The Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt ‘Interview With the Vampire' feud rumors, explained
The second Tom Cruise stepped out on the red carpet at the European premiere of F1: The Movie to greet the film's star, Brad Pitt, the world of celebrity gossip revved its engine and then collectively lost its mind. The myriad body language experts of X fired off their instant analyses of the interaction. It was awkward! Look at the handshake! These men clearly hate each other! Gossip sites, like Closer, passed along the accounts of anonymous insiders, who bandied about theories like Cruise being "very territorial about the U.K."
OK, but then who gets Topeka?
More from GoldDerby
Mel Brooks loves 'Hidden Figures'?! Julianne Moore's a 'Superbad' fan?! Stars reveal their most surprising NYT movie picks
Billy Joel doc 'And So It Goes' sets HBO premiere date, 'The Strangers 2' trailer drops, and more of today's top stories
'American Idol' winner Jamal Roberts to join Brandy and Monica on 'The Boy Is Mine' tour
All of that aside, there is actual reporting(!) with sourced quotes(!!) from the people involved(!!!) at the base of this feud conversation.
The original source of the bad blood dates back — appropriately — to the one time that Pitt and Cruise actually shared the screen, the 1994 adaptation of Anne Rice's Interview With the Vampire directed by Neil Jordan.
In an interview with Premiere (which tragically doesn't have a proper online archive), Pitt told the magazine that he and Cruise were very different people, in a way that eventually began to "bug" him.
"You gotta understand, Tom and I are… we walk in different directions,' Pitt told Premiere. "He's North Pole. I'm South. He's coming at you with a handshake, where I may bump into you, I may not, you know? ... I always thought there was this underlying competition that got in the way of any real conversation. It wasn't nasty by any means, not at all. But it was just there and it bugged me a bit."
Fighting words!
But wait until you get a load of what Pitt says in the very next sentence, the one most gossip publications don't publish alongside the previous. "But I'll tell you, he catches a lot of sh-t because he's on top, but he's a good actor and he advances in the film," Pitt said. "He did it. I mean, you have to respect that."
Warner Bros.
Huh! Less scintillating!
To be fair, Pitt cops to having a bad time making Interview With the Vampire elsewhere, some of it connected to his position in the movie relative to Cruise's. He described the shoot as "miserable" to Entertainment Weekly in 2011, saying it was "six months in the f--king dark," "playing the bitch role," which had caught him by surprise because he wasn't able to read the script until two weeks before filming started.
"No discredit to Tom, man," Pitt said. "He had pressure on him. There were all the fanboys of the book. He had all this pressure to make it work, and he made it work — and good on him."
Speaking to Gold Derby recently, Interview costar Christian Slater said that he sympathized with Pitt on the grueling shoot.
"The majority of my work was with Brad. And I think I was catching him at the end of a long shoot [laughs]. It was a good, long six-month shoot. And I feel like he was at the end of his rope at that point. I think he was sick and tired of getting his face painted with those little veins and wearing fangs. But you know what? He was a professional. He was great. Certainly in the role. He did it. … He still showed up, 100 percent. But I just thought it was funny that he was so sick of it by that point. He was just over it."
Years later, Cruise and Pitt found themselves orbiting the same project — but not to star together. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Cruise was considered for the role of Cliff Booth in Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood, a role that went to Pitt and earned him his Oscar.
Rumors then swirled that Cruise could join Tarantino's since-aborted The Movie Critic with Pitt, but that talk was apparently unfounded.
So what's really going on?
Cruise's presence at the premiere makes complete sense due to his past work with F1's director Joseph Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer and Cruise's apparent blood oath to do everything he can to single-handedly save the theatrical experience. Did that mission simply bring him into the orbit of a former coworker with whom he didn't gel terribly well for a photo op? Maybe! But where's the fun in that?for Warner Bros. Pictures
Best of GoldDerby
Tom Cruise movies: 17 greatest films ranked worst to best
'It was wonderful to be on that ride': Christian Slater talks his beloved roles, from cult classics ('Heathers,' 'True Romance') to TV hits ('Mr. Robot,' 'Dexter: Original Sin')
'It almost killed me': Horror maestro Mike Flanagan looks back at career-making hits from 'Gerald's Game' to 'Hill House' to 'Life of Chuck'
Click here to read the full article.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Post
3 hours ago
- New York Post
Brad Pitt-led Formula 1 drama ‘F1: The Movie' speeds into No. 1
Brad's in the pole position. 'F1: The Movie' sped to No. 1 on Friday, its opener, raking in $25 million, according to The Numbers. The Post praised the sports drama, starring Brad Pitt as a Formula One driver who comes out of retirement, as 'a high-octane driving movie that's actually fast and furious.' The flick, which is slated to bring in up to $60 million this weekend, already made Apple Studios history as its biggest opening weekend ever, dethroning 'Killers of the Flower Moon,' according to Variety. 'How to Train Your Dragon' remained in the second spot, with $5.74 million in sales. 3 In 'F1,' Brad Pitt plays a racecar driver who makes a comeback after a 30-year retirement. AP The live-action remake is projected to earn $19 million this weekend, its third in theaters. In third was 'M3GAN 2.0,' with earnings of $4.53 million on its first day at the box office. The Post called the sequel to the 2022 original, which centers around a creepy child-sized robot doll that runs on AI, 'an annoying, forgettable and hard-to-follow action-comedy.' 3 The live-action remake of 'How to Train Your Dragon' was in second place on its third Friday in theaters. AP 3 The Post called 'M3GAN 2.0″ 'an annoying, forgettable and hard-to-follow action-comedy.' AP Disney and Pixar's 'Elio' landed in fourth, with a $3.2 million take on its second Friday in theaters. In fifth was zombie thriller '28 Years Later' — a swift downfall from its No. 1 spot last Friday, its opener — which took in $3 million.
Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Max Verstappen Snubs F1's Flashy World, Admits He Hates the Spotlight
Max Verstappen Snubs F1's Flashy World, Admits He Hates the Spotlight originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Max Verstappen loves Formula 1 but don't expect to see him enjoying the glamorous side of the sport. The reigning champion has made it clear that he has little patience for the glitz that follows F1 and he's not afraid to admit it. Advertisement Speaking ahead of the Austrian GP, Verstappen offered an honest take on why he avoids the spotlight whenever possible. 'Being authentic is not something I have to try and focus on,' he said. 'It's just who I am.' This comes after the drivers showed up at the premier of the F1 Movie co-produced by Lewis Hamilton. 'I don't like to be on the red carpet and dress up in a suit. I don't like to interact with people I don't really know, and have a fake smile and fake chat,' Verstappen confessed. 'It's horrible, I just don't enjoy it.' It's a candid admission that sets Verstappen apart in a sport often tied to luxury events, celebrity parties, and sponsor gatherings. While some drivers lean into these events, Verstappen remains laser focused on the track and is quick to distance himself from the circus that surrounds it. Max Verstappen talks to media during qualifying in comments resonate with fans who admire his straightforward, no-nonsense approach. For Verstappen, the appeal of F1 is still the raw thrill of racing, not the photo ops. Advertisement Even as he sits at the peak of his career, Verstappen shows no interest in changing his tune. In a paddock obsessed with image, his blunt honesty is refreshing. Love it or hate it, Verstappen remains unapologetically himself: a driver who'd rather be in the cockpit fighting for tenths than working a velvet rope. And if that means skipping another glittering afterparty? For Max, that's not a sacrifice, it's exactly how he likes it. Related: Max Verstappen Is Nothing Like the Media Portrays, Says F1 Movie Star This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 28, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lewis Hamilton Called Out 'BS Scenes' in F1 Movie Says Damson Idris
Lewis Hamilton Called Out 'BS Scenes' in F1 Movie Says Damson Idris originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Lewis Hamilton isn't just lending his name to the upcoming F1 movie, he's shaping it's authenticity. Actor Damson Idris, who plays the lead role in the Hamilton-co-produced Apple Original Film, opened up about Hamilton's involvement on set and how the seven-time world champion made sure the movie didn't drift into Hollywood fiction. 'He kinda called [expletive] on some of the sequences that wouldn't happen in real life,' Idris revealed in a recent interview. 'It was really just a sense of encouragement from Lewis. Anytime he came on set — everyone would be really excited.' The film, directed by top gun: Maverick's Joseph Kosinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, stars Idris as a former F1 driver making a comeback. Hamilton, who has been deeply involved in ensuring the film reflects the reality of the sport, helped tweak scenes to reflect the intensity and complexity of life in the paddock. According to Idris, Hamilton's input went beyond technical accuracy — he brought motivation and mentorship. 'He'd congratulate me and encourage me to keep going, and that fuelled me throughout the whole process of filming,' the actor added. While most of the film remains under wraps ahead of its international release, these behind-the-scenes insights offer a glimpse into the level of care Hamilton is putting into the project. For a sport often misunderstood in pop culture, Hamilton's insistence on realism could be what sets this film apart. In short: when Hollywood tried to overtake F1 reality, Lewis Hamilton hit the brakes. With global fan anticipation building, and Hamilton's stamp of authenticity behind it, the movie could do for F1 what top gun: Maverick did for fighter jets — and Hamilton wouldn't have it any other story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 17, 2025, where it first appeared.