
‘Top Gun – Maverick’ is Action-Based “Dad Cinema” At Its Very Best
The moving story in “Top Gun: Maverick” of a fatherless son’s journey toward healing is proving popular with audiences worldwide. This is a film highlighting the importance of fatherhood, portraying a tale of reconciliation and redemption.
Top Gun: Maverick is smashing box offices, and it’s easy to understand why.
The film is spectacularly outpacing its weak-because-they’re-woke counterparts, because the film’s unapologetic dad themes resonate.
Alongside the gutsy F-18 camera shots, audiences are in love with the Tom Cruise/Joseph Kosinski sequel because its father-son backstory hits home.
Even the, “it’s all flag-waving, MAGA propagandist tripe” critics are applauding the sequel for keeping to the consistency of the first film’s deep relational backbone.
As The Atlantic’s David Sims explained, the film’s ‘emotional weight rests on Pete Mitchell (Maverick) fighting to earn the respect of Goose’s son (Rooster), who blames Maverick for the tragic loss of his father.’
Childhood Memory
For me, Top Gun: Maverick cut deeper.
My family and I recently saw the film for a birthday bash. The only thing missing was my dad.
Watching the first Top Gun at the cinema with my dad was to be one of the only long-lasting positive memories I would have of him.
It was 1986, I was 9, and we’d turned up late to the cinema.
Missing the iconic afterburner intro of the first Top Gun, dad and I slid into our seats in rhythm with Tony Scott’s smooth golden orange sunset, shot high above a lone F-14 landing on the silhouette of the USS Enterprise.
It became a shared interest, a mutual pursuit, a common bond solely shared between father and son.
From the soundtrack, which always seemed to be on repeat in our broken-down housing commission home, to the old-school Amstrad computer game, the movie connected us.
This was true, right up until my dad’s final week, when, knowing he would never get a chance to wear it, I gifted him a T-shirt with the Top Gun logo on it.
Now covered in dust, I still hold onto the volumes of Warplane magazines he’d chosen to buy me, instead of paying “through the teeth” for participation in a weekend sport.
Healing
I related to the second film because of the first.
Similar to ‘Goose’s’ son in the film, I was confronted by what was lost, what might have been, and what my dad chose to abandon somewhere along the way.
The sequel made the memories all the more material when Val Kilmer (Iceman), tells Maverick — still haunted by the death of ‘Goose’ — “It’s time to let go.”
Seeing the first film at the cinema in 1986 with my dad was an oasis event, an anomaly of normalcy in a wasteland of ash.
This explains why, in almost every scene of Top Gun: Maverick, I heard, and felt my dad’s absence, and choked up at Hans Zimmer’s rendition of Faltermeyer’s iconic Top Gun anthem.
We’re taught in The Good Book to raise up thanksgiving in the face of suffering. Even the smallest object or event that is worthy of our gratitude puts points on the board when it comes to healing trauma.
In retrospect, watching Top Gun with my dad in ’86 was the first, and only time he offered me a healthy introduction to manhood.
His wasn’t perfect, but that was a perfect day. That day my dad did good, and for that I thank him.
For me, the only thing missing from Top Gun: Maverick was the man who took me to see the first one, sitting, at his best, beside me and my uber-impressed family.
Top Gun was, and is, about loss, grief, and recovery; fatherhood, and fatherlessness — as much as it is about courage, defiance, and the determination to overcome obstructions encountered along the way.
The sequel builds on its original father-son backstory. It is “dad cinema” at its very best.
To lean on Miles Surrey’s review in The Ringer,
‘Every single dad — past, present, and those who are expecting to be dads in the near future — should check out Maverick, if not for the sanctity of ensuring Dad Cinema doesn’t fade away, then for experiencing a blockbuster that surpasses its predecessor in every respect.’
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First published at Dads4Kids.
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Thank you Rod.
We need our men now perhaps more than ever before in the history of the world not just within our own Nation. We need them to father our little boys n our little girls. We need them to love n support the women in their lives. We need them to model Jesus n Joseph to us as they walk beside us on this terrifying journey our God has called us to walk.
Yes, we do. That challenge has been made even clearer by the new census stats showing that 4 out 5 of the 1 million+ single-parent homes in Australia are without dads.