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Rebecca De Mornay reflects on relationship with 'Risky Business' co-star and ex Tom Cruise
Rebecca De Mornay reflects on relationship with 'Risky Business' co-star and ex Tom Cruise

Express Tribune

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Express Tribune

Rebecca De Mornay reflects on relationship with 'Risky Business' co-star and ex Tom Cruise

Rebecca De Mornay is opening up about her former relationship with Tom Cruise, expressing admiration for the actor and their early days together. In a recent interview with Page Six while promoting her new thriller Saint Clare, the 65-year-old actress spoke warmly about Cruise, whom she dated for nearly three years after meeting on the set of Risky Business in 1982. 'I'm really, really proud of him,' De Mornay said, acknowledging Cruise's extraordinary rise to Hollywood superstardom. The 1983 film, which launched both of their careers, remains a cultural touchstone, and De Mornay credited Cruise's drive and vision even back then. 'He is a brilliant interpreter of the zeitgeist,' she added. 'We started this together and look what he did with it.' De Mornay reflected on their differences, likening Cruise to a 'major chord' and herself to a 'minor chord,' noting that his career path fulfilled what America wanted, while she pursued more unconventional and gritty roles after Risky Business. Her filmography includes Runaway Train, Backdraft, The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, and a role in Marvel's Jessica Jones. Now, De Mornay appears in Saint Clare, a dark thriller starring Bella Thorne as a serial killer with a fixation on Joan of Arc. De Mornay said she was drawn to the project by its unique perspective. 'It's very rare that I read scripts about a female serial killer who's obsessed with Joan of Arc,' she explained. 'I just wanted to be a support to this project.' Despite the film's violent themes, she admitted she didn't initially associate it with real-life figures like Jeffrey Epstein. 'I never even thought of that… it's freaky that that would come into it,' she said.

The Au Pair, Channel 5 review: the sort of schlocky mindless fun that makes you binge the lot
The Au Pair, Channel 5 review: the sort of schlocky mindless fun that makes you binge the lot

Telegraph

time10-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

The Au Pair, Channel 5 review: the sort of schlocky mindless fun that makes you binge the lot

If you're in the mood for some enjoyably schlocky nonsense, Channel 5's The Au Pair fits the bill. It's the kind of mile-a-minute, OTT thriller in which 25 outlandish things happen in the first episode. You know the sort of thing. As in a cartoon, everyone who gets a bash to the head is knocked out cold. Villains administer potentially lethal injections to their enemies on a regular basis. Someone gets tied up in the boot of a car. All of this happens in the Cotswolds. Well, the caption tells us this is taking place in the Cotswolds, but there isn't a Cotswold stone in sight and it appears to have been filmed somewhere else for budgetary reasons. Never mind, it looks very pretty. Into the idyllic life of Zoe (Sally Bretton), who lives in a beautiful house with her family, comes a French au pair. You can never trust the French. Particularly this one, because she is on a dastardly mission to ruin Zoe and her family. But why? All will be revealed, in increasingly fraught instalments. There are strong echoes of the 1990s thriller The Hand That Rocks the Cradle. Sandrine (Ludmilla Makowski) arrives at the home of Zoe and Chris (Kenny Doughty) in response to an advert for an au pair. The couple have been married for three years and Zoe is stepmother to Chris's two children, while going through her own fertility struggles and grieving the loss of a baby. Zoe's dad (a lovely turn from David Suchet) lives in the annexe. Sandrine soon makes herself indispensable while also trying to bump everyone off. Every second scene seems to involve her eavesdropping behind a door. There is attention to detail in places – the costume designer has got it spot on, particularly with Suchet's wardrobe of retired doctor smart casualwear – but you could drive a luxury SUV through the plotholes, and don't get me started on the stepdaughter's schoolfriend who is eight months pregnant and hiding it from her parents yet doesn't seem to be all that worried about it. And why does Sandrine need to have one of those evidence walls from crime shows, covered in photographs and Post-it notes? Still, it's mindless fun, and I rushed to watch the second episode straight after the first. Plus, it's elevated by a classy performance from Makowski, who exudes Gallic cool.

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