Tuesday, June 20, 2006

"Hard deck my ass...we nailed that son of a bitch!"

If I were to list a few of the films I think to be great, I’m sure that many would shoot me an are-you-out-of-your-mind facial expression. This, of course, since I’m terribly arrogant and always right, means that these people simply don’t understand those particular films’ claims to greatness. Top Gun immediately comes to mind. If a person in his/her mid twenties were to watch Top Gun now, having never seen it before, surely this person would think it a terrible movie. I mean, the whole thing essentially consists of a bunch of ass-slapping, ex-fratboy types flying fighter jets for the Navy, playing beach volleyball, and trying to pick up women. In this case, the greatness seems to come, at least initially, not from Top Gun’s actual merits, but from what some of us have made of it.

As many of you might know, this all began at some point in high school with Joe’s famous impression of the locker room scene in which Tom “Iceman” Kazanski (Val Kilmer) tries to console Pete “Maverick” Mitchell (Tom Cruise) after Goose’s death. Joe’s impression selects for particularly ridiculous mocking those tense facial expressions that Val Kilmer suffers through as he says, “Mitchell…I’m sorry about Goose…Everybody liked him…I’m sorry.” In the impression, those four short lines might take a full minute to articulate what with all the tongue flicking and lip movements involved in those ellipses and the requisite nose-high-in-the-air nasal deep breath before some of the lines. I suppose that the humor in this comes not only from our not being said ass-slapping, ex-fratboy types, but from those sorts of characters trying to be serious and consoling, a big stretch after all the flipping-the-bird-to-a-mig, beach volleyball, and carnal knowledge bets in bars that come before the locker room consolation scene.

But even beyond “the impression,” some of us have become far too skilled in carrying on conversations which consist primarily of Top Gun lines. JJ and I, for instance, have made extensive use of the “I hate it when she does that” and “That’s the way he flies—ice cold—no mistakes” lines. Both of these come from the bar scene in which Charlotte “Charlie” Blackwood (Kelly McGinnis) makes her first appearance. The ability to use these lines in conversation stems from a rather extensive understanding of, or at least familiarity with, their context in the film. For example, if someone is rather arrogant, but still good at something, the “That’s the way he flies” line might be appropriate. And the “I hate it when she does that” line, well, the possibilities are endless.

So I’m wondering…does all of this actually affect my perception of Top Gun’s quality as a film? Is there some inherent aspect that makes it especially useful for the sort of appropriation we’ve done and that therefore increases its quality? Or is all of that a load of crap and our appropriation a highly successful attempt at making something out of a particularly bad movie? There’s a cliché I’ve heard that might apply here, one that goes something like, “It’s so bad it’s good.” Does this apply here? I’m just dying to hear what some of you have to say about this classic movie from the era of our childhood.

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4 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Prior to Brian's most recent posting, I held that there were few things worthy of keeping a man up till 5 AM, woman and drink among them. But with Brian's 4:59 AM posting, I see now my list was incomplete. We must add Top Gun to the list, and I applaud Brian for selecting such thought-provoking fare for this blog.

At its heart, Top Gun is an atrocious movie. Val Kilmer's performance is characteristically poor, Tom Skerritt seems to be horribly constipated throughout the entire production, and the Maverick-Charlie romance has all the sophistication and heat of lapdog humping a throw pillow. But you can't argue with the sunglasses, the soundtrack, and its intense quotability, Brian having selected several fine examples of the last of these. In spite of these positives, there's a richness in how bad the movie is, a point that's easier to see several decades after it hit theaters. Perhaps most prominently, it's formulaic and predictable. But while Top Gun IS a bad movie, it's also vying for Best in Class (1980's movies). Plenty of 80's movies staples here: machismo, numerous soundtrack-driven montages, and a happy ending. So, I suppose the question becomes: should we reward a movie for being one of the very best of its kind, even if the entire genre looks silly two decades later?

Coming finally to Brian's question regarding the root of the movie's appeal, I think those of us who first had the Top Gun experience as sub-ten-year-old brats see the movie as part of the fabric (however small) of our childhoods. Perhaps more importantly, I have a sense that I was duped by the movie. When I first saw it, I thought it was phenomenal. It was a shiny new toy, and it wasn't until several years and many viewings later that it began to dawn on me that the movie was really quite bad. But, just as a traumatic hazing incident can build ties to an athletic team or Greek organization, the realization that I had been tricked into seeing greatness in such a poor movie only strengthened my support of it. For all its flaws, I must admit that I can't stop watching the movie each time it buzzes my tower (so to speak) on cable.

If I might ask, Brian, how long has the Top Gun homage on Collective Myth been festering in your mind? Follow up: was it intimidating taking on one of the great unifying cultural phenomena for the sub-35 set?

1:36 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I wasn't sure if the above comment was Joe Kinast's or some other Joe's until I read "constipated" and "lapdog humping a throw pillow."

I wish I had more time to add to the debate, but I'm at work.

6:37 PM  
Blogger L.A. said...

Really? Usually when I think of "lapdog humping a throw pillow"
I'm thinking of Smokin.

10:50 PM  
Blogger Brian said...

I must confess, in response to Joe's question, that the Top Gun thing has been festering in my head in some form for as long as I've had this blog. However, it's such a big, intimidating topic because everyone's so familiar with it and has such diverse opinions of it, that I pretty much threw out all the stuff I'd been thinking about saying for so long and winged it to a certain extent with the hope of capturing something of what the movie means to many of us. Of course, since this is a blog and not a dissertation, I always run into a bit of trouble saying everything as thoroughly as I might otherwise...

10:23 AM  

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