Tag: top-gun

  • Here’s Why Kenny Loggins Is the ‘King of Movie Soundtracks’

    Kenny Loggins is many things. He was one half of one of the most successful and critically lauded duos of the 1970’s (with Loggins and Messina), had a stellar solo career that has awarded him 12 platinum-selling albums and two Grammys. And he’s also got one of history’s greatest beards, easily ranking alongside Abraham Lincoln and the guys from ZZ Top, dense and powerful in a decidedly 1980’s way (like Ellis from “Die Hard“). He’s also the undisputed King of the Movie Soundtrack.

    And how did he earn this title (which he totally embraces), exactly?

    Well, let’s go back for a bit.

    Soundtrack albums had been a part of the pop culture landscape since at least 1938, when Walt Disney, ever the ingenious businessman, put out an album accompanying his first feature-length animated film, “Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.” Since then, albums have risen in the ranks, and in the 1970s and 1980s sometimes eclipsed the films that they were connected to, with breakout collections to “Saturday Night Fever,” “Dirty Dancing,” “Grease,” and “The Big Chill.” Some of these were collections of preexisting songs, others featured all new music, and some, like the work a singularly visionary Prince did for “Purple Rain” and “Batman,” expertly blurred the line between album and soundtrack.

    But to be King of the Movie Soundtrack, you have to be somebody like Loggins — an unabashed populist whose solo fame rose in parallel to the cinematic movements of the 1980s which favored flash and polish over the “big themes” and sociological commentary of the 1970s. Here, Loggins flourished. And he didn’t just flourish on a single chart-topping soundtrack, but he contributed to several huge soundtracks, embracing disparate genres and styles. But one thing connects all of these accomplishments, and it’s Loggins’ clever songwriting and honeyed vocals. He can really sing.His first breakthrough came in 1980, with “I’m Alright,” the theme from “Caddyshack,” the outré, National Lampoon-connected golf comedy starring Bill Murray. Eschewing one of the more obnoxious trends of the 1980s soundtrack song (recounting specifics from the movie’s plot), Loggins instead crafted a timeless gem of a pop song which, instead of referring to anything to the film, simply recreated its anarchic, freewheeling style. This song is a masterpiece, sonically speaking (listen to that nifty breakdown around the 1:50 mark), and just so much fun. You can easily imagine a rascally gopher dancing to it.

    The song would also set the high-water mark for the rest of his soundtrack career — which is saying something, given what was to come. And what’s more, he did three other songs for “Caddyshack.” How epic is that? They range from the schmaltzy (“Lead the Way”) to the adventurously awesome — “Make the Move,” whose first minute is ambient echo-y goodness and serves as a companion to “I’m Alright” — to the outright funky (“Mr. Night”). Seriously, it’s mind-blowing how awesome his contributions to “Caddyshack” were, especially if they were the building blocks for his entire Kingdom. (Elsewhere on the soundtrack is Journey’s “Any Way You Want It” because of course it is.)In 1984, his next soundtrack sensation would be unleashed. Loggins’ friend, Dean Pitchford, was working on a movie for Paramount. He gave the script to Loggins and asked if he’d write a couple of songs for the eventual movie. Loggins did, including the title track — “Footloose” — thinking that the movie might not even happen. Of course, it did, and Loggins’ contributions would eventually reach a kind of pop culture immortality. (Loggins still closes his live shows with the title track.)

    That song is just perfect, again summing up the energy and vibe of the movie, and the second contribution “I’m Free (Heaven Helps the Man),” has a darker musical palette and does well to recreate the moody teenage undercurrent of the film. (The music video is even more atmospheric.) “I’m Free” scores one of the most emotional moments of the movie and is just as good as the title track, which makes it underrated, especially in the Great Soundtrack Songbook of Kenny Loggins.Two years later, Loggins would contribute perhaps his most well-known soundtrack songs for the Tom Cruise action classic “Top Gun.” But are you ready to have your mind blown? Loggins wasn’t even supposed to sing “Danger Zone.” It originally existed as a demo that electronic music pioneer Giorgio Moroder composed with songwriter Tom Whitlock, at the insistence of producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson. (They were looking for something to get the audience fired up during the opening montage.)

    The producers approached a number of artists, including Toto, Bryan Adams, REO Speedwagon and Corey Hart (!), all of whom turned the collaboration down for a number of reasons (Adams thought the film glorified war, for example). Finally, it fell to Loggins, who Paramount knew and liked from “Footloose,” who absolutely crushed it. Loggins also contributed a song of his own to the film, “Playing with the Boys,” which ran during the unintentionally homoerotic beach volleyball sequence. (Interestingly, this song was repurposed for a much more hetero-normative beach volleyball movie, “Side Out,” in 1990.) While not an out-and-out masterpiece like “Danger Zone” (hey, it’s missing that Moroder magic), it’s still a terrific song and, along with “Danger Zone” and a number of other A+ cuts from bands like Cheap Trick and Berlin, propelled the “Top Gun” soundtrack to the top of the charts. It was the best-selling soundtrack of 1986.A year after “Top Gun,” Loggins returned to the soundtrack fold once more for “Meet Me Half Way” from the regrettable Sylvester Stallone arm-wrestling child custody drama, “Over the Top.” I have no idea how Loggins got involved and the movie is really awful. But here’s the thing — the song kicks ass. It’s deeply soulful and awesome and has an agreeably cheesy guitar solo. Sometimes it sounds like a lost Chicago song from that same period. This is not a bad thing.

    “Meet Me Half Way” cemented one of the central themes of the Loggins Soundtrack Legacy — the movie doesn’t have to be good (or even watchable) for the accompanying song to be transcendent …Speaking of which, in 1988, a year after his “Over the Top” experience, Loggins returned to the “Caddyshack” franchise with “Nobody’s Fool.” “Caddyshack II” was an unmitigated disaster, from Chevy Chase being the only actor willing to return, to the original director being fired during production. But one thing it did have was a crackerjack Kenny Loggins song. “Nobody’s Fool” isn’t quite on the same level of “I’m Alright” (or any of the other Loggins contributions to the first soundtrack) and it does the cardinal sin of incorporating the movie’s annoying tagline (“Back to the Shack,” a favorite of producers Peter Guber and Jon Peters) into the lyrics, but it’s still pretty great. For the first time, Loggins was in danger of letting the shellacked production overtake his velvety vocals — but it never quite gets to that point. The whole thing is, like every other Loggins soundtrack joint, soaring and majestic, like some kind of endangered eagle.

    And, as the 1980s came to a close, Loggins found himself perched atop the soundtrack landscape like he did at the beginning of the decade: singing a really catchy song for a movie that involved an animatronic gopher. This would ultimately be the close of his soundtrack domination, although he has returned to the fold periodically, penning a song for the sugary George Clooney-Michelle Pfeiffer romantic comedy “One Fine Day” (“For the First Time”) and working with the legendary Sherman Brothers for “Your Heart Will Lead You Home” from “The Tigger Movie.”

    Also, in 2016, he wrote and recorded a satirical anti-Trump song called “The Art of the Dealfor Funny or Die. Unsurprisingly, it’s amazing and gleefully taps into the sound of his 1980s soundtrack hits. Even after all this time, the highway to the Danger Zone is leading him home.

  • ‘Top Gun: Maverick’ Sounds Pretty Awesome, According to ‘Only the Brave’ Director Joseph Kosinski

    When we sat down with director Joseph Kosinski to talk about his brand new firefighting drama, “Only the Brave” (in theaters everywhere this Friday), we had to squeeze in a few questions about his next film, the highly anticipated “Top Gun: Maverick.”

    Tom Cruise, who teamed up with Kosinski for the sci-fi action flick “Oblivion,” will be back, but not much else is known about the project — besides its release date of July 19, 2019. But in our chat, Kosinski revealed that his longtime cinematographer Claudio Mirando will be back (“Claudio will be shooting it”), along with new information about his approach to the movie’s music, who will be handling screenplay duties, and whether or not he is incorporating any of the elements that Tony Scott developed before his tragic suicide.

    MOVIEFONE: Have you thought about the music?

    Kosinski: I really like the themes of the first film. I love the work that Harold Faltermeyer did. I’ve been listening to a lot of the original score. Not the songs, per say, but the score. I love the idea of trying to bring some of those themes and that sound back into the new movie, and we’re figuring out how to do that.

    After Daft Punk and M83, you’re running out of French disco artists to work with.

    Yeah, I don’t know if French disco is the right sound for “Top Gun.”

    You have a really unique opportunity with this project to modernize it for a new audience.

    Yes, for sure. Nostalgia is a really powerful thing and I never want to use it as a crutch. But I think that some of those themes and sounds are so iconic. I really need to think of a way to feather those in, in a way that aids this new story.

    Are you excited to be working with Tom again?

    Of course! Tom, especially in this role that’s near and dear to him, more than any other role that he’s played, we want to get it right.

    Tony Scott was working on a version of the sequel before his passing. Did you look at any of that stuff?

    I didn’t look at the draft Tony did. We actually started over. It’s a whole new draft written by Eric Warren Singer, who wrote “Only the Brave.” So we are working on a new draft right now.

    Kosinski’s “Only the Brave” opens this Friday everywhere.

  • The ‘Top Gun’ Sequel Now Has a Director & Release Date

    'The Mummy' New York Fan EventIf you’ve lost that loving feeling, you have just over two years to find it.

    Paramount Pictures will release “Top Gun: Maverick,” sequel to the 1986 classic, on July 12, 2019. Deadline confirmed the news, adding that “Tron: Legacy” director Joseph Kosinski will direct the movie, re-teaming with his “Oblivion” star Tom Cruise.

    The site added that Cruise’s Maverick is now “a flight instructor teaching the young macho pilots how to do it.”

    Last we heard, Cruise was telling reporters the sequel would likely begin filming in the next year. We’ll have to stay tuned for more specifics, but we can work backward from the planned release date and figure, yeah, they’d want to be starting production within the next year to make a summer 2019 tentpole date.

    Back in 2015, Skydance CEO David Ellison talked to Collider about Justin Marks writing a screenplay for the “Top Gun” sequel with “an amazing role for Maverick.” (Deadline updated that the script will be by Peter Craig and Justin Marks, along with Ashley Miller and Zack Stentz.) Cruise reportedly still wants to do his own stunts, like he still does with the “Mission: Impossible” movies, despite turning 55 on July 3.

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  • Tom Cruise Wants to Film ‘Top Gun 2’ in the Next Year: ‘It Is Definitely Happening’

    Tom Cruise still feels the need for speed, just not super-speed about a “Top Gun” sequel. It has been 31 years since Maverick and Goose sang in that bar, and Cruise is only now preparing to return for “Top Gun 2.”

    “Top Gun 2” has been in the works in some form or another forever, but an Australian morning show recently pressed Cruise on the subject when he was there to promote other stuff. One of the anchors said she heard about rumors of a “Top Gun 2” and asked that they please be true. Cruise smiled his Tom Cruise smile and said “It’s true.” The anchors were thrilled (maybe overly thrilled, calm down a bit) and asked for details on when, but at first Cruise just kept repeating “It’s true.” Could he not say when? Ultimately, he did say this:

    “You know what. I’m going to start filming it probably in the next year. I know It’s happening. It is definitely happening.”

    Back in 2015, Skydance CEO David Ellison talked to Collider about Justin Marks writing a screenplay for the “Top Gun” sequel with “an amazing role for Maverick.” In 2016, Cruise was on “The Graham Norton Show,” and said they were “discussing” the sequel and “trying to figure it out.” He reportedly still wants to do his own stunts, like he still does with the “Mission: Impossible” movies, despite now being 54.

    Now that Cruise has gone on the record about wanting to start filming in the next year, maybe it’ll front-burner the whole project. That would still only get it started in 2018 for a potential 2019 release. But fans have not lost that loving feeling, and are happy to hear there’s been any progress at all.

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  • What’s Leaving Netflix in December 2016

    Feel like watching the holiday rom-com “Just Friends” over Christmas vacation? Well, get on that: The Ryan Reynolds comedy is disappearing from Netflix on December 26.

    Also disappearing by the end of the year: “50 First Dates” (2004), “Sling Blade” (1996), “Top Gun” (1986), and “Spy Kids” (2001). Also going bye-bye: The Kevin Sorbo series “Hercules: The Legendary Journeys.”

    Here’s everything leaving Netflix in December 2016:

    December 1
    “50 First Dates” (2004)
    “American Beauty” (1999)
    “Camp Takota” (2014)
    “Carmen Jones” (1954)
    “Cats & Dogs” (2001)
    “Curious George: Swings Into Spring” (2013)
    “Don’t Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in The Hood” (2016)
    “Elizabeth: The Golden Age” (2007)
    “Event Horizon” (1997)
    “Frequencies” (2013)
    “McConkey” (2013)
    “Medora” (2013)
    “Monkey Business” (1952)
    “Myth Hunters”: Series 1
    “Myth Hunters”: Series 2
    “Neil Young: Heart of Gold” (2006)
    “Paycheck” (2003)
    “Pirates Who Don’t Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie” (2008)
    “River of No Return” (1954)
    “Sling Blade” (1996)
    “Thor: Hammer of The Gods” (2009)
    “The Great War Diary”: Season 1
    “The In-Laws” (2003)
    “The Out-of-Towners” (1999)
    “Top Gun” (1986)
    “Valley of The Dolls” (1967)
    “World Trade Center” (2006)

    December 2
    “Legends of The Knight” (2013)
    “The Red Baron” (2008)

    December 3
    “The Best of Me” (2014)

    December 5
    “Holes” (2003)

    December 14
    “The Da Vinci Code” (2006)

    December 15
    “High Profits”: Season 1
    “World War II in Colour” (2009)

    December 16
    “Beyond The Hills” (2012)

    December 22
    “Dark Skies” (2013)

    December 26
    “Just Friends” (2005)

    December 27
    “Spy Kids” (2001)

    December 31
    “Hercules: The Legendary Journeys”: Seasons 1-6

  • Tom Cruise Gives an Update on ‘Top Gun 2’: ‘We’re Trying to Figure It Out’

    'Jack Reacher: Never Go Back' Berlin Premiere; Berlin PremiereMore than 30 years after it first hit theaters, “Top Gun” still doesn’t have a sequel. While there’s been talk over the past few years of finally making “Top Gun 2” a reality, no concrete plans for the follow-up have materialized yet. So is the project actually happening, or not?

    Star Tom Cruise addressed that question in a recent interview with “The Graham Norton Show,” where the host asked him about his meeting with producer Jerry Bruckheimer back in January. Bruckheimer and Cruise shared a photo of themselves smiling together, with the promise that they were talking about “Top Gun 2,” though there’s been no word about the project since then.

    According to the actor, the film isn’t exactly a done deal yet — but it’s not dead, either.

    “Yes, we’re discussing it,” Cruise told Norton of the long-awaited sequel. “We’re trying to figure it out. … If we can figure it out, I’d love to work on it.”

    One of Cruise’s stipulations is reportedly that he’d like to do his own stunts, just as he did for the first flick. The actor reminisced about the experience with Norton, though he noted that learning how to fly was also a lesson in learning how not to barf all over the cockpit. Guess moviemaking isn’t always so glamorous after all.

    The fact that Cruise is talking about the project so openly gives us hope that it may still happen after all. Stay tuned for more intel from the star.

    Photo credit: Getty Images for Paramount Pictures

  • ‘Top Gun’: 15 Things You (Probably) Didn’t Know About the Tom Cruise Classic

    Could there be a more quintessentially 1980s movie than “Top Gun?”

    All that lovingly-photographed military hardware, that synth-pop soundtrack featuring two Kenny Loggins tunes, and a grinning Tom Cruise at his cockiest. He felt the need for speed, and for 30 years (since the film’s release on May 16, 1986), you’ve been watching Cruise’s Maverick soar in his fighter jet and overcome his paternal-abandonment issues.

    Still, as many times as you’ve re-watched “Top Gun,” there’s a lot you may not know about the this ’80s classic. Here are the Navy pilot saga’s secrets, declassified.
    1. The film originated as “Top Guns,” a 1983 article by Ehud Yonay in California Magazine. It profiled the Navy pilot training center at Miramar, in San Diego, and featured aerial photography by a Top Gun pilot. Co-screenwriter Jack Epps Jr. researched the script by attending Top Gun classes and getting flown around in an F-14.

    2. Tom Cruise wasn’t actually the first choice to play Maverick, but Matthew Modine turned down the role because he didn’t agree with the film’s militaristic politics. Instead, he went off to star as a Vietnam War Marine private in Stanley Kubrick‘s anti-war drama “Full Metal Jacket.”

    3. To obtain access to naval aircraft and personnel, the producers had to grant script approval to the Navy. The biggest change demanded by the service branch was to make Maverick’s love interest a civilian, since the Navy officially frowns on fraternization within the ranks.
    4. Kelly McGillis initially turned down the love-interest role, since the character was written as an aerobics instructor. Then the filmmakers met Christine “Legs” Fox, a civilian tactician at Miramar who earned her Top Gun nickname because of her 6’0″ height. She became the inspiration for Charlie Blackwood, the instructor role that McGillis ultimately accepted. Fox would go on to become the highest ranking woman at the Pentagon before she retired in 2014.

    5. Like Fox, McGillis was tall; her 5’10” height made her a tricky match for Tom Cruise, who was 5’7″.

    “I towered over him,” the actress recalled in 2010, noting that she had to slouch and crouch throughout the shoot in order to fit in the frame with her leading man. “I had really bad posture through the whole movie.” Indeed, test audiences initially found their romance unconvincing, and the filmmakers called them back for reshoots six months after principal photography had ended. McGillis had cut and dyed her hair darker for another role, which is why she wears a cap throughout the elevator love scene.

    6. In real life, no one under 5’8″ is eligible to become a Navy pilot. Nonetheless, Cruise spent months taking classes at Top Gun and even learned how to land a plane on an aircraft carrier.
    7. The F-14 planes and other naval aircraft — along with their fuel, their pilots, and support staff — cost the production $7,800 per hour in rental fees. Even more expensive was the aircraft carrier. During one sequence, the carrier captain had to change course, altering the angle of light for the shot. Told it would cost $25,000 to turn the ship around, director Tony Scott dashed off a check for that amount and got the captain to reverse course in order to get five more minutes of light to finish the sequence.

    8. Much of the dizzying aerial photography was shot from a plane flown by pilot Art Scholl. During one sequence, however, Scholl’s plane failed to recover from a flat spin and crashed into the Pacific Ocean. Neither the aircraft nor Scholl’s body was ever recovered. The film was dedicated to his memory.

    9. “Top Gun” cost a reported $15 million to make and ultimately earned $180 million in North America, becoming the top-grossing movie of 1986. Its total global gross was $357 million.
    10. “Top Gun” also became an early top-seller in the then-new videocassette market, as it was one of the first films priced to sell (at just $20), not just to rent.

    11. The film was credited with a 500 percent boost in Naval recruitment; some theaters even had recruiting booths in the lobby. Bomber jackets and Ray-Ban Aviator sunglasses also credited the film with a 40 percent jump in sales.

    12. Bryan Adams turned down a chance to have a song included on the “Top Gun” soundtrack because he disapproved of the film’s militarism. Still, the resulting album became one of the most popular in movie soundtrack in history, selling seven million copies in the U.S. and another two million abroad. It made stars of the band Berlin, who performed the movie’s love ballad, “Take My Breath Away.”
    13. Did all that male bonding, towel-snapping, and shirtless volleyball-playing make “Top Gun” a covertly homoerotic movie? Many critics (and comedians) have thought so. Most famously, Quentin Tarantino delivered a hilarious (and NSFW) monologue on the topic in the 1994 movie “Sleep With Me.”

    14. At the Academy Awards in 1987, “Top Gun” was nominated for four Oscars, including Best Editing, Best Sound, and Best Sound Effects Editing. It won for Best Original Song, for “Take My Breath Away.”

    15. A “Top Gun” sequel has been in the works for nearly a decade, though it was nearly derailed by director Tony Scott’s suicide in 2012. The new film, which will reportedly focus on the transition from old-school aerial dogfight warfare to drone combat, has gone through several screenwriters. Cruise and Val Kilmer reportedly remain committed to return as Maverick and Iceman.

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  • Tom Cruise Teases ‘Top Gun 2’ With New Photo

    It looks like the wheels are finally up on “Top Gun 2.” The looooong-awaited sequel to Tom Cruise‘s 1986 movie got itself a solid script last year, and now there’s photographic proof of progress.

    Producer Jerry Bruckheimer just posted this photo with Cruise, and Cruise — who rarely tweets anything — retweeted the shot:

    Someone needs to find the Fountain of Youth that Tom Cruise and Keanu Reeves have hidden somewhere, ’cause 53-year-old Tommy does not look much older than he did in the ’80s.

    Over the summer, Skydance CEO David Ellison talked to Collider about “Top Gun 2,” saying “Justin Marks is writing the screenplay right now. He has a phenomenal take to really update that world for what fighter pilots in the Navy has turned into today. There is an amazing role for Maverick in the movie and there is no Top Gun without Maverick, and it is going to be Maverick playing Maverick.”

    Shortly after that, while in London for the premiere of “Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation,” Cruise addressed the “Top Gun 2” talk with Reuters, saying, “It would be fun. I would like to get back into those jets.” However, he said, “It would have to be practical. I don’t want any CGI jets. I want to shoot it like how we shot the first one.”

    So he still wants to do his own stunts, and that may have been part of the weekend conversation between the producer and the star. If they are not only talking about the movie, but sharing a photo from the discussion, that is a solid hint that this puppy will actually fly sometime soon — like, within the next 30 years.

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  • National Film Registry Adds ‘Ghostbusters,’ ‘Top Gun,’ ‘Shawshank Redemption’

    ghostbusters, library of congress, national film registry, 1984The National Film Registry announced this week its annual selection of 25 films and recordings to add to the permanent collection of the Library of Congress, and among them are old Hollywood classics, recent Oscar winners, and beloved ’80s favorites.

    Highlights of this year’s inductees include comedy classic “Ghostbusters” and Tom Cruise’s iconic flick “Top Gun.” Awards bait fare “Shawshank Redemption” (which nabbed seven Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture) and “L.A. Confidential” (which took home the Best Supporting Actress and Best Adapted Screenplay trophies) also made the 2015 cut.

    There are always a few quirky additions, too, and this year’s crop is no different. A recording that Thomas Edison made of a sneeze in 1894 is a new inductee, as is a short animated film from Disney called “The Story of Menstruation,” which was shown in American schools as part of health education classes in the 1940s (and was both pioneering and pretty weird). The infamous Jerry Lewis Holocaust film “The Day the Clown Cried” — considered by many to be the worst movie ever made, and so terrible that it was never released and only viewed by seven people — was rumored to be joining the fold, but was not present on the Film Registry’s list on Monday.

    The complete list of 2015 additions is below.

    Being There (1979)
    Black and Tan (1929)
    Dracula (Spanish language version) (1931)
    Dream of a Rarebit Fiend (1906)
    Eadweard Muybridge, Zoopraxographer (1974)
    Edison Kinetoscopic Record of a Sneeze (1894)
    A Fool There Was (1915)
    Ghostbusters (1984)
    Hail the Conquering Hero (1944)
    Humoresque (1920)
    Imitation of Life (1959)
    The Inner World of Aphasia (1968)
    John Henry and the Inky-Poo (1946)
    L.A. Confidential (1997)
    The Mark of Zorro (1920)
    The Old Mill (1937)
    Our Daily Bread (1934)
    Portrait of Jason (1967)
    Seconds (1966)
    The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
    Sink or Swim (1990)
    The Story of Menstruation (1946)
    Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One (1968)
    Top Gun (1986)
    Winchester ’73 (1950)

    [via: Library of Congress]

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  • Val Kilmer Joins ‘Top Gun 2,’ Posts Confusing Facebook Status

    Val Kilmer caused quite a stir on social media this week when he insinuated that “Top Gun 2” was officially a go, and that he was 100 percent on board for the flick. Now, the actor has backtracked a bit on those claims, telling fans that he’s only been offered a part in the potential follow-up — which may or may not make it into theaters.

    Kilmer wrote on his Facebook page early Tuesday that he “just got offered” a role in the long-gestating sequel to 1986’s “Top Gun.” Kilmer also insinuated that original star Tom Cruise was already on board, and wrote, “let’s fire up some fighter jets again!!!”

    But that post — which also name-checked Francis Ford Coppola and Gene Hackman, who Kilmer used as examples of people he’d also immediately agree to work with — apparently caused some confusion among fans, who thought that those big names were somehow involved with the production. The actor then edited his post to clarify his remarks, and added a bit more context, cautioning followers, “This is a long way off so calm down.”

    “This has been talked about for a long long time and being offered a role is very different from doing a role,” Kilmer added in his update about the proposed sequel. “I jumped the gun with my post. I jumped the topgun… An innocent mistake. It was just such a wonderful phone call with my agent.”

    I just got offered #topgun2 – not often you get to say “yes” without reading the script…”It’s starring Gene…

    Posted by Val Kilmer on Monday, November 16, 2015

    So, here’s what we know so far: “Top Gun 2” is indeed in development; Kilmer has been offered the role (and presumably taken it, pending Cruise’s involvement and an official greenlight); the film is not yet a sure thing; Cruise still has to sign on officially. And no, Coppola and Hackman are not involved. (Seriously, how did anyone make this mistake? Kilmer’s post could have been better-written, sure, but those two would be really random choices to suddenly join this flick.)

    This has been your daily dose of “Top Gun 2” speculation. Stay tuned — there’s bound to be lots more ahead.

    [via: Val Kilmer]

    Photo credit: Associated Press

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