Tom Cruise Celebrates 46 Years in Movies With Career Retrospective and New ‘Digger’ Footage
Warner Bros.
Cruise marked nearly five decades on screen with a tribute to his greatest roles and a first look at his dramatic transformation in Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s upcoming Warner Bros. film.
Tom Cruise is looking back on 46 years in movies, and he is using the milestone to remind audiences just how many different versions of Tom Cruise have existed on screen.
The actor shared a career retrospective clip spotlighting some of his most memorable roles, from the adrenaline-driven movie-star mythology of ‘Top Gun,’ ‘Mission: Impossible’ and ‘Edge of Tomorrow’ to dramatic turns in ‘Rain Man,’ ‘Born on the Fourth of July,’ ‘Magnolia,’ ‘The Last Samurai’ and ‘Jerry Maguire.’ The video functions as both a celebration and a statement of purpose from one of Hollywood’s most vocal defenders of the theatrical experience.
“For the last 46 years, it has been my privilege to work alongside countless talented artists and crews to create these characters, stories, and films for you all,” Cruise wrote in the caption of his post. “I’m looking forward to seeing you at the movies!”
That last line has become central to Cruise’s public identity in recent years. Few stars have been as closely associated with theatrical advocacy, whether through his blockbuster stunt work in the ‘Mission: Impossible’ franchise, the massive success of ‘Top Gun: Maverick,’ or his visible support for other major theatrical releases. Cruise has repeatedly positioned himself as both movie star and moviegoing evangelist, making his latest retrospective feel less like a nostalgia reel than a declaration that he is still building the next chapter.
The most notable part of the clip arrives at the end, with a new look at ‘Digger,’ Cruise’s upcoming film from Alejandro G. Iñárritu. The project marks a major shift from the actor’s recent franchise-heavy run, placing him inside a satirical dark comedy from the Oscar-winning filmmaker behind ‘Birdman,’ ‘The Revenant’ and ‘Bardo.’ Warner Bros. is set to release the film in theaters on Oct. 2, with the full trailer expected July 13.
In ‘Digger,’ Cruise plays Digger Rockwell, an eccentric oil baron whose company may have set off an ecological disaster capable of escalating toward nuclear catastrophe. Early footage shows Cruise in one of his most physically altered screen looks to date, with thinning white hair, a thick Southern accent and a heavier frame. It is a far cry from Ethan Hunt sprinting across rooftops, which is precisely why the role has already become one of the most intriguing turns of his later career.
John Goodman plays an ailing U.S. president who urges Digger to fix the disaster he helped create, while the ensemble also includes Riz Ahmed, Sandra Hüller, Michael Stuhlbarg, Jesse Plemons, Sophie Wilde and Emma D’Arcy. The film has been described as a “comedy of catastrophic proportions,” with Iñárritu reportedly pushing Cruise into an exaggerated, absurdist register that could reframe the actor for audiences more accustomed to seeing him as the last great action star.
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That makes ‘Digger’ especially significant in the context of Cruise’s retrospective. The clip may look backward across decades of movie history, but it ends by positioning the actor as someone still willing to risk transformation. Cruise’s career has always moved between precision and reinvention. He became a global star through charisma and physical confidence, but some of his best performances have come when filmmakers pushed against that image, from Paul Thomas Anderson in ‘Magnolia’ to Michael Mann in ‘Collateral’ and Stanley Kubrick in ‘Eyes Wide Shut.’
‘Digger’ appears to belong to that lineage. It is not selling Cruise as invincible. It is selling him as strange, compromised, grotesque and potentially ridiculous, which may be exactly the kind of swing he needs after years of defining himself through practical stunts and blockbuster endurance.
The retrospective also arrives as Cruise remains one of the few stars whose name still functions as a theatrical brand on its own. Even as Hollywood has shifted toward franchises, superheroes, streaming and IP-driven marketing, Cruise has preserved an older form of movie stardom built around audience trust. Viewers know the physical commitment will be real, the scale will be large and the theatrical experience will matter. That trust has carried him across genres and decades, from teen comedy to military drama, legal thriller, romantic sports movie, sci-fi spectacle and spy franchise.
At 46 years in, Cruise is not merely commemorating longevity. He is asserting continuity. The same actor who slid across the floor in ‘Risky Business,’ shouted “show me the money” in ‘Jerry Maguire,’ flew fighter jets in ‘Top Gun,’ carried impossible missions across multiple decades and turned stunt work into a modern religion is now preparing to play a disastrous oil tycoon in an Iñárritu satire.
That is the story the clip tells most clearly. Cruise is still chasing the next transformation, still anchoring himself to theaters and still treating cinema as a public event.
For an actor who has spent nearly half a century turning moviegoing into spectacle, “I’m looking forward to seeing you at the movies” is not just a caption. It is the thesis.



