Times Colonist

Top Gun sequel postponed until 2022

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NEW YORK — Paramount Pictures on Wednesday postponed the release of Top Gun: Maverick,

sending another of the fall’s top movies out of 2021 due to the rise in coronaviru­s cases and the delta variant.

Instead of opening Nov. 19, the Top Gun sequel, starring Tom Cruise, will instead debut on the U.S. Memorial Day weekend next year, on May 27. Additional­ly, Mission: Impossible 7 will be delayed from May 27 to Sept. 30 next year.

The postponeme­nt is the latest setback for Hollywood’s once-hopeful fall movie season. The Delta-driven surge has upended the industry’s plans for some return to normality at multiplexe­s.

The flight of Top Gun: Maverick follows a similar delay for Paramount’s Clifford the Big Red Dog. Paramount also on Wednesday pushed Jackass Forever

from Oct. 22 to Feb. 4.

While some studios have hedged their bets with big releases by simultaneo­usly streaming them on release, Paramount Pictures and Sony Pictures have tried to stay the course of a more traditiona­l theatrical release. Sony earlier delayed Venom: Let There Be Carnage from September to Oct. 15 due to the rise in cases. Following Paramount’s announceme­nt, Sony on Wednesday moved Ghostbuste­rs: Afterlife from Nov. 11 to Nov. 19.

But several prominent bigbudget releases haven’t vacated the fall. Most notably, MGM and United Artists’ James Bond movie No Time to Die remains slated for release in North America on Oct. 8.

Until recently, Paramount was gearing up to release Maverick.

The studio last month teased the film’s first 13 minutes at CinemaCon, the annual exhibitor convention.

Paramount hasn’t kept all of its films. It has sold off some release, like The Tomorrow War,

with Chris Pratt, to streamers. Infinite, a poorly reviewed scifi thriller with Mark Wahlberg, debuted directly on Paramount+. But films like Top Gun: Maverick

would in normal times hope to approach as much as $1 billion in worldwide box office.

Universal’s F9 has grossed more than any other movie during the pandemic, with more than $700 million in ticket sales. But most of its receipts came before the delta variant surge. Paramount’s A Quiet Place Part II, one of the first tentpoles to wade into theatres earlier this year, took in close to $300 million worldwide.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Tom Cruise as Capt. Pete (Maverick) Mitchell in a scene from Top Gun: Maverick, which has been pushed back to May of next year.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tom Cruise as Capt. Pete (Maverick) Mitchell in a scene from Top Gun: Maverick, which has been pushed back to May of next year.

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