Top Gun Movie Review
Top Gun Review
"Top Gun" Overview

Rating: PG
1986
Cast and Crew
Director : Tony ScottProducer : Jerry Bruckheimer,Don Simpson
Screenwiter : Jim Cash,Jack Epps Jr.
Starring : Tom Cruise,Kelly McGillis,Val Kilmer,Anthony Edwards,Tom Skerritt,Michael Ironside,John Stockwell,Barry Tubb,Rick Rossovich,Tim Robbins,Clarence Gilyard Jr.,Whip Hubley,James Tolkan,Meg Ryan
Anyone fondly remembering Top Gun as a prototypical action-packed Jerry
Bruckheimer 'nad-fest probably hasn't seen it in awhile. Newly released as a
mega-deluxe DVD, it's time to remember what Top Gun really is: From "You've
Lost That Lovin' Feeling" to "Take My Breath Away," it's mushy love story
first, fighter-pilots-in-training movie second.
Ironically, the early 1990s would bring to light the fact that carousing was
what naval pilots seemed to do best: The 1986 Tailhook scandal occured during
the same year Top Gun was released.
But in its day, Top Gun was nothing less than a pop culture phenomenon. Despite
being nearly 20 years old, it's still #80 on the list of all-time U.S. box
office champs -- ten spots ahead of The Matrix. All the hits that would follow
owe a huge debt to Top Gun, as it was one of the first carefully manufactured
blockbusters to hit an unsuspecting public. A then-not-too-shabby $15 million
budget turned into $176 million at the box office, establishing Bruckheimer as
a mega-producer, Tony Scott as a go-to direcctor, and Cruise as the most
bankable star in the movies. Everyone involved with the film (Val Kilmer, Meg
Ryan, Anthony Edwards, even Tim Robbins) owes a debt of gratitude to the
production team -- but none more than Kelly McGillis, who made a single film of
importance (1988's The Accused) after appearing in the lead here, rapidly
squandering her incredible celebrity and falling into B-movie obscurity.
As for the movie, well, it's got everything, all crammed into one schizo film.
Our heroes Maverick (Tom Cruise) and Goose (Edwards) -- those are their call
signs, if you can remember their real names you should try to get on Jeopardy
or something -- are chose to attend the Navy's #1 flight school, nicknamed
"TOPGUN," where they encounter machismo-fueled rivalries with Iceman (Kilmer),
angry officers (Tom Skerrit, Michael Ironside), and one improbably sexy
instructor (McGillis), who Maverick woos from the moment he sees her. Alas,
tragedy strikes midway through the film, sending Maverick into serious doubt
and on many a motorcycle ride to work through his feelings. Meanwhile,
proto-'80s music blares pretty much nonstop.
In the air, Top Gun offers one of the most interesting and well-made movies
about the flying experience this side of The Right Stuff. In an age before
computer effects, it's all real, and it's great fun to watch. On land, the love
story caught the attention of many a teen girl, as Top Gun turned Cruise from
"that cute guy in Risky Business" to a genuine megastar.
Top Gun remains a lasting and essential film in the history of the medium, but
today its legacy is more of a punchline as an analogy for '80s overindulgence
in action films and as a vehicle to be freely reinterpreted ("you can be my
wingman anytime" became an infamous metaphor for gay love in Sleep With Me).
Now almost 20 years after its release, Top Gun can be reinterpreted by you to
your heart's desire on a two-disc DVD. Disc one includes an exhaustive
commentary track and music videos for four songs from the film, while disc two
includes a lengthy making-of documentary plus a smattering of additional
featurettes and storyboards.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





