The Capital

‘Top Gun’ pilot landing at sports banquet

Weisser, who flew plane in movie, to be honored guest at Touchdown Club’s football awards event

- By Bill Wagner

Actor Tom Cruise is famous for insisting on performing all of his action scenes.

There is no stunt double when Cruise jumps out of an airplane during the “Mission Impossible” franchise or runs away from a fiery explosion in the movie “Edge of Tomorrow.” However, not even Cruise is allowed to pilot a $70 million fighter jet owned by the U.S. government.

In “Top Gun: Maverick,” the sequel to the 1986 classic “Top Gun,” Cruise reprises his starring role as Naval aviator Capt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell.

For the movie, the highest-grossing domestic release of 2022, Cruise was forced to enlist the expertise of U.S. military profession­als to film the flight scenes. The results were spectacula­r, with some of the most realistic aerial acrobatics ever recorded on film.

In all of the F/A-18F Super Hornet scenes, the pilot of the plane bearing Maverick’s name is actually a highly decorated pilot named Frank Weisser, a 2000 graduate of the Naval Academy.

Weisser, 44, who served two separate stints as a pilot with the Blue Angels flight demonstrat­ion squadron, will be in Annapolis on Thursday night as the honored guest for the Touchdown Club of Annapolis’ 68th annual football awards banquet.

Weisser, who retired from the Navy in September 2021, will discuss the filming of “Top Gun: Maverick” and his role as a stand-in pilot. He will have an audio-visual presentati­on showing some of the hair-raising scenes in which he is flying the fighter jet with Cruise as his wingman.

The movie centers on a dangerous mission in which a strike force of fighter jets must destroy an unsanction­ed uranium enrichment plant located in an undergroun­d bunker before it becomes operationa­l.

Maverick is tasked with training an elite group of Top Gun graduates to destroy the plant.

It is a harrowing run through a twisting canyon with the jets flying uncomforta­bly close to rocky cliffs and the ground at lightning speeds.

To execute the mission, the strike force had to fly extremely low to avoid detection by enemy radar.

In reality, Weisser was at the helm of the Super Hornet during one of the most memorable scenes in the movie, filmed in a canyon that is part of the Toiyabe Mountain Range in Nevada, with the jets taking off from Fallon Navy Base.

“I would say that a portion of that flight had a very small margin of error,” Weisser told The Capital this week. “What was most challengin­g was that we had to do it multiple times until the director was happy with the final footage.”

Weisser was impressed with Cruise’s ability to withstand significan­t gravitatio­nal force equivalent, commonly known as g-force, and avoid suffering motion sickness. It helps that Cruise has been a licensed pilot since 1994 and was allowed by the Navy to fly a P-51 propeller-driven fighter plane in the movie.

“Many of those scenes were very, very challengin­g for an actor,” Weisser said. “Tom has solid skills as a pilot and took a very profession­al approach every time we were in the jet.”

Naturally, Weisser spent considerab­le downtime with Cruise on the various sets and described him as down to earth.

Weisser, who grew up in Atlanta, initially attended the Naval Academy with the hope of becoming a special warfare officer. He wound up getting Navy pilot as a service assignment and was sent to Naval Air Station Pensacola for training.

“I loved flying right away,” he said. “From the very first flight, I could not believe what I was doing. I was not a naturally gifted pilot, but I really enjoyed it and worked harder than anyone to develop.”

After earning his wings, Weisser flew the single-seat F-18 out of Naval Air Station Oceana in Virginia Beach for three years. He was then sent to Pensacola for his initial stint with the Blue Angels from 2007-11.

Weisser rejoined the Blue Angels for a second time in 2018, replacing a pilot who was killed in an accident during an air show. On the verge of retirement, Weisser’s final assignment was as test pilot for the newly commission­ed Boeing F/A-18F Super Hornet. He handled testing in the flight simulator and the actual aircraft.

When “Top Gun: Maverick” began filming in the fall of 2018, none of the other Blue Angels pilots had been certified to fly the cutting-edge Super Hornet. Weisser was, which made him the obvious choice to fly the fighter jet for filming of the movie scenes.

“I had a lot of experience with how this new airplane flew,” he said.

Top Gun instructor­s did a lot of flying in other fighter jets, such as the legacy aircraft the Grumman F-14 Tomcat. Most of the dogfightin­g scenes featured Top Gun instructor­s.

The movie begins with Maverick taking off in the so-called “Darkstar” hypersonic scramjet. That is Weisser performing the unusually low takeoff that causes a guard shack to disintegra­te.

In another scene in which there is a Blue Angels flyover for the funeral of Maverick’s former nemesis — Admiral Tom “Iceman” Kazansky — Weisser flew an older version F-18 for that taping.

One of his favorite scenes is when Maverick is flying his fighter jet inverted over another. Weisser is flying the inverted jet, while former Top Gun commanding officer Chris “Pops” Papaioanu is below him.

“The footage is remarkable,” Weisser said. “It’s very rare to film a movie of that nature without using any computer graphics. It was a great experience getting to see behind the curtains of the making of the movie.”

Weisser, who has amassed more than 5,000 flight hours and more than 500 carrier-arrested landings, said he was “privileged to be part of a platform that promotes Naval aviation.”

“The original ‘Top Gun’ was a boon for the Navy and Air Force as it motivated a generation of young people to want to become military pilots,” said Weisser, who has received multiple Meritoriou­s Service medals and Strike Flight Air medals.

“I think the ‘Top Gun’ sequel will wind up being just as valuable of a recruiting tool.”

 ?? COURTESY ?? Frank Weisser sits in the cockpit of an F/A-18F Super Hornet that bears the name of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell.
COURTESY Frank Weisser sits in the cockpit of an F/A-18F Super Hornet that bears the name of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell.
 ?? COURTESY PHOTOS ?? Frank Weisser in the cockpit of F/A-18F Super Hornet that bears the name of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell, the Tom Cruise character in “Top Gun: Maverick.”
COURTESY PHOTOS Frank Weisser in the cockpit of F/A-18F Super Hornet that bears the name of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell, the Tom Cruise character in “Top Gun: Maverick.”
 ?? ?? Retired Navy Commander Frank Weisser flew the F/A-18F Super Hornet in the “Top Gun: Maverick” movie.
Retired Navy Commander Frank Weisser flew the F/A-18F Super Hornet in the “Top Gun: Maverick” movie.
 ?? ?? Frank Weisser is the pilot of this F/A-18F Super Hornet that was made to look like an aircraft called “Darkstar” in the movie.
Frank Weisser is the pilot of this F/A-18F Super Hornet that was made to look like an aircraft called “Darkstar” in the movie.

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