“Keep It on the Ground,” Brad Pitt Says of Possible Tom Cruise Team-Up

Actor jokes he’ll reunite with longtime contemporary if the script lets him stay off airplanes, highlighting Cruise’s escalating stunt ethos.

Brad Pitt

Brad Pitt signalled this week that he is willing to share the screen with Tom Cruise again, provided the action stays firmly on the ground—a nod to Cruise’s trademark penchant for gravity-defying stunts. Asked at the Mexico City premiere of his Formula One drama “F1” whether a reunion was possible, Pitt laughed that he was “not gonna hang my ass off airplanes,” adding that he would sign on “when he does something again that’s on the ground.”

The pair have not worked together since 1994’s “Interview with the Vampire,” a production long rumoured to have created off-screen friction. Spanish outlet MeriStation notes that Cruise has already praised early footage from “F1,” suggesting relations between the two megastars are warmer than in the ’90s.

Both actors have fresh projects built on physical spectacle. Cruise is touring internationally for “Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning,” whose marketing hinges on a motorcycle-to-base-jump sequence shot on day one of filming. He has defended doing his own stunts, telling People magazine he is “constantly training” because “it can always be better.”

Stunt coordinator Wade Eastwood, who has overseen Cruise’s last four films, recently called the 62-year-old “a machine” whose discipline enables scenes such as 120 mph wing-walking to be executed without digital shortcuts. Minnesota-based expert Tom Ringberg broke down the safety layers behind Cruise’s work for CBS, underlining how much engineering stands between spectacle and disaster.

The appetite for that realism is not universal. New York Post reporting on Cruise’s breakfast-of-champions stunt regimen prompted pundits to question whether such extremes are necessary when visual effects can mask wires and airbags. Yet box-office momentum suggests audiences still reward the authentic peril Cruise promises, a factor Pitt may weigh as he prepares to race real cars in “F1” while leaving the sky—and its dangling fuselages—to someone else.

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