The Guardian (USA)

A question of style: will Top Gun’s apple-pie nostalgia work its magic in 2022?

- Jess Cartner-Morley

Flicking through a magazine one day in 1983, Jerry Bruckheime­r found himself transfixed by a photo. “It was a picture of this helmet with a visor down and a plane reflected in the visor, and then two airplanes beside the helmet, and the guy’s in a cockpit,” the Hollywood producer later recalled.

Three years later, the movie pitch that Bruckheime­r dreamed up in that moment – “Star Wars on Earth” – became Top Gun, a blockbuste­r that grossed $350m from a $15m budget, sent Berlin’s Take My Breath Away to No 1 in six countries, turned a young Tom Cruise into the biggest movie star in the world, and made Ray-Ban’s Aviator sunglasses into a bulletproo­f summer style icon.

But, while the Star Wars franchise has racked up 12 films, it has taken 36 years for Top Gun: Maverick to bring back the cocksure grin and leather flying jacket of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell. Can Top Gun – an American high-school movie in military uniform, a western with fighter jets instead of horses, a film that has been dubbed “an infomercia­l for America” – charm the world in 2022?

With its high-fives and Budweisers, motorbikes and power ballads, Top Gun offers a nostalgic vision of the 1980s at a time of deep anxiety. Indeed, an appeal to a simpler, more wholesome past played a part in the popularity of the original film. Cruise in his James Dean-esque white T-shirt, McGillis with a baby pink sweater tied around her shoulders, the starchy whites of the military uniforms – these were all riffs on 50s iconograph­y designed to beguile an 80s audience with their apple-pie wholesomen­ess.

Top Gun never positioned itself as a fashion film – unlike on the set of 1980s American Gigolo, Giorgio Armani was not on speed dial – but its jumpsuits, leather jackets and mirrored shades are indelibly inked into our pop-cultural memory. Costume supervisor­s Bobbie Read and James W Tyson chose Aviator shades for factual accuracy, the style having been commission­ed by the US military as eye protection for pilots since the 1930s. A consistent bestseller since 1986, the style currently enjoys White House patronage as Joe Biden’s signature look. The backers of Top Gun:

Maverick will be hoping such longevity is a good omen.

The leather flying jacket worn by Tom Cruise in the original was a centrepiec­e in a 2020 auction of film memorabili­a that also included the thighhigh boots worn by Julia Roberts in Pretty Woman and the lightsaber used by Ewan MacGregor in Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith.

A replica appears to have been made for the sequel, with an early trailer for the new film lingering on a close up of Cruise shrugging on the iconic Navy G1 bomber, in tanned goatskin with a sheep wool collar and stars-andstripes embroidery. The olive-green boilersuit­s worn for flying, and the tobacco camp-collar shirts for downtime, are reprised.

As Charlie Blackmore, Kelly McGillis’s wardrobe may not have had the knockout punch of Cruise’s but it offered an understate­d elegance that has stood the test of time.

Stills of McGillis teaching class in an oversized white T-shirt with an unstructur­ed dove-grey blazer, or teaming a streamline­d version of the leather bomber jacket with a white shirt, dark pencil skirt and red lipstick are still spotted on fashion designers’ backstage moodboards as an icon of grownup chic. Monica Barbaro, who plays a fighter pilot in the new film, is seen in the trailer playing sports in a crop top – a nod to the iconic beach volleyball scene of the original.

The biggest gamble of Top Gun: Maverick is not whether audiences are still charmed by Cruise, but whether they can still be tempted back into cinemas. As Maverick straps himself in and takes to the skies, a lot is riding on it.

 ?? McGillis. Photograph: Paramount/Allstar ?? A turn for the sweater … Cruise and
McGillis. Photograph: Paramount/Allstar A turn for the sweater … Cruise and
 ?? ?? Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis in the original Top Gun. Photograph: Paramount/Allstar
Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis in the original Top Gun. Photograph: Paramount/Allstar

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