MOVIES
TOP GUN: MAVERICK
130 minutes, M
SO, WHY are we watching Top Gun: Maverick today? To make a joke of cocky American can-do attitudes, check out how Tom Cruise looks at 59, see why Joe Biden got hooked on aviator sunglasses? Or to soak up some exhilarating excitement and have a fun time?
All of the above, and it's better than expected, with more to it than hard-driving action. Characters have a few dimensions, which is more than you can say for much of the other actioners around, and at least some of the action is real.
There's a smart, crisp screenplay, from collaborators Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer and Christopher McQuarrie, that rolls along while quickly establishing the right, irreverent tone. Who had the inspired idea that Ed Harris, as the stern old-style Rear Admiral Chester Cain, would not duck or flinch although the roof flies off a nearby shed as Maverick flies directly overhead? Funny, and one of many casual reminders that Maverick offers some thrills but it doesn't take itself too seriously.
Director Joseph Kosinski has managed a sensitive balancing act with the various performer egos, with balancing the techno input and the human drama, and with acknowledging a real-world issue or two.
In terms of running time, however, most of the drama in Top Gun: Maverick takes place on the ground. Not in the air behind masks inside cockpits, but in the offices where Cruise's Pete 'Maverick' Mitchell confronts his superiors, in the class of elite young pilots that he is preparing for the mission, on the tarmac where they have to do push-ups if they get shot down during practice, and around the pool table in the bar where the competitive young guns relax.
Now that one of the pilots, Natasha call- sign 'Phoenix' (Monica Barbaro) is female, there's far less time in the locker room. This and less of a white-bread cast is another minor concession to modern audience tastes.
I liked the fact that Top Gun: Maverick maintains the tradition of a female love interest who is capable and independent. Penny Benjamin (Jennifer Connelly) is a single mum with her own business, and she can sail a boat while Maverick doesn't have much idea. There is no sign of actor Kelly McGillis' Charlie, who Maverick fell for in the original film of 1986, but there is a new edition Porsche to remind us of her.
The interpersonal drama in this legacy sequel is a concession to today's audiences, with different expectations to the young demographic that the original Top Gun, with a 24-year-old Cruise, was aimed at.
By the time Maverick and his team of FA-18 pilots are fired up for their mission to take out a secret uranium enrichment plant in an unnamed rogue state, much of the human drama has already played out, but the climactic scenes carry plenty of grunt. As the four fighter jets enter a precipitous, pine-clad valley, who is to say someone won't black out?
In various ways, the film makes subtle, effective connections with the original movie. Actor Val Kilmer, now struggling with health issues, hasn't fared nearly so well as Cruise, and there is respectful acknowledgement of his real-life condition here with his character Ice, now an admiral, but an ill man.
Kosinski and his team have got the balance right. While revisiting the bland original was a bit of a chore, I never once suppressed a yawn this time around.
And Cruise's acting is so much better now. He has been a decent actor, especially in Born on the Fourth of July and Magnolia, though there has been that tendency to fall back on the trademark, ultra-white grin. There are fewer toothy grins here.
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