow review

    Cage's imperfections actually give something for the actor to do - he adapts and changes throughout the movie, which is something we rarely see in even the best Cruise movies.

  21. 'Edge of Tomorrow' Works Because Tom Cruise Is Playing a Coward

    Adventure. A soldier fighting aliens gets to relive the same day over and over again, the day restarting every time he dies. Release Date. June 6, 2014. Director. Doug Liman. Cast. Tom Cruise ...

  22. Edge of Tomorrow review

    Major William Cage (Tom Cruise) is kind of a jerk when we first meet him in Edge of Tomorrow, the new sci-fi action thriller from director Doug Liman (Swingers, The Bourne Identity).A public ...

  23. Edge of Tomorrow (2014)

    8/10. This year's most surprising blockbuster movie so far. aldri-feb 28 May 2014. With thrilling action sequences, clever sense of humor and surprisingly intellectual storyline, "Edge of Tomorrow" shows a real deal of summer blockbuster movie and proves itself beyond expectation especially after unconvincing trailers.

  24. This 20-Year-Old Tom Cruise Movie Can Lay The Blueprint For His Future

    As Cruise gets older, it'll become more challenging for him to remain at the center of these action franchises. Unlike films like Indiana Jones and The Dial of Destiny, which heavily relied on CGI to assist 81-year-old Harrison Ford with the action scenes, Cruise's movies use their practical stunt work as a selling point.Top Gun: Maverick had Cruise flying real jets, and Mission Impossible ...

  25. Tom Cruise film 'Without Limits' was filmed in Eugene in '96

    Cruise himself visited Eugene in 1998 for a screening of the film at the McDonald Theater. The movie was well-received by critics but ended up grossing only $777,000 at the box office.