Review: Top Gun: Maverick ushers in the newfound possibility that movie theaters aren’t doomed after all. A ballistic jolt to the blockbuster formula courtesy of (of course) Tom Cruise.
Top Gun: Maverick Review
It has been nearly seven months since Top Gun: Maverick hit theaters and still not a single aspect of the biggest film of the year has worn off. We forget that up to the month that this throwback blockbuster was released, there was real concern about how this film was going to be perceived and what the final dollar total would be. Endless delays and COVID-related panic caused this film to be released years after its initial expected widescreen opening, and when the film finally hit its release date, the industry never looked back.
I worked at a movie theater during the Top Gun: Maverick craze, and let me just say, I never experienced a crowd-pleasing hit quite like it. To be fair, I didn’t work previous smash hits like Avengers: Endgame or Avatar, but even last holiday’s biggest release Spider-Man: No Way Home didn’t feel quite like how Top Gun: Maverick felt. And understandably so, Top Gun: Maverick is a generation-binding story that manages to usher in the new, tie in every bit of nostalgia from the original, and still center itself directly on its leading man Tom Cruise.
Right from the opening sequence played only in theaters, Tom Cruise (Magnolia, Edge of Tomorrow, Mission: Impossible) thanking audiences for staying patient while Paramount waited for the right time to drop this nuclear bomb of a flick (no pun intended for this film’s ultimate premise), does it click on all cylinders. The story’s reintroduction to Maverick as he attempts to hit Mach 10 in speed to keep their department alive is heart-poundingly riveting and epic – and yes, I’ve seen the complaints about how Mach 10 is theoretically impossible, and no, I don’t care.
Every millisecond of Joseph Kosinski‘s Top Gun: Maverick is for the fans, but not made specifically to serve the fans. Miles Teller (Whiplash, The Spectacular Now) and Glen Powell (Everybody Wants Some!!, Hit Man, Twisters) are seamless introductions for the franchise, and every supporting performance beyond that (like the scene-stealing Jennifer Connelly [Requiem for a Dream, A Beautiful Mind) only adds fuel to this ingenious fire. The film chugs along and doesn’t do too much handholding to catch the audience up to speed. Once the title card hits, we’re rolling. And we don’t stop until the final theme starts playing.
I’ve seen this film a handful of times at this point, and Top Gun: Maverick has one particular element to it that plays out much smoother than I thought it would after repeat viewings. Its pacing is quite great. Each act weaves in and out so flawlessly that each moment that brings the tension down is immediately followed by own that amplifies it even further. Not sure how many films I’ve seen this decade with the sheer amount of perfectly executed set pieces as Top Gun: Maverick, but I know the list is short.
It’s going to be a real litmus test for the Oscars next year because the Academy doesn’t typically offer up much recognition for franchise efforts that garner this much commercial success. There is more hope for it this time around with an Awards season slate that doesn’t seem to have many slam dunk nominees, but anything is currently possible with a voting body that’s been expanded recently to include a much more diverse collection of individuals.
Top Gun: Maverick was also released much earlier than the normal Oscar season material, so we’ll see if the voting body’s ability to sit with this film throughout the year helps it or hurts it. If I have to guess now, I would say Top Gun: Maverick gets nominated for Best Picture because it feels like a real monumental piece that has helped hold over movie theaters for more than half a year.
Seven months later, Top Gun: Maverick still feels fresh – for its direction, for its acting, and for its precise attention to emotion and payoff. Every moment feels important and finely tuned, and every actor and actress fits perfectly within this nostalgia-laden juggernaut. A real hit, and one of my favorite movie theater experiences of all time.
Score: 9/10
Watch Top Gun: Maverick (2022) on Paramount+, Prime Video, and VOD
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Top Gun: Maverick Movie Cast and Credits
Cast
Tom Cruise as Maverick
Miles Teller as Rooster
Jennifer Connelly as Penny
Jon Hamm as Cyclone
Glen Powell as Hangman
Ed Harris as Hammer
Val Kilmer as Iceman
Crew
Director: Joseph Kosinski
Writers: Ehren Kruger, Christopher McQuarrie, Justin Marks, Peter Craig, Eric Warren Singer
Cinematography: Claudio Miranda
Editor: Eddie Hamilton
Composers: Hans Zimmer, Harold Faltermeyer, Lady Gaga