Top Gun: Maverick, 7/10
When i saw this was still playing in IMAX (at 8:20 PM on a Tuesday night) I knew I had to see it. And I'm glad I did, because seeing this in a theater definitely elevates it. It is probably one of the best action movies to come out in years, though I think that has more to do with how Covid fucked up things in that regard. On the action front this movie is basically untouchable. The flying scenes are simply breathtaking, and made all the more impressive by the fact that all of it (or at least most of it) is in-camera. The roar of the engines, the sense of speed and power is honestly quite unlike anything released in at least a decade. One thing the movie particularly excels at is tension and stakes. Things seem to be constantly ramping up, and it always feels like the characters are getting by by the skin of their teeth. If the whole movie were as good as the action scenes, it'd be a 10/10. The soundtrack's also incredible, and genuinely got me feeling nostalgic for a movie I''ve never seen, from a time when I wasn't even born yet. That's quite something.
Not that the movie's bad outside of the action scenes. The story is actually really wholesome and sweet. There's a strong theme of mentorship and generational shift, as the characters from the original movie are now old and withered, but the movie also conveys the new younger generation stepping in and carrying on the tradition. This is helped in large part by Maverick himself clearly being out of his depth and struggling with some pretty heavy guilt. As weird as it feels to say there's a genuine sense of gravitas to the movie.
I can't really say there's any major issues with it. It's just that this movie clearly exists for the action scenes and nostalgia, and it excels at those, but everything else feels just "good enough". Outside the action scenes it's not really visually very interesting and the dialogue is just alright, so there's not much really grabbing my attention. And that makes this movie, as good as the action scenes are, feel pretty disposable in the end. Which is fine, this is basically an old school blockbuster after all, but it kind of dampens my enthusiasm for it when I can be on the edge of my seat while watching it, and struggling to remember much of it the next morning.
There is one unfortunate effect real life has had on this movie though, and that's the villains. They're kind of weirdly never specified or characterized or even told where they're located, but it's clearly supposed to be Russia. It's just that when we've now seen the mighty Russian military turn out to be the wettest paper tiger in history, it's kind of hard to take them seriously as having some kind of high-tech superjets and ultra-skilled pilots. It's not the movie's fault, this was shot mostly pre-Covid after all, and I suppose them being unspecified also helps, because you can always tell yourself it's not Russia, it's the Republic of Russkograd or something.