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Top Gun (DVD)

2-disc Widescreen Collector's Edition

APPROX. 109 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 1986 - MPA RATING: PG

Tom Cruise
" It may not be a good movie to begin with but Top Gun's great impact on popular culture is still felt almost two decades later.

DVD review

FIRST PUBLISHED Dec 7, 2004
By Hock Guan Teh

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Remember that one girl (or boy) that you might have dated years ago? You know, there was always one that was kind of weird and you dated for a while but it never went anywhere? That person might not have been perfect but at least he or she paid you some attention. Now, many years later, you find out that he or she has been arrested for a felony or something similar. As you sit down and thank your lucky stars you broke off the relationship back then, I´m sure there are times when you must have thought, what the heck was I thinking? For me, "Top Gun" epitomizes that exact feeling and that is, what the heck what I thinking when I worshipped this movie back in 1986?

It´s amazing what years of wisdom (and being continually blasted with umpteen amounts of mediocre films coming out of Hollywood) can do to one´s taste in movies. Forgive me, but hey, I didn´t know better then! I was a starry-eyed teen dreaming about "the need for speed" and about being as cool as Tom Cruise. That, however, lasted until the first time I boarded a commercial airplane and barfed my lungs out. Okay....my own system´s imbalance precluded me from trying out for the Air Force but I had a dream once. And in that dream, I could imagine blue skies and wispy clouds zooming past my cockpit window as I zip along the blue yonder at Mach 1. I´m sure "Top Gun" inspired many a teenage boy back in the 80s. Who in their hormone-induced minds would not want to aspire to be a fighter pilot--a sexy jock with a control stick between their legs that carries with it enough firepower to level half a major city? Judging by "Top Gun"´s half a billion-dollar box office business worldwide, there were very few.

"I feel the need....the need for speed" – Maverick and Goose

It never ceases to astound me that films with more glamour than substance can do so well, given the right conditions and "Top Gun" is the perfect example. Taking the cue from a magazine article about the U.S. Navy´s Top Gun advanced fighter pilot school in Miramar, California, producer Jerry Bruckheimer hit upon the idea of making a movie about this unique breed of fighter pilots. First thing that they had to do to get this project off the ground was to obtain permission from the Navy for them to shoot on location at an aircraft carrier (in this case, the U.S.S. Enterprise) and also to use actual F-14s and real Top Gun pilots to carry out some of the show´s amazing aerial stunts. Jack Epps, Jr. and Jim Cash, whose other writing credits include "Turner and Hootch" and "Anaconda", were commissioned to write the screenplay and their completed work was first unceremoniously dropped by Paramount, which was at that time helmed by Jeffrey Katzenberg and Michael Eisner. Fortunately for Bruckheimer, after both men left Paramount for Disney, the new management team at Paramount picked up the script again and gave the green light for "Top Gun" to start production. That decision helped produce a money-making machine that sort of heralded the era of films with little substance but plenty of what many would like to call, the wow factor.

After suffering low-kill ratios during the Vietnam War, the U.S. Navy established the Fighter Weapons School or better known as Top Gun at the Miramar Naval Air Station to train a nucleus of fighter crews on the skilled art of Air Combat Maneuvering (ACM) or dogfights. The crews who attend Top Gun are expected to go back to their squads and impart their knowledge to their fellow pilots. Many of them even come back to Top Gun as instructors. This elite school for fighter pilots becomes the setting for this movie. Initially, after being approached by producers Bruckheimer and Don Simpson about directing "Top Gun", director Tony Scott (brother of the better known Ridley Scott) first envisioned a dark movie in the same vein as "Apocalypse Now"! Of course, the producers quickly squelched that idea and impressed upon Scott that they wanted a summer popcorn flick. And for better or worse, a popcorn flick was what the masses got. Bruckheimer has shown over the years that he is a master when it comes to producing summer blockbusters with a safe formula that almost guarantees success. "Top Gun" came at the early part of Bruckheimer´s career and together with "Beverly Hills Cop" only two years earlier in 1984, established a successful formula that he has followed religiously ever since.

"That SOB cut me off!" - Maverick

Lt. Pete Mitchell (Tom Cruise) is a skilled but brash and sometimes even reckless Navy fighter pilot. Even Mitchell´s call sign "Maverick" alludes to his rebellious attitude. Together with his more sensible radio intercept officer (RIO), Lt. Nick "Goose" Bradshaw (an unlikely Anthony Edwards) by his side (in this case, behind him), Maverick flies the Navy´s potent strike fighter, the F-14 Tomcat. After an incident involving another flight crew on the aircraft carrier that they are serving on, Maverick and Goose are elevated to the top slot and are ordered to go to Miramar to attend Top Gun. Once there, Maverick finds that his reputation precedes him and he predictably goes head-to-head with another calculated pilot called Iceman (Val Kilmer), who becomes sort of Maverick´s nemesis in competing for the title of Top Gun, that is given to the best pilot of each class. It is here that the movie took some liberties with what is the actual reality at Top Gun. First of all, there is no real competition or any trophy to win. The movie only created this fictional scenario to inject conflict between the main characters. The guys at the Navy were, shall we say, bemused by this but in no way tried to block it.

After establishing whom the hero and whom the bad guy (sort of) is, the formula then calls for a love interest for our rebellious hero. This damsel comes in the form of a civilian contractor working at the base evaluating the pilots and her name is Charlotte "Charlie" Blackwood (Kelly McGillis). An interesting fact to note is that the Navy nixed the initial script idea of the female lead being an enlisted officer, as it does not encourage fraternizing between officers. My first reaction to McGillis was, wow, an older woman! Even though only five years separate their ages, you have to admit that next to Cruise´s boyish good looks, McGillis comes across as someone who is more suited for a role as, let´s say, the Admiral´s wife than Tom Cruise´s love interest. I guess they needed an "older" woman to make her role of an experienced military evaluator and enemy MiG fighter plane expert more realistic. Which is too bad because I could think of many other more attractive actresses that could have easily filled this role.

"Sorry Goose, but it´s time to buzz the tower" - Maverick

The story in "Top Gun" is as straightforward and as uncomplicated as a Sidewinder missile coming right at you. There are no twists and turns and the writers and director go out of their way to make sure that the audience gets it. This is the kind of filmmaking that tries to cater to the lowest common denominator or as Bruckheimer likes to put it, to mom and pop in Oklahoma. Maverick is the troubled but talented hot shot whose reckless nature not only puts himself at risk but also unnecessarily endangers others around him as well. As he goes through various trials and tribulations at Top Gun, he meets the girl of his dreams and the self-confessed playboy falls in love for the first time (a collective awwwwwwww fills the room). By the time the final act of the movie rolls along, he is presented with the one chance to vindicate himself and to set things straight. Oh and have no fear, in the end, our hero, naturally, gets the girl too.

The storyline may be cheesy and predictable but the aerial footages of the F-14s dogfighting are genuinely breathtaking and exciting. With skillful editing and tight stunt coordination between the Navy pilots who actually flew the planes and director Tony Scott, I amazingly, never once got confused over the fast-paced on-screen action. You always knew who was who by the distinctive markings on the pilots´ helmets. It really helps that the actors were wearing breathing masks over their mouths, which enabled the editors to insert any dialogue they want over the shots in post-production. What this really means is that all the accumulated rolls of aerial footages may not have a decent story structure in the first place but with clever editing and voice dubbing, anything is possible, as clearly shown by the resulting film.

"You can be my wingman anytime!" - Iceman

Sometimes, I tend to think of "Top Gun" as a rock and roll musical with fast jets rather than an action movie with great music. The movie was clearly written and constructed with rock music in mind. Scenes like the shameless pseudo hard body showoff event on the beach volleyball court are only meant for one thing and one thing only, and that is to bring legions of women into the theaters to watch the movie. With Kenny Loggins´ "Playing With The Boys" thumping in the background, it is funny to note that Goose, who is played by a rather scrawny Anthony Edwards, is the only person on the court with a shirt on. Everyone else, Cruise, Kilmer and Rick Rossovich (Slider, Iceman´s RIO) have their shirts off and their buff bodies oiled to perfection. As with many movies from that time period, the movie´s soundtrack became a whole new entity that sort of defined the movie itself. With famed producer and songwriter Giorgio Moroder penning two of the film´s biggest hits, "Danger Zone" sung by Kenny Loggins and "Take My Breath Away", performed by Berlin and which won an Oscar for Best Original Song, it was not a big surprise for me to find that many of the songs on the soundtrack album became singularly synonymous with the movie.

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