Tom Cruise movies available on 4K Blu-ray, ranked by transfer quality.
dir. Oliver Stone
S-Tier Shout Factory 4K. Oliver Stone's Vietnam film. Shout Factory keeps picking up significant catalog titles.
Shout! Factory · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Doug Liman
S-Tier Warner Bros. 4K. Coming 2026-05-11 through Rare Waves.
Warner Bros. · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Stanley Kubrick
Criterion put this on 4K in November 2025 and it landed as a new standard for the format. Rare Waves has a UK Limited Edition Steelbook for 2026 using the same Warner transfer, which is the pickup for non-US collectors.
Criterion Collection · 4K Ultra HD
dir. Cameron Crowe
S-Tier Sony 4K. Cameron Crowe's sports agent film with Tom Cruise. Sony's transfer is decent for a mid-90s studio comedy, though there isn't much collector energy around this title on its own.
Sony Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Christopher McQuarrie
S-Tier Paramount 4K. The best MI film by most accounts. The 6-movie 4K set has been available for around USD per film, but a lot of people are holding out for the eventual 1-8 complete box. The individual steelbook re-releases in the matching silver and grey art came out in July, and the worry is that MI7 and MI8 won't match.
Paramount Pictures · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Brad Bird
S-Tier Paramount 4K. Brad Bird's Mission Impossible entry with the Burj Khalifa sequence. The steelbook dropped to $14.89 USD on sale. People wish the IMAX aspect ratio expanded on the disc. Not a lot of dedicated discussion for this specific entry, though the MI franchise as a whole is well-collected.
dir. Paul Brickman
Criterion's July 2024 announcement had people losing it. One of those 80s films where the reputation has quietly shifted from guilty pleasure to legitimate classic, and Criterion putting their name on it sealed that. The standalone 4K disc is the way to go unless you're already deep into Criterion collecting.
Criterion Collection · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Joseph Kosinski
Paramount S-Tier 4K. The Maverick steelbook is one of the most-owned discs in the format and the transfer is reference quality. Runway takeoffs and cockpit shots are the demo moments.
dir. Michael Mann
Cab driver Max picks up a man who offers him $600 to drive him around. But the promise of easy money sours when Max realizes his fare is an assassin.
dir. Steven Spielberg
A-Tier Paramount 4K. Spielberg's sci-fi thriller, and the 4K announcement alongside Catch Me If You Can was one of the biggest Paramount reveals of the year. The Catch Me If You Can artwork was universally panned while Minority Report's was better received. The steelbook inner photo is oddly from a 2009 Empire magazine shoot, not the film itself.
A-Tier Paramount 4K. McQuarrie's MI7, and Paramount re-released it with "Part One" removed from the title after the planned two-parter structure changed. The US steelbook design didn't match the silver and grey style of entries 1-6, which bothered collectors going for a matching set. The UK Zavvi steelbook was better-looking but pricey at around CAD imported.
A-Tier Paramount 4K. McQuarrie's first MI entry. The Rogue Nation steelbook has been sitting at $5-6 USD for a while, which tells you where it sits in the franchise pecking order. Part of the matching steelbook set that collectors are building.
A-Tier Paramount 4K. The Final Reckoning wraps up the two-part story that started with Dead Reckoning. The steelbook art was called bland and lacking color, and a Polish exclusive briefly appeared before getting swapped for the US version. Mixed reception on the film itself, with people saying 45 minutes of great action was buried in two hours of exposition.
dir. J.J. Abrams
A-Tier Paramount 4K. J.J. Abrams' MI entry with Philip Seymour Hoffman as the villain, and part of the matching 1-6 steelbook re-release set from July. People are building custom display cases for the MI steelbook collection. The series artwork consistency became a talking point when Fast & Furious was cited as the standard for keeping steelbook art matching across entries.
dir. Barry Levinson
A-Tier MVD Entertainment 4K. Hoffman and Cruise on a road trip, with the $49.95 USD price having people wait for a sale. Viavision also has a limited edition of 2000 copies.
MVD Entertainment · 4K + Blu-ray
dir. Sydney Pollack
Mitch McDeere is a young man with a promising future in Law. About to sit his Bar exam, he is approached by 'The Firm' and made an offer he doesn't refuse. Seduced by the money and gifts showered on him, he is totally oblivious to the more sinister side of his company. Then, two Associates are murdered. The FBI contact him, asking him for information and suddenly his life is ruined. He has a choice - work with the FBI, or stay with the Firm. Either way he will lose his life as he knows it. Mitch figures the only way out is to follow his own plan...
dir. Tony Scott
Paramount A-Tier 4K. The upgrade over the Blu-ray is noticeable in the flight scenes, and people keep running A/B comparison posts against Maverick.
David Aames has it all: wealth, good looks and gorgeous women on his arm. But just as he begins falling for the warmhearted Sofia, his face is horribly disfigured in a car accident. That's just the beginning of his troubles as the lines between illusion and reality, between life and death, are blurred.
Paramount Pictures
The Spielberg 4K steelbook showed up in a haul this week. The audio track is the real reason collectors want this one, with 'bass you can taste' being the phrase going around.
B-Tier 4K. Cruise in a stock car. The audio mix could have been better for a film about racing, but the picture is decent. Nostalgic for people who grew up in the 90s.
D-Tier Universal Blu-ray. Kosinski's sci-fi with Tom Cruise and an M83 soundtrack. Multiple steelbook editions exist across retailers including a Zavvi exclusive and an EverythingBlu premium. People call it underrated. The D-Tier is because it's still on Blu-ray transfer for the 4K disc.
Universal Pictures · Blu-ray