Bangkok Post

Top Gun gets ‘evolution’ in sequel 36 years on, says Cruise

- ANDREW MARSZAL

It has been 36 years since Tom Cruise donned his aviators, jumped into a fighter jet and ascended Hollywood’s A-list with Top Gun — and, finally, a sequel is about to land.

“I was a little slow — sometimes I’m a little slow,” Cruise joked at the world premiere of Top Gun: Maverick, held aboard a retired US aircraft carrier in San Diego last week.

Slow is not usually a word associated with Cruise, arguably the world’s biggest movie star, who landed via helicopter onto a red carpet that was rolled across the USS Midway’s sprawling top deck for the occasion.

In his new film, scheduled for release in Thailand on May 25, Cruise’s hotshot pilot Maverick returns to the US Navy’s elite TOPGUN fighter weapons school where he earned his wings to train the latest batch of cocky young aviators.

Among them is Rooster, son of Goose, who was killed in the 1986 original in a moment that still haunts Maverick, even as he must prepare his charges for a deadly mission.

“The sense of romance, the sense of adventure — there’s a world that you want to be in,” said Cruise, on returning to Top Gun at the age of 59.

“And obviously, there’s always something about aviation.”

Cruise’s original film popularise­d the concept of the “wingman”, and he said viewers particular­ly connected with the closeness of relationsh­ips in the world of aviation.

“The culture in this world is very unique... and it’s really interestin­g that people can just connect with the friendship­s,” he said.

While the movie opens with a nostalgic throwback sequence set on an aircraft carrier, and features a brief return for Val Kilmer alongside Cruise, itotherwis­e rests on a group of relatively unknown young actors.

“I always knew that’s howI wanted to open the movie, right from the beginning, just to allow the audience to go ‘you’re gonna get what you want, trust me’,” said Cruise.

It also incorporat­es technologi­cal advances such as fighter drones, which Cruise — who has long held a pilot licence in real life — said he spent decades looking at and evaluating. “It has to be an evolution,” he said. In Top Gun: Maverick, female fighter pilots have joined the elite squadron, including Monica Barbaro’s Phoenix.

“I got to learn from some incredible female aviators,” said Barbaro, who along with her male and female co-stars underwent training from US Navy pilots.

“They’re smart, they’re intelligen­t, they don’t have to prove themselves in any aggressive way. They just are incredible.”

According to director Joseph Kosinski, the Navy had been “wary” when the original was shot but was fully supportive and helpful for the sequel.

“The first Top Gun was a reason a lot of these guys signed up for the Navy,” said Kosinski.

“The decision-makers in the Navy today are guys who signed up in the 80s because of Top Gun.”

The movie largely shuns computer-generated effects and the actors were filmed inside fighter jet cockpits, enduring intense G-forces as the planes swooped dangerousl­y low above the Earth’s surface.

Still, according to Kosinski, Cruise “always wanted to go lower”.

“There’s a sequence in this film where we went so low, I guarantee you’ll never see anything quite like it ever again.

“He was always pushing... but I think he was happy with where we ended up.”

 ?? ?? From left, producer JerryBruck­heimer, actor Miles Teller, actress Jennifer Connelly and actor Tom Cruise.
Tom Cruiseatth­e premiere of Top Gun: Maverick.
From left, producer JerryBruck­heimer, actor Miles Teller, actress Jennifer Connelly and actor Tom Cruise. Tom Cruiseatth­e premiere of Top Gun: Maverick.

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