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Tom Cruise Spotted at Concert of Famous Rock Band That Once Mocked Him

Tom Cruise Spotted at Concert of Famous Rock Band That Once Mocked Him

Yahoo28-07-2025
Tom Cruise Spotted at Concert of Famous Rock Band That Once Mocked Him originally appeared on Parade.
Tom Cruise just made a surprising appearance at an Oasis concert at London's Wembley Stadium years after the band's frontmen mocked him in a documentary.
Fans were shocked to see the A-list actor at the event, given the history between him and the iconic English rock band fronted by brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher. The brothers have reunited after years of public feuding for a world tour - marking the first time they've performed together in 16 years.
During a scene in the 2007 documentary Lord Don't Slow Me Down, which followed the band's 2005-2006 Don't Believe the Truth world tour, the Gallagher brothers poked fun of Cruise and his career.
"He's a little fucker, and he's not been in one good film in his entire career," Noel said on camera about Cruise. Liam added, "I hate Tom Cruise. Bastard. Him and [soccer player] Michael Owen."
RELATED:
Cruise reportedly confronted Liam Gallagher years later when the two were at the same hotel in Berlin, Germany in 2009.
The actor allegedly walked past Liam in the hotel and then turned around to jokingly bring up he and Noel's criticism of him. Cruise reportedly reminded Liam that he also said in the documentary that Cocktail was a good movie, and the two men appeared to shake hands before parting ways.
The Oasis reunion tour kicked off earlier this month in Cardiff, Wales, and will head to Edinburgh, Scotland and Dublin, Ireland before coming to the United States in August.Tom Cruise Spotted at Concert of Famous Rock Band That Once Mocked Him first appeared on Parade on Jul 28, 2025
This story was originally reported by Parade on Jul 28, 2025, where it first appeared.
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'Disney has different incentives to a lot of other companies in that it has a very sophisticated way of monetising its IP through theme parks, which make loads of money, cruise ships and merchandising,' Jackson explains. 'It doesn't need new hits in the same way. It makes the repeat hits to invest in existing IP. It looks boring to the outside, but a film like Mufasa on streaming is helping the Lion King brand and keeping it fresh for a new audience.' It means Disney has retreated from its message movies – the young hero of Elio who ends up saving the world after being mistaken for a global ambassador was originally 'queer-coded' before all references were scrubbed – but those are replaced by a focus on an endless loop of slight tweaks to stories we've seen before, to help boost theme park rides or merchandise. As Rumi is told in Kpop Demon Hunters, 'focus is good, but focusing on one part leads to ignoring other parts, making you separated, isolated'. Disney can learn a lot from these girls. KPop Demon Hunters is currently streaming on Netflix Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more. Solve the daily Crossword

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