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Not ‘Mission Impossible’: Tom Cruise Finally Wins His First Oscar At The 16th Governors Awards
Tom Cruise has spent more than four decades jumping off planes, hanging off skyscrapers, and pulling off action scenes most actors wouldn't even discuss in theory. But despite all the stunt talk and franchise excitement, he had still never won an Oscar. That changed at the 2025 Governors Awards, where the Academy finally presented him with an Honorary Oscar, recognising his contribution to cinema as an actor, producer, and all-round force who kept the theatrical experience alive even during the industry's most uncertain years. It was a straightforward moment that carried real weight. After years of nominations and near-misses, Cruise finally walked away with his first Academy statuette.
The Films That Earned Him Nominations But Not An Oscar
Cruise wasn't ignored by the Academy in the past. He was nominated four times, but each time the award slipped away for reasons that had more to do with industry politics, timing, and who he was up against than his performance.
Born On The Fourth Of July (1989) - Best Actor
Cruise's transformation into Vietnam War veteran Ron Kovic remains one of his strongest dramatic performances. But that year, the competition was stacked, and his win was far from guaranteed. Daniel Day-Lewis won for 'My Left Foot', a performance many still consider one of the strongest in Academy history. Cruise delivered intensity and vulnerability but Day-Lewis's role was the kind that the Academy has always leaned toward.
Jerry Maguire (1996) - Best Actor
People remember the "Show me the money!" energy, but the film also showed Cruise's ability to balance charm with emotional depth. He lost to Geoffrey Rush for 'Shine', another performance that checked all the traditional "Oscar boxes" - biographical, transformative, dramatic. Cruise's work was memorable and accessible, but not the kind the Academy tends to reward.
Magnolia (1999) - Best Supporting Actor
Cruise was widely praised for this one. His performance as a troubled self-help guru was loud, messy, and uncomfortable in all the right ways. But he lost to Michael Caine for The 'Cider House Rules', a safer, sentimental pick during an era when the Academy usually leaned toward gentler performances. Cruise's risk-taking didn't align with the Academy's mood at the time.
Top Gun: Maverick (2022) - Best Picture (as Producer)
This one stung for fans. Maverick revived theatres worldwide after the pandemic and became a cultural moment, not just a movie. But as the Academy historically favoured serious dramas over big commercial films, 'Everything Everywhere All at Once' swept that year, making Maverick's chances slim despite the film's global impact.
What The Honorary Oscar Represents
So when Cruise finally took the stage at the Governors Awards, he was emotional. He spoke about watching movies as a child and feeling the magic of a projector beam lighting up a dark theatre. He also shared how filmmaking isn't just a job for him and as he put it, "making films is not what I do, it is who I am." The Academy's decision reflects exactly that: a man whose career blends acting, producing, stunt work, and a steady commitment to cinematic storytelling.
The Honorary Oscar essentially acknowledged:
- His role in preserving theatrical cinema during a streaming-heavy era
- His global influence as an action superstar
- His ability to push filmmaking technology through practical stunts and production choices
- His place in Hollywood history despite never winning a competitive Oscar
- It's not a consolation prize - it's the Academy finally acknowledging the scale of his contribution.
Why Is This A Huge Moment
For fans, this award feels like a closure of sorts. For critics, it's an acknowledgment that mainstream entertainers matter just as much as arthouse favourites. And for the industry, it comes at a time when Cruise is collaborating with Alejandro González Iñárritu, a director known for layered, dramatic cinema. That alone hints that Cruise's next chapter may look very different from the one we're used to. More importantly, the award signals something simple: Tom Cruise's decades-long effort to keep the movie-going experience alive has not gone unnoticed.
Tom Cruise didn't win his first Oscar for a single role. He won it for an entire body of work - the highs, the misses, the daring choices, and the commitment to giving audiences a reason to sit in a theatre again. The Governors Award isn't the end of a journey; it's a reset point. And with new films lined up, collaborations with serious filmmakers, and his continued push for big-screen cinema, it seems like Cruise is just getting started.



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