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Leo vs. Tom: Two different paths to stardom

The baby-faced kid coming of age and the intensely driven young man

Image: Tom Cruise and Leonardo DiCaprio
Reuters
When it comes to two Hollywood personas, there may not be too many — at least among A-list males — who are perceived differently than Tom Cruise, left, and Leonardo DiCaprio.
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By Michael Ventre
msnbc.com contributor
updated 1:26 p.m. ET Dec. 22, 2008

Both became movie heartthrobs at a relatively young age. Each has snagged three Academy Award nominations. Neither has escaped the scrutiny of the tabloid press.

And that’s about it for the similarities.

When it comes to two Hollywood personas, there may not be too many — at least among A-list males — who are perceived differently than Tom Cruise and Leonardo DiCaprio. What they have in common recently is their names atop two very high profile releases opening on the same day: DiCaprio in “Revolutionary Road” and Cruise in “Valkyrie.”

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The films couldn’t be much different, either. “Revolutionary Road” is a drama based on the Richard Yates novel about a couple in suburban Connecticut whose marriage is crumbling. “Valkyrie” is a thriller about a plot by German officers to assassinate Adolf Hitler during World War II. “Revolutionary Road” is directed by Sam Mendes, who is best known for another tale of middle-class dissatisfaction, “American Beauty.” Bryan Singer, whose most notable credits include “The Usual Suspects” and the first two “X-Men” pictures, did the honors in Cruise’s film.

Those choices offer an indication of the type of films with which the two Hollywood stars have become identified. It isn’t exactly accurate to say that DiCaprio always gravitates to prestige pictures while Cruise prefers spectacle and action, because there is enough crossover on both their resumes to disprove that conclusion.

Yet generally speaking, those are the posh pigeonholes they occupy in the movie business.

“The issue with Tom Cruise is always going to be his larger-than-life star power,” said Missy Schwartz, a senior writer at Entertainment Weekly who covers movies, “and the fact that he’s even more scrutinized, more under the microscope, for things like the couch-jumping escapade. His career did take a hit after that. ‘War of the Worlds’ did great, but for a Tom Cruise-Steven Spielberg film it didn’t do the amazing business it could have. Also, ‘Mission: Impossible III’ didn’t do as well as it was expected to do, and ‘Lions for Lambs’ was D.O.A.

“That said, he had one of the greatest cameos of the year in ‘Tropic Thunder.’ What that showed is that he has a sense of humor. Even if it was a little contrived, it came off as him poking fun at himself and having a good time. That went great lengths to repair any kind of weird feelings people have had.”

DiCaprio: Not a star for star's sake
And then there’s DiCaprio. Schwartz sees an actor less committed to stardom and his standing in the business and more focused on great scripts, great parts and great directors.

“I think Leo is interesting because he’s sort of the opposite of Tom Cruise in a lot of ways,” she said. “He has huge star power. Obviously the tabloids love him. But he really has gone to great lengths to not be a star for star’s sake. You can tell by his choices he really wants to work with auteur directors. He’s worked with (Martin) Scorsese three times (and a fourth collaboration,  ‘Shutter Island,’ opens next year). Ed Zwick. Spielberg.

“He doesn’t take Hollywood blockbuster star vehicles for the heck of it. He is concerned most with being an actor.”

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While those seem to be the general directions the two have gone in, there certainly are exceptions. Cruise, for instance, has worked on several films with a high art pedigree, most notably Barry Levinson’s “Rain Man” and Oliver Stone’s “Born on the Fourth of July” and more recently “Jerry Maguire” and “Vanilla Sky,” both by director Cameron Crowe, “Magnolia” by Paul Thomas Anderson, and Stanley Kubrick’s “Eyes Wide Shut.”

So even though Cruise has been hammered at times for concentrating too intently on box office projects like the “Mission: Impossible” series and “War of the Worlds,” he manages to mix in reminders of his ability to act and chooses pictures that might cause Oscar to at least glance his way.

Do we judge Cruise unfairly?
In fact, Kirk Honeycutt, film critic of the Hollywood Reporter, feels Cruise is sometimes shortchanged in public perception.

“Cruise’s career has been astonishing,” he said. “He’s had numerous hits. In terms of box office, I don’t see that many missteps.”

Honeycutt said that at a recent meeting of the Los Angeles Film Critics Association, there was at least some discussion about honoring Cruise for his brief but memorable turn as a boorish Hollywood mogul in “Tropic Thunder.”

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“He’s at the stage of his career where he’s gambling now,” Honeycutt said. “He did ‘Lions.’ He did ‘Tropic Thunder.’ Now ‘Valkyrie.’ He’s 46. Even though he’s in great shape, he’s looking for character roles as well as leading roles. I’m not so sure he’s mismanaging his career. There are too many hits for that to be true.”

And Honeycutt feels many of the knocks on Cruise have to do with his life away from the camera. “The popular press sometimes finds that Cruise is a little over the top,” he said. “I don’t spend too much time worrying about how he looked on ‘Oprah.’”

How DiCaprio and Cruise look, of course, has a great deal to do with how they’re received. The camera loves them, and so do audiences.

But the initial impressions they made still resonate. DiCaprio, 34, broke through in 1993 with two spectacularly received performances in “This Boy’s Life” and “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,” even though he had had minor parts before that. Cruise’s memorable debut came as a ramrod-straight military student in the 1981 drama, “Taps.”

Those personas — the baby-faced kid coming of age, the intensely driven young man — have remained indelible features of DiCaprio and Cruise’s careers, respectively.


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