Tom Cruise unveils Top Gun sequel with mid-air stunt

LAS VEGAS • Tom Cruise unveiled the world-first screening of Top Gun: Maverick at CinemaCon in Las Vegas on Thursday - introducing the long-awaited sequel while balanced atop a flying bi-plane.

The new Top Gun, which picks up the story of Maverick and his fighter pilot buddies some three decades after the 1986 blockbuster original, was scheduled to open in 2020, but was repeatedly delayed due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Cruise, famous for doing many of his own stunts, introduced the screening to the movie theatre industry convention with a video message recorded in typically hair-raising style - perched on the moving plane's fuselage from the skies above South Africa.

"Hey everyone. Wish I could be there with you. I'm sorry for the extra noise," yelled 59-year-old Cruise over a roaring plane engine and high winds.

"As you can see, we are filming the latest instalment of Mission: Impossible."

Producer Jerry Bruckheimer, who also worked on the first movie, said at the CinemaCon event: "Tom does everything at full speed all the time... and you can't stop him. He's going to do it no matter what."

While plot details and reviews are embargoed before the film officially premieres at the Cannes festival next month, Top Gun: Maverick drew immediate glowing praise on social media from journalists attending Paramount's CinemaCon presentation.

It combines adrenaline-packed action sequences largely shot on real United States Navy fighter jets with emotional references to the original.

Bruckheimer said it had taken so long to make the follow-up because "all our careers kind of took off from that point" and Cruise "had a lot of stories he wanted to tell".

Tony Scott, who directed the original, died in 2012, but new director Joseph Kosinski "came up with a way to make it that excited Tom".

Kosinski said he had been inspired by stunning footage on YouTube recorded by US Navy pilots filming with GoPro cameras during their training.

He added: "I showed that to Tom and I said, 'This is available on the Internet for free. If we can't beat this, there's no point in making this film.' So he agreed."

With the assistance of engineers from the navy, the film-makers found ways to insert six cameras into the jet cockpits.

The blockbuster original was inspired by a real training programme that was known as Topgun and based at San Diego's former Naval Air Station Miramar.

Navy recruiting officials reportedly saw a dramatic uptick in inquiries from would-be flyboys following the film's release, with military recruiters in some cities setting up tables outside cinemas.

Film-makers "did not get a lot of support from the navy" to make the original Top Gun, said Kosinski.

"This movie, on the other hand, when we approached the navy to make it, it was like throwing open the doors. You know, 'Come on in, tell us what you need.'"

The latest movie was granted access to the secretive Naval Air Weapons Station China Lake in California's Mojave Desert, he added.

It also features an appearance from American actor Val Kilmer, whose career effectively ended when he lost his voice during treatment for throat cancer.

Bruckheimer said: "Val felt comfortable doing it. It was very emotional filming it."

He added: "Obviously, he's compromised but he's still an amazing actor, an amazing individual.

"Tom actually said, 'I'm not making this movie unless Val is in it.'"

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on April 30, 2022, with the headline Tom Cruise unveils Top Gun sequel with mid-air stunt. Subscribe