A man in a brown leather jacket, a white shirt, and beige trousers falling through the air in a harness against a blue background.
Tom Cruise jumps from the roof of the Stade de France at the end of the Paris Olympics.
  • Tom Cruise does his own stunts and it's remarkable what he's been able to pull off.
  • Hanging on the side of a plane, skydiving, climbing the world's tallest building — he's done it all.
  • He also jumped off the roof of the Stade de France to mark the end of the 2024 Paris Olympics.

Tom Cruise has been one of the biggest names in Hollywood since the 1980s, but as his star power grew, so did his ambitions. 

He started to do a lot of his own stunts when appearing in action blockbusters like "Top Gun," "Mission: Impossible," and "Minority Report." 

The star famously does his own stunts, and he even drove a motorbike off a mountain in Norway for a scene in 2023's "Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One."

At the film's London red carpet, Cruise told Business Insider that he's "always pushing" to create bigger and better stunts to entertain moviegoers.

He certainly surprised audiences at the 2024 Paris Olympics' closing ceremony when he jumped off the roof of the Stade de France.

Here are the best stunts of Cruise's career, ranked.

11. For the cargo-plane crash in "The Mummy," Cruise did the stunt inside a NASA plane that trains astronauts for zero gravity.
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Annabelle Wallis and Tom Cruise in "The Mummy."

In 2017's "The Mummy," Cruise finds himself stuck in a cargo plane as it crashes. To pull off a scene like this, actors would typically film it in a controlled setting like a sound stage surrounded by a green screen.

Not Cruise, though.

The star shot the scene in a plane that NASA uses to train astronauts.

The scene was filmed in the plane which had to go up to 25,000 feet to get the look that Cruise was in zero gravity. The plane then did a free fall for 22 seconds.

Cruise did the flight four times to pull off the scene.

10. Cruise flew a helicopter in "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."
mission impossible fallout helicopter Paramount final
Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."

For the thrilling helicopter-chase scene in the finale of "Fallout," Cruise spent 16 hours a day training to get to the required 2,000 hours to fly a helicopter on his own.

But Cruise didn't just fly the helicopter. He also pulled off a 360-degree corkscrew dive in it, which would challenge even the most veteran pilot.

9. Cruise is really in an F/A-18 jet for the flight scenes in "Top Gun" Maverick" and had to deal with the G-forces.
Tom Cruise with a helmet and mask on inside a fighter jet
Tom Cruise in "Top Gun: Maverick."

When you see Cruise and the cast looking like they are battling G-forces in the jets, complete with distorted faces, it's because they really were.

Cruise and the cast went through training so their dogfight scenes could look as realistic as possible — which meant sitting in the F/A-18 jets as they were spun around and took dramatic dives.

8. Cruise jumped off the Stade de France during the closing ceremony of the 2024 Paris Olympics.
A man in a brown leather jacket, a white shirt, and beige trousers falling through the air in a harness against a blue background.
Tom Cruise jumps from the roof of the Stade de France at the end of the Paris Olympics.

The 2024 Paris Olympics closing ceremony went big on the Americana to mark Los Angeles hosting the 2028 games, with Cruise pulling off a stunt straight out of a Hollywood blockbuster.

He jumped off the roof of the Stade de France and descended into France's national stadium in front of thousands in a stunt that blurred the lines between himself and the daring characters he's known for playing. 

When Cruise got to the stage, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Olympian gymnast Simone Biles gave him the Olympic flag. After it was attached to a motorbike, the actor drove out of the stadium to start the flag's journey to America. He was later shown jumping out of a plane and turning the Hollywood sign into the Olympic rings. 

They're not the most extreme stunts of Cruise's career, but perfectly captures his showmanship.

7. Cruise climbed a 2,000-foot cliff in "Mission: Impossible 2."
Tom Cruise handing from a cliff
Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible 2."

In the opening scene of 2000's "M: I 2," Cruise is seen climbing a cliff. And yes, that's really him.

Cruise scaled the cliff in Utah with nothing but a safety rope. He also did a 15-foot jump from one cliff to another.

6. Cruise held his breath for six minutes for an underwater stunt in "Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation."
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Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation."

In one scene, Cruise's Ethan Hunt has to dive into an underwater safe to retrieve the computer chip that will lead him closer to the villain.

Along with having to hold his breath the whole time, he must keep away from a large crane that's circling around the safe.

For the scene, Cruise first jumped off a 120-foot ledge. Then, in a 20-foot deep-water tank, Cruise held his breath for six minutes.

5. Cruise broke his ankle jumping between buildings while making "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."
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Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."

Tom Cruise loves to run in his movies; it's become his trademark. But his ability to continue running came into question after a stunt went wrong on the set of "Fallout."

While jumping from one one building to another, Cruise hit the wall of the building the wrong way and broke his ankle.

The accident halted production for months and doctors told Cruise his running days might be over. But, six weeks later, Cruise was back on set doing sprints.

4. Cruise climbed the tallest building in the world for "Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol."
Tom Cruise in
Tom Cruise climbs up the side of the Burj Khalifa in "Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol."

The Burj Khalifa in Dubai is the tallest building in the world, and Cruise climbed it.

For "Ghost Protocol," the actor's climb got him up to 1,700 feet in the air.

He also fell four stories down by rappelling on the surface of the building.

3. Cruise did 500 skydives and over 13,000 motocross jumps for the thrilling motorcycle stunt in "Mission: Impossible — Dead Reckoning Part 1."
Tom Cruise skydiving
Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part 1."

For the latest "M:I" movie, Cruise once again pushed himself.

And one stunt in particular is definitely up there as one of his craziest ideas yet: driving a motorcycle off a cliff.

The star did 500 skydives and over 13,000 motocross jumps to prepare for the stunt. And that wasn't just so Cruise had the skill and comfort to pull off the stunt; the training also made it possible for director Christopher McQuarrie and his crew to map out camera angles to capture it. 

The stunt was then done on the first day of principal photography.

"We know either we will continue with the film or we're not. Let's know day one!" Cruise told "Entertainment Tonight" on why it was done on the first day.

Cruise ended up doing the stunt six times on the day of shooting.

 

2. Cruise hung on the side of a plane as it took off for "Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation."
tom cruise mission impossible rogue nation
Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation."

Cruise clung to the side of a massive Airbus A400M plane as it took off and went up to 1,000 feet dealing with speeds of 100 knots.

To protect the actor, he was secured with a wire attached to the plane. He also had special contacts on to protect his eyes from debris.

Cruise did this stunt eight times.

1. Cruise did 106 skydives with a broken ankle to pull off the HALO jump in "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."
Mission Impossible Fallout Paramount
Tom Cruise in "Mission: Impossible — Fallout."

While Cruise was healing the broken ankle he sustained earlier in the "Fallout" production, he went and pulled off the most amazing stunt he's done in his career so far.

In the movie, Cruise's character and CIA tagalong August Walker (Henry Cavill) decide to do a HALO jump — a high-altitude, low-open skydive, in which you open your parachute at a low altitude after free-falling for a period of time — out of a giant C-17 plane to get into Paris undetected.

Cruise did this for real by executing the jump 106 times over two weeks, many of them done during golden hour, a very brief period of perfect lighting that occurs just before sunset.

Read the original article on Business Insider