Watch: Tom Cruise Is Officially Strapped in for Top Gun 3: Everything to Know
These days, Tom Cruise is just as likely to be hanging off the side of a plane as piloting one onscreen, but he had to start somewhere.
He first planted the seeds of his future action hero status 40 years ago, playing irresistible rogue Lt. Pete “Maverick” Mitchell in 1986’s Top Gun, costarring Val Kilmer, Anthony Edwards, Kelly McGillis, sleek jets, a Righteous Brothers serenade and endlessly quotable dialogue.
It took 36 years for a sequel to land in theaters, but not least because Cruise was a little busy making a lot of movies, including the now eight-film Mission: Impossible series, but Top Gun: Maverick‘s $1.5 billion at the global box office in 2022 was proof that Cruise could still take an audience’s breath away without his IMF team.
And it was all the runway needed for a third Top Gun movie to achieve lift-off, with Paramount confirming at CinemaCon in April that it’s in development with Cruise, now 63, to star. Just as Glen Powell envisioned.
“There are smarter people involved in this movie, than I can come up with,” Powell, who as Lt. Jake “Hangman” Seresin filled the next-gen Iceman role of cocky but capable hotshot in Top Gun: Maverick, told E! News in 2024 about a potential premise for the third movie. “But whatever it is, I know we’re going to be flying cool stuff, that’s all I know.”
CBS via Getty Images
The blockbuster sequel was nominated for six Oscars, including Best Picture, and won for Best Sound. (Though shouldn’t there be an honorary award for pulling off the impossible and saving movies?)
Cruise was snubbed for his true-to-form performance as an older, wiser but still kinda reckless and stubborn AF Maverick, but picked up a nomination as a producer on the film, which touched down in theaters a few years behind schedule because foregoing IMAX screens was not an option for this mission.
And it turned out that Maverick’s return as a promotion-resistant flight instructor tasked with training the incoming class of Top Guns, at least one of whom (ahem, Goose’s son) is not impressed, was just the shot of adrenaline the post-pandemic box office needed.
But the theaters were packed with butts because of the lingering loving feeling for the original Top Gun, which made $354 million worldwide, put director Tony Scott on the map and inspired countless future fighter pilots. (And it’s an Oscar winner, taking home Best Original Song for Berlin‘s “Take My Breath Away.”)
So, though you’ve since been treated to a whole new crop of call signs, keep scrolling to see where it all began and what Cruise and the rest of the crew from 1986’s Top Gun look like now:
Paramount Pictures
Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock; Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images
Shutterstock; Paramount Pictures
Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock; Gregory Pace/Shutterstock
Paramount Pictures; Steve Granitz/WireImage
Paramount Pictures; ABC/Randy Holmes
Paramount Pictures; Rich Polk/Getty Images
Paramount Pictures; Allen Berezovsky/WireImage
Paramount Pictures; Walter McBride/Getty Images
(Originally published May 16, 2020, at 7 a.m. PT)
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