Turns out Goose was the lucky one. He died before seeing the American armed forces reduced to this.
When Top Gun came out, the highest priority was military readiness, and America trained and recruited the best accordingly. Today’s military, in contrast, is a tool of domestic politics that
doesn’t even exist to win wars anymore.
READ MORE: The Pentagon’s Fight With Tucker Carlson Proves It Doesn’t Even Exist To Win Wars Anymore
In the world of Top Gun: Maverick, America puts diversity first, and gets the military it deserves.
Top Gun celebrated masculinity and excellence, two things America now abhors.
Top Gun was not necessarily a particularly deep film, but to the extent that it had an underlying message, it was about excellence. Cruise’s Maverick, as presented in the original film, serves an archetype that American boys yearned to be for generations, throughout America’s golden age.
Maverick is a hotshot bad boy, a superstar pilot whose insufferable arrogance is only exceeded by his meteoric talents. Maverick has world-class instincts and reflexes, but his hotheadedness and unpredictability make him a bad wingman, and he often can’t tell the difference between courage and mere recklessness as he overcompensates for not having a father. His character arc consists of him learning to moderate his impulsiveness with teamwork and thereby become a world-class pilot… and because this is a 1980s summer blockbuster, he gets the girl along the way.
One of the original Top Gun’s legacies is the popularization of “wingman” as a slang term for a male friend helping pick up women at bars or other social venues. Regardless of ongoing rumors about
Tom Cruise’s personal predilections, Top Gun celebrated the exploits of conventional, marshal masculinity.
Today’s America, meanwhile, badly wants both excellence and masculinity far, far away from the armed forces. When U.S. top defense brass aren’t busy losing in Afghanistan or allowing ships to run into each other, they release reports
denouncing “toxic” masculine culture in the service. Twentieth Century Americans may have wanted the best and the brightest leading their armies.
Today’s Army War College prefers to publish papers about “systemic bias” and the merits of “cognitive diversity” in military organizations.
But a new Top Gun starring Tom Cruise in 2022 isn’t jarring just because of how America’s military has declined. The new film also serves as an illustration of a decline in American cinema too… or perhaps, rather, a lack of change. Thirty-six years have passed, yet there is nothing really surprising or strange at all that Tom Cruise is still coming out to fly a carrier-based fighter jet. Why should we be shocked? Stunningly spry at fifty-nine, Cruise is still carrying the Mission: Impossible franchise 26 years on (two more films are on the way; the last will be released when Cruise is 62). And Cruise is far from the exception.
America has no young, transcendent film stars.
Across the board, America’s most bankable stars are a bizarrely ancient bunch. Bruce Willis recently starred in a Death Wish remake at 64. Arnold Schwarzenegger turned 70 in 2017, but that didn’t stop him from starring in a new Terminator film two years later with 62-year-old co-star Linda Hamilton. Also, in 2019, Sylvester Stallone starred in Rambo: Last Blood at 73.
The star of that trailer is as old as Ronald Reagan was at the start of his
second term as president.
Just about the only young bankable action movie star is Jason Statham, and guess what? He’s 54!
Why are aging stars still such a constant in theaters? America’s heroic 1980s film stars are
still huge draws overseas. Or, put another way, America, its films, and its heroic stars captivated the entire world thirty years ago, and still cast a spell over them today. Modern mass-produced superhero films may gross at the box office, but specific film stars don’t have the global appeal they once did.
One reason may even be biological. Testosterone levels in America have been
tanking for decades. Young men have
lost one-fifth to one-quarter of their grip strength since the 1980s. As America steadily becomes less manly, it has become unable to elevate new authentic masculine icons, instead trotting out the same stars from four decades ago.
Then, there’s the film itself.
The original Top Gun was the top-grossing film of 1986. It wasn’t a sequel. It wasn’t a computer-animated children’s film or based on a series of young-adult novels. There was no intention of making a mass-produced franchise out of it, which is why it didn’t receive an immediate sequel.
That used to be the norm for American cinema. Of the top 10 highest-grossing films in the U.S. in 1986, seven were original films. But in 2022,
all ten of the betting favorites for highest-grossing film of the year are parts of franchises. There are four just from Marvel’s never-ending avalanche of content for consoomers like David French to consoom.
For today’s film industry landscape, making a sequel to a thirty-six-year-old movie counts as relatively inspired. In 1986, America was so stupendous that a film that was essentially
an infomercial for America could be the world’s favorite film. But in 2022, America seems incapable of producing anything new and captivating at all.
Sad.