Film is like a battleground
Samuel FullerPropaganda
Top Gun: Maverick is a movie about the American Empire; about its ethos and hopes, its illusions and contradictions.
The United States does not like to present itself as an Empire. The phrase itself, ‘American Empire’, is a contested one. To many Americans it is inconceivable that their country, born from an anti-imperial struggle, could ever be an empire. However, the United States is much more than a single, sovereign nation, as evidenced by the sheer number of U.S. soldiers and military bases stationed around the world, its fourteen unincorporated territories in the Caribbean Sea and Pacific Ocean, and the scope of influence that the nation has on matters of international politics, economics and culture. That said, there is a remarkable amount of academic writing that denies the existence of an ‘American Empire’ whilst, simultaneously, confirming that the United States is an ‘imperial’ or ‘imperialist’ nation.Footnote 1 The imperialism of the United States is less difficult, or perhaps even impossible, to deny. What it seeks to spread through its power, what it claims to spread, and the ultimate benefits of this reach, are rich topics of debate, ones that I will only glance upon in what follows. What I argue here is that, whether or not intellectuals find this notion of ‘American Empire’ satisfactory, the cultural products of the United States betray and bolster a social imaginary of an imperial power devoted to the pursuit of a universally beneficial mission.Footnote 2 Top Gun: Maverick is a perfect example of one such cultural product that promotes the myth of the ‘American Empire’ and speaks to its undying appeal.
This sequel to the original Top Gun (1986) might be seen as an advertisement for the military, and to a certain extent it is. The film is part of a long history of collaboration between the Department of Defense Entertainment Media Office and Hollywood.Footnote 3 But Top Gun: Maverick is more than this. The film provides insights on the shifting expectations, and troubles facing the American Empire's project. In reflecting upon the sequel and comparing it with the original, it is possible to notice changes and new prerogatives in the self-perception of the imperial project of the United States, as well as an overall imperial fatigue and tension.
Many have marveled at Tom Cruise's performance, and at the feeling of authenticity of the film. In the pre-recorded speech that welcomes audiences to the theater, Cruise himself says that the entire team's effort was to produce something ‘authentic’. Forces of gravity truly smoosh Maverick's (Tom Cruise) face during the action scenes, and we are looking at ‘real F-18s’. But what is even more significant is the combination of fiction and nonfiction at play. After all, the story remains fictional and Top Gun: Maverick is ‘only’ a film. Yet this combination of fictional narrative and authenticity of how the story has been filmed is essential for any propaganda and, in general, for any ideology.Footnote 4 For no propaganda, or ideology would ever have any chance to succeed without being perceived as ‘real’, as ‘authentic’. In the following pages, I want to stare through this feeling of authenticity and past the film's grand visual spectacle in order to better understand the movie's propagandistic content: something that makes this movie more than just a movie. For Top Gun: Maverick tries to re-cement the myth of a country—the United States—with a universal mission.
Especially in the English-speaking world, there is a tendency to negatively value the concept of propaganda as dissemination of dangerous, often dishonest, ideas and information. Jürgen Wilke notices that the term propaganda arouses highly negative associations in Western democracies since they present themselves as defenders of the ideals of freedom of opinion and freedom of the press. In the context of Western democracies, propaganda appears as information and education's Other.Footnote 5 Propaganda is taken as a synonym of manipulation. Of course, this is often the case. And yet the reality is more complex. Western democracies are no exception to the variety of propaganda that weaves together information and ideology, education, and entertainment. That said, in this essay I prefer to employ the term ‘propaganda’ according to its Catholic usage as ‘propagation’ and active promotion of a worldview.Footnote 6 A more ‘neutral’ understanding of the concept of propaganda has been described by film historian Richard Taylor, according to whom ‘propaganda is concerned with the transmission of ideas and/or values from one person, or group of persons, to another’.Footnote 7 It is also worth recalling that propaganda is not always or exclusively a method to create ex nihilo a social imaginary, but also and more often a way of solidifying and reshaping an already existing set of ideas. As Aldous Huxley, insightfully reminds us: ‘Propaganda gives force and direction to the successive movements of popular feeling and desire; but it does not do much to create these movements. The propagandist is a man who canalizes an already existing stream. In a land where there is no water, he digs in vain.’Footnote 8
Mission
Maverick is a US Navy test pilot who is sent to train an elite group of aviators for a secret mission. In his career, Maverick has been recognized as a top pilot, but he is also incapable of submitting entirely to authorities. Despite his achievements, he has remained a captain, rather than advancing to higher ranks. He is chased by the memories of Goose (Anthony Edwards), his wingman whose death in a flight accident is a central plot point of the first Top Gun. Always looking for adrenaline and impossible challenges, Maverick's entire raison d’être seems to be to fly and push the boundaries of what can be achieved, which has earned him a checkered reputation with the Navy's top brass.
The mission at the center of Top Gun: Maverick is the first element of divergence from the 1986 original. Where Top Gun focused primarily on the camaraderie and competition between elite, young aviators in training, the sequel presents the viewer an actual threat and job that must be done. Before giving more insights into the specifics of the mission, I want to consider the metaphorical implications of centering the film around a mission to begin with. Top Gun came out in May 1986, during Ronald Reagan's second presidential term at a time when America was more certain of its world superiority. The confrontation with an enemy, in the first Top Gun, was detached from any mission. There, the enemy appeared as a necessary accessory. The symbolism of the emphasis on the mission could hardly be more explicit in the sequel. At least half of the 2022 movie is dedicated to the training for and then accomplishment of this mission. Its centrality cannot be overstated. This change—from the training and possibility of an enemy in the former movie to an actual mission in the sequel—indicates an American Empire that feels less secure in the world. In this moment of insecurity, Top Gun: Maverick, tries to penetrate within America's and the world's imaginaries with the following statement: the American Civilization must regain an awareness of its historic and universal mission.
For further context of the geopolitical contrasts separating 1986 and 2022 that speak to the divergences in the films, one can recall that in 1989, only three years after Top Gun was released, political scientist Francis Fukuyama popularized the famous expression ‘the end of history’, by which he indicated an end of historical struggle now that, at the end of the Cold War, liberal democracies like the American one, could spread throughout the rest of the world. Today, everyone knows that history did not end, and rather than a unipolar world imagined by Fukuyama we have entered a multipolar world in which the US has faced, and it is still facing the rise of new, and aspiring empires. The war that the US is currently fighting, indirectly, with Russia on Ukrainian soil, captures this current imperial battle and gives insight into the rise of a multipolar world. This change of affairs—from one in which the American Empire could simply train itself to one in which it must regain a sense of its own mission—is essential to Top Gun: Maverick’s propaganda content. The mission is far from being a mere backdrop to the human story of Maverick, or an excuse to increase the action sequences. Instead, it is the detail that reveals the ideological underpinning and purpose of the film.
Furthermore, it is impossible to not notice a certain religious afflatus in the reference to a mission. The mission must pass through ‘two miracles’, as Maverick likes to say and the admirals like to repeat, referring to the two bombs that need to hit the nuclear site that the navy pilots must destroy as part of their mission. Of course, these are miracles not based upon faith, but upon engineering, technique, innovation, human accuracy. The use of missionary language in American politics has a long history that still reverberates within Top Gun: Maverick.Footnote 9
So, what is the mission? As explained to Maverick by Admiral Beau ‘Cyclone’ Simpson (Jon Hamm) and Rear Admiral Solomon ‘Warlock’ Bates (Charles Parnell), an unspecified foreign country is not respecting international regulations on nuclear weapons and the US army has the responsibility to destroy this arsenal. This is just the story, but beyond this apparently generic plot there is something more: the American Empire still wants to present itself as the watchdog of the world order. The movie does not give many details on the actual threat represented by these nuclear weapons. What counts most in the logic of the film is that the United States preserves the status quo, and thus its position at the top of the world.
The defenders of this order take a more plastic formulation with the flags on the back of the famous bomber jacket that Maverick wears at the beginning of the movie: those of the United States, the United Nations, Japan and Taiwan. These flags function as a statement on the concept of empire as a trans-national political alliance formed by ‘united’ nations.Footnote 10 In the mythology of the Top Gun saga, the flags indicate a world order in which the United States has the leading role among the United Nations, while being supported by its allies. Japan and Taiwan, metaphorically, signify allies par excellence, the most loyal supporters of the Empire that can and should trust in the Empire's support.Footnote 11 The movie promotes imperial unity and indicates the direction of possible conflicts.
Of course, one must notice that the mission is not presented as an aggressive measure. Rather it represents the consolidation of the Pax Americana. The United States wants to perceive itself as defender of peace and enforcer of rules, not as an imperial aggressive power. America might know that it is an empire, but it does not want to be perceived as such—especially not as an aggressive one. Again, it would lead us too far to consider the paradox of an empire, the United States, that was born out from a rebellion against another empire, the British one. It is probably true that these historical roots of the American Empire determine a strange kind of schizophrenia in its self-perception.Footnote 12 What one could infer from Top Gun: Maverick is that the United States does not want to project an image of a country that must necessarily change the world, as much as it has a duty of keeping the world as it is. Of course, this could be interpreted as a sign of imperial fatigue since the American Empire seems to state that it has no more the capacity or energies to change the world; a narrative and desire that was still in place at the start of the Iraq War, not to mention all the active regime change efforts in Latin America in the twentieth century. Yet what counts most to consider here is that Top Gun: Maverick is not a movie that cements ‘jingoistic’ narrative. The movie does its best to portray the American Civilization as defender of a world order, not as an aggressive imperial power. The mission to destroy a nuclear arsenal must be read as the destruction of a threat.
Furthermore, in the context of Top Gun: Maverick, the mission is not presented as part of a general conflict between good versus bad, the good empire versus the empire of evil. This is an interesting shift in political message and articulation of political ideology if one recalls that only a few decades ago George W. Bush framed Global War on Terror precisely as a fight against ‘the Axis of Evil’, referring to Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. Bush's rhetoric resurrected the Cold War and Reagan's reference to the Soviet Union as the Evil Empire. Within the logic of Top Gun: Maverick, the American Empire wants to show the increased awareness that the dichotomy good versus bad is a simplification that does not convince the international public opinion anymore. Probably the utter failure and unpopularity of the War on Terror justifies this shift. To maintain an order, encapsulated in the destruction of the nuclear arsenal, does not require anymore the attempt to explain who is good and who is bad. What counts more, again in the logic of the film, is the preservation of a status quo. In such a sense, the mission is not about aggressiveness. Rather it is meant to guarantee the Pax Americana. This is the way the American Empire wants to perceive itself, and wants to be perceived, internationally.
If preservation of the status quo is the goal, then any entity seeking to disrupt things as usual is the ‘enemy’. What form does this ‘antagonist’ take in Top Gun: Maverick? One notices here an element of continuity between the sequel and the original movie since in both movies the enemy's identity is unspecified. Of course, one might easily recognize in the fictitious symbols on the enemy's planes a certain association with the Soviet Union in the original Top Gun, and with China in Maverick. At the same time, the nuclear threat might call to mind Russia, Iran, or North Korea. The landscape surrounding the nuclear site that the jet fighters need to bomb recalls the remote parts of Russia or China. Yet it is a futile exercise to try to identify who the enemy is since, in the logic of the American Empire, that is, of an Empire that still wants to present itself at the top of a world order, the enemy is always the enemy to come. A future enemy, and not only China or Russia. It is indicative that the enemy is unknown since its undeclared identity projects the enemy towards a future plane. At the same time, it unwittingly testifies that the Empire, any empire, never feels entirely safe. A possible enemy—an unknown enemy—might always come into existence.
The geopolitical bent of Top Gun: Maverick could not be more straightforward, yet its mission is not motivated by a clear ideological aim.Footnote 13 It is not enough to say that American Civilization must engage in a mission to preserve a world order. This is utterly generic. One would like to know why this mission should be fought. What remains largely unclarified in the movie is the moral content of this mission. The movie states that the American Empire is on the right side of history. But it does almost nothing to state explicitly why, as if the rightness of a world order could appear as self-evident. Perhaps, the movie proves a more generalizable rule since any empire, at some point of its life cycle, exists but unaware of what moves them towards their own mission. Ultimately, it is a strange kind of mission, apparently justified by a rather generic reference to the violation of ‘international treaty’. Yet the implications of the mission remain unknown. Based on this film, it seems that American exceptionalism has ceased to rest on any certain belief.
Perhaps, only if we reflect more upon how the mission can be won, one could detect some hints of how Top Gun: Maverick intends to portray the ethos of American Civilization, that is, the ideological reasons to fight this mission.
E Pluribus Unum
The individualism and the competition among pilots—in the first Top Gun, between Maverick and Ice (Val Kilmer), in the sequel, between Hangman (Glen Powell) and Rooster (Miles Teller)—is a persistent feature within both movies. Who is going to be recognized as ‘the best of the best’ is a leading thread in the Top Gun saga. Actual pilots and Navy officials might consider that this is a fictionalized aspect, and that teamwork is much more important than personal competition in the navy. Even if this criticism would be justified, it would miss the general import of both movies since the idea of individual excellence is grounded in a certain ethos of American Civilization.Footnote 14 Yet one should also notice that both movies do not limit themselves to the celebration of strictly individual talent and individual achievement. Both movies—already the first Top Gun, and even more the sequel—provide a more sophisticated account. By the end of both movies, the pilots who were in competition end up forming an alliance, or practically speaking watch each other's backs, as Hangman does in one of the final scenes in which he takes down an enemy who is in the act of hitting Maverick and Rooster. Maverick's unorthodox methods, individualism, rebelliousness, and disrespect for authorities do not exclude social discipline, too. By watching the movie, one has the impression that the negotiation and reconciliation of the individual with the collective is truly at the core of the American Civilization project; it is the way American Civilization would like to be perceived and what it evangelizes.
In this movie, as in any movie of American propaganda, social discipline is persistently valorized; in particular, the importance for individuals to work as a collective, as a ‘team’. Even the individual hero, Maverick himself, would be unable to accomplish any mission without relying on the team of young navy pilots and the various forms of technical assistance provided by naval officers. Central to the ideological message of the film is the scene of the football match played on the beach, which stresses precisely this need of succeeding as a team. The Admiral ‘Cyclone's’ disapproval towards Maverick's waste of time during the aviators’ training is met with Maverick's words on the need of creating a team first, as if a collective spirit would be essential and preliminary to any technical proficiency. This is also something that marks a distance between Top Gun: Maverick and the original movie since in the former the famous volleyball scene was a spontaneous and pointless interlude of masculine posturing, where in the sequel the football sequence becomes part of an exercise of team-building.Footnote 15 Again, this is telling of a change of ethos, and how the American Empire, today, wants to communicate that the time for narcissistic indulgences might have come to an end.
This idea of the synergy between the individual and the collective is reflected by the inter-racial and inter-gender dimension of the team, too. The ethnic, racial, and gender diversity is transcended in the unity of the Navy and the collective purpose of the mission. The differences are set apart since what counts most is an overall sense of unity. Phoenix (Monica Barbaro), Bob (Lewis Pullman), Payback (Jay Ellis), Fanboy (Danny Ramirez), or Fritz (Manny Jacinto) might be born in the United States, but they are all distinctively coming from diverse ethnic and racial groups. Regardless of differences, the message is that when you become ‘American’ you automatically become part of the same civilizational process. Of course, most of the primary characters and people in power are still White Americans. Yet the most important aspect is that the movie, quite explicitly, tries to address any ‘American’—coming from any racial and class background—as active in the physical maintenance of the American imperial project.
The movie is thoughtful enough to not completely mask social tensions behind this ideological depiction. Today, the United States is a vastly divided country. The sequel presents a lack of unity at the level of government which captures not only the perception of the general population, but also the reality of contemporary American politics. The contrast between admirals and captains, and among admirals themselves is part of this general need of the movie to be perceived as authentic. Of course, even in this case there is a propagandistic message: the possible reconciliation between individuals thanks to the accomplishment of the mission.
That a collective of individuals might form a unity beyond their individual particularities is the moral content of this mission. E pluribus unum. This moral content is the idealistic version of democratic powers since this is a political organization grounded in the faith of resultant forces—even ones distinctively opposed to one another—and not upon a single clearly-planned set of ideas.
The ethos of American Civilization that Top Gun: Maverick wants to portray is constantly grounded in this idea of reconciliation of individual and collective. However, this reconciliation should not be seen only among a community of individuals living in the present, but also extending towards the past and projecting itself towards the future. The intergenerational dynamics of this movie are fundamental to the political and military message of the film itself. The human story—more precisely, the relationship between Maverick and Rooster—connects intimately with the political story on the preservation of an American world order. To the question, ‘How can this mission be won?’, one should reply here by replying, ‘If the past and present form an alliance and the traumas of the past are redeemed in the present.’Footnote 16
In the first Top Gun, Maverick was a much skilled pilot chasing the ghost of his much-admired dad, a deceased Navy legend. In the sequel, the ghost hunting Maverick is Goose, his wingman deceased in the previous movie. As much as Maverick has been judged not responsible for Goose's death, he still holds onto the guilt of not having been able to save him, a guilt that is exacerbated by the fact that Rooster, Goose's son, is one of the pilots hoping to fly the mission. Rooster, too, is hunted by the ghost of his father, Goose. The persistence of Goose's memories in Maverick and Rooster is recalled throughout the movie a few times. We also learn that Maverick had set back Rooster's career to save him from the same destiny of his father. The film follows the contrast and final reconciliation between Maverick and Rooster.
The characters belong to two different generations but are both connected by this intergenerational loss. Both pilots have lost their parents. The shared experience of a parental sacrifice to the interests of the nation brings Maverick and Rooster together. There is a common story, here, that consolidates the sense of belonging to a nation, to an historical community grounded in the continuity among several generations. Yet there are several problems with this intergenerational dynamic as well. The ideology of Top Gun: Maverick—built around this intergenerational continuity—is not believable since the only character with some depth is Maverick whilst the young pilots, Rooster included, are only masks. Bob is ‘the nerd,’ Phoenix is ‘the strong woman’, Rooster is ‘the traumatized’, Hangman is ‘the individualist’, and so on. This younger generation of fighters are typologies of individuals. Maverick is the only character with a psychological depth (remorse, guilt, needs for reconciliation, and so on), which isolates him from his peers.
Even more crucially, the continuity between past and present appears purely ideological since one leading feature that could create a greater bond is entirely missing: sacrifice itself.Footnote 17 The American Empire, today, cannot tolerate more losses. One could compare this movie with the first Top Gun in which Goose dies, and acts as a sacrificial lamb with no psychological nor existential weight in the movie. Goose exists only so that he could die. Any empire needs a certain amount of blood. Goose is the metaphorical ‘bird’ sacrificed to the life of the Empire. This relationship between violence, death, and sacredness is quintessential to the sacralization of politics. The image of a ‘new man’ for the nation can only be born out of struggle and sacrifice.Footnote 18 Lastly, one could recall that, in a classic study by Henri Hubert and Marcel Mauss, the sacrificial system should be understood as providing ‘a means of communication between the sacred and the profane worlds through the mediation of a victim’.Footnote 19 Now, it is telling that, apart from Iceman, who is old and sick, in Top Gun: Maverick no one dies. In the first Top Gun someone dies among the pilots, but in Maverick it is no one. The Empire has been traumatized enough, especially after 9/11 and the disaster of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and it cannot tolerate any more trauma. Yet it is hard to justify a true generational bond without this disposition to loss and sacrifice.
It is true that the navy pilots in Top Gun: Maverick are still willing to risk their lives, but what is fascinating here is that the feeling of the Empire—its self-perception—has changed: no one must die. It is impossible to not notice here a contradiction and another symptom of imperial fatigue. The American Empire is incapable of tolerating any more losses. Aside from the personal dynamics, what is most fascinating is the sense of guilt of the Empire towards its past: the guilt towards sacrificed people, and the desire to not see anyone else sacrificed again. As much as Maverick and Rooster form an intergenerational chain, a gap has been created between the past and the present. In the present, the American Empire is not willing anymore to tolerate more losses—at least, not the losses of American citizens. This tells us that it is impossible to actualize, entirely, a sense of continuity with the past since the past, with its willingness to sacrifice itself, has slipped away. Of course, nothing precludes that in the future this situation might be overcome, but what is worth considering here is the unconscious disposition of this movie. As if the American Empire is trying to convince its citizens that they can remain at the top of the world without any sacrifice anymore.
Immortality
If we now return to the leading question, ‘How can the mission be won?’, we should conclude the analyses of the propagandistic messages of this movie by looking at another possible response: by going beyond the book. There is a quite terrific scene in which Maverick meets his students for the first time. He points to the rulebook of the jet that they will have to fly, and immediately subverts the students’ expectations by throwing it literally into a garbage bin, saying that that same book was already known to the enemies as well. This apparently insignificant scene is quite telling.Footnote 20
Of course, Maverick's gesture is meant to emphasize human courage, creativity, and teamwork. The capacity of going ‘beyond the book’ mirrors the capacity of being inventive, courageous, capable of working with other people. But the symbolic gesture of throwing away the rulebook has a larger ideological implication: it refers to a capacity of acquiring knowledge about something that has not been written yet. Maverick's gesture emphasizes a perennial push towards innovation, and an infinite progress that has no arrival point. Going ‘beyond the book’ emphasizes the need to rewrite, perennially, the book itself. And yet, the emphasis on innovation is not deprived of an anxious side.
One of the very first scenes, which appears to a certain extent as a sort of prologue to the actual movie, shows Maverick being a test pilot working on a hypersonic Darkstar. The scene presents the first and most obvious propaganda message: the American civilization's projection towards a universe that is beyond the earth, its capacity of transcending the earth.Footnote 21 Yet one must notice a certain amount of anxiety based on the tension between human inventiveness and the shadow of machines. In the movie, the possible antagonism between man and machine is resolved in favor of humans, especially thanks to a celebration of group values and team efforts.Footnote 22 But the shadow of machines looms over Maverick and the younger generation of pilots. In the initial scene which I briefly recalled, the Rear Admiral says to Maverick that he belongs to the past and in the future human pilots would not serve anymore, replaced by self-guided planes. Aside from this facile concession to a rather stereotypical idea in action movies—the machine taking over human beings—there is something else to consider.
The movie deals with a certain amount of historical anxiety about this perennial research of innovation. Considering Maverick's obsession with his own work, it seems that a greater problem for Maverick would not be death itself, as much as not working. The veneration towards one's profession is a distinctive feature of American society. In the United States, it is one's profession that defines one's identity. Yet, how can this veneration towards work be sustained and justified within a field—technological innovation—that might not be capable of creating new jobs as much as reducing them? Again, one notices here another tension and contradictory aspect within the project of American Civilization. Innovation is valued and celebrated throughout the entire movie, yet under the signs of a general anxiety that innovation might bright people out of work. The American Civilization faces another form of anxiety: professional marginalization and, in so doing, a loss of any true meaning of one's own existence since, in the American Civilization project, it is only your work that truly defines you.Footnote 23
The transfiguration of the individual in the collective, and the collective in the individual; the cult of work; the adoration for innovation and infinite progress; the perennial need to find newer paths in one's life; and the United States as preserver of world order are some of the leading features of Top Gun: Maverick.Footnote 24 Of course, how effective this propaganda-movie is remains hard to establish.Footnote 25 What matters more to consider here is that these ideals coalesce around a crucial message: the empire cannot die. Tacitly, subtly, the movie claims a desire for immortality.
Top Gun: Maverick is the dream of immortality that persists within the American imaginary. Maverick, more than anyone else, is the image of the desire of transcending time and death. It is through him and thanks to him that the movie can also say that the empire cannot die.Footnote 26 Maverick/Cruise's quasi-miraculous incapacity to age is a grand advertisement to this myth of perennial youth of American Civilization. It is distinctively American, a never-ending desire for more. More life. More youth. More time. Even Iceman appears, in the photograph that camps over his coffin, incredibly alive. There is an endemic Christianity in the United States which lies in the conviction that some part of one's being—what Christians call the soul—continues to live even after death. Yet the immortality at the forefront of American spirituality is not the one of the soul as much as the immortality of one's image and one's body. Immortality in this theo-materialistic sense means more of what you already got. Of course, this is ideology since, to my knowledge, history has no trace of immortal empires nor immortal human beings.
In the movie, the dream of immortality is sustained by and presented through two more opposing forces: technology as something that is perennially perfectible and potentially at the service of human beings in order to overcome their limits, on the one hand, and the lack of interest in fashion, on the other hand.
The first aspect is simple to explain, and it is captured, for instance, by the scene in which Maverick is running assisted by technological equipment, or by the voice of Iceman which has been recreated thanks to a software.Footnote 27 This desire for a technological-assisted immortality sheds light on this human desire to become like God. The fundamental project of American Civilization goes beyond politics, and it presents itself as a theo-political project in which the human being could assimilate itself with divinity.
With regards to fashion, nothing is more mortal and vanishing than fashion itself. It is not surprising that this movie, with its strong impulse towards immortality, has almost no interest nor capacity in influencing fashion in any way. The first Top Gun created a number of fashion ‘looks’, the bomber jacket being the most distinctive. In Top Gun: Maverick fashion is truly vague and generic. This makes sense since the movie wants to be perceived as timeless, and not on the side of what is constantly changing like fashion. With regards to the clothing styles of the lieutenants and Maverick himself everything is a bit generic. Maverick's white shirt and the blue jeans is a reference to the past, to an incapacity of influencing fashions in new ways. Rooster's Hawaiian shirt recalls generic chain clothes. Nothing in the fashion style of Top Gun: Maverick really stands up. The vagueness of fashion is a trace of the desire of transcending time.
It is part of the history of empires a chronic incapacity, or maybe impossibility, to abdicate their power.Footnote 28 The Empire is only capable of one message of perennial rejuvenation. Top Gun: Maverick states that an empire, any empire, would simply cease to be such if it would not believe in its own myth of perennial youth. An empire cannot give away power, and cannot stop being a great political, military, and technological power. In such a sense, this is also a movie about the burden of being an empire. Its damnation is its immortality, its illusion of eternity. Any empire is forced not to die.Footnote 29
Despite several internal contradictions—or maybe even thanks to them—the propaganda of Top Gun: Maverick is extremely sophisticated. One marvels not only at the authenticity of the movie, but how persuasive the propaganda is. This movie is not absent-minded patriotism. At least, not only. Its multiple nuances and complexities make it an incredibly more convincing movie than the original one. Top Gun: Maverick is, yes, a sequel, but also an entirely new movie that shows a different state and stage of the history of the American Empire. The 1986's movie arrived at the end of the American century—the twentieth. Top Gun: Maverick is projected towards the future and tries to indicate plans to make the twenty-first century, also, an American century. Indeed, the central message of the film is that the century in which we have recently entered will represent a continuation of the previous one. If this message is true, only time will tell.Footnote 30