SOURCE: MEGA
Director Ed Zwick recalled talking to Tom Cruise about his relationship with his son, Connor, to help prompt genuine emotion from him while filming a scene in The Last Samurai in an excerpt of his new memoir, Hits, Flops, and Other Illusions: My Fortysomething Years in Hollywood.
SOURCE: MEGA
Ed Zwick wrote the book, ‘Hits, Flops, and Other Illusions: My Fortysomething Years in Hollywood’.
Zwick wrote about a day on set where he specifically noticed how “sweet and attentive” Cruise was being to a young actor. This gave the 71-year-old the idea to have him use that paternal energy for an upcoming scene.
“‘Tell me about your son,’ I said. He looked at me, surprised,” he remembered telling the Top Gun actor, referring to his now 29-year-old child he adopted with ex-wife Nicole Kidman. “I knew Connor had just returned to L.A. and Tom wouldn’t be seeing him for a while.”
SOURCE: MEGA
Tom Cruise is a father-of-three — Connor, Isabella and Suri.
“For a moment Tom was quiet. And then he began to talk,” Zwick shared. “It doesn’t matter what he said in those few short moments in the fading light. I watched as he looked inward, and a window seemed to open and his eyes softened.”
Zwick added that Cruise “nailed the scene” after their chat.
SOURCE: MEGA
Connor Cruise is 29 years old.
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Cruise isn’t the only A-lister the director dished about in his tell-all book. As OK! previously reported, he also detailed his sometimes tense relationship with Brad Pitt while making Legends of the Fall.
“Brad had grown up with men who held their emotions in check,” he clarified. “I believed the point of the novel was that a man’s life was the sum of his griefs. […] Yet the more I pushed Brad to reveal himself, the more he resisted. So, I kept pushing and Brad pushed back.”
SOURCE: MEGA
Zwick and Brad Pitt had a fight on the set of ‘Legends of the Fall’.
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“Brad wasn’t about to give in without a fight,” he said. “In his defense, I was pushing him to do something he felt was either wrong for the character, or more ’emo’ than he wanted to appear onscreen.”
“I don’t know who yelled first, who swore, or who threw the first chair. Me, maybe?” he continued. “But when we looked up, the crew had disappeared. And this wasn’t the last time it happened. Eventually the crew grew accustomed to our dustups and would walk away and let us have it out.”