Meewella | Critic

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Tag: Jon Hamm

QuickView: Top Gun: Maverick (2022)

“My dad believed in you. I’m not gonna make the same mistake.”

Bradley ‘Rooster’ Bradshaw

Whilst it may be an 80s classic, it is fair to say that the lasting cultural impact of Tony Scott’s testosterone-fuelled Top Gun outstripped its cinematic quality. A sequel some 36 years later, still starring Tom Cruise, seemed a perilously misguided undertaking and yet miraculously it has resulted in a far superior film. With Maverick teaching the next generation of pilots, there are similar themes about overconfidence, authority and teamwork, but the emotional weight is greater here as we find Maverick is still dealing with the trauma of losing his closest friend whilst also trying to be a father figure to the man’s son. Miles Teller and Cruise play this dynamic of bitterness and regret believably, forming the foundation for the story. A romantic subplot feels hollower, relying on an unseen prior relationship in which we have no investment, but it plays into the theme of Maverick’s life having stalled. The mission itself is bizarrely derivative of the Death Star trench run from Star Wars but it is so brazen that any distraction rapidly wanes and the aerial action is consistently thrilling under Kosinski’s direction. Conversely, it is difficult not to view Maverick as propaganda, US regalia constantly on display with the adrenaline-pumping depictions of combat serving as prime recruitment material for the military. There is space for reflection that was absent in the original and the film is not blind to cultural shifts in the intervening years. Music was responsible for much of Top Gun’s atmosphere and Maverick’s soundtrack is most evocative when it borrows liberally from Harold Faltermeyer’s original score (he is credited alongside Hans Zimmer). The connective tissue runs beyond the music, with several scenes repurposed in the sequel including a requisite sun-drenched beach sports montage that impressively manages to avoid parody. Val Kilmer’s cameo as Iceman — the only other returning character — is particularly poignant, overlaying the severe health issues that left Kilmer with damaged vocal chords. Maverick may not be doing anything groundbreaking, but it is effective blockbuster pageantry and a rare sequel that outshines its predecessor, rarer still after such a prolonged gap.

8/10

QuickView: Marjorie Prime (2017)

“When you remember something, you remember the memory. You remember the last time you remembered it, not the source, so it’s always getting fuzzier, like a photocopy of a photocopy.”

Tess

Marjorie Prime is a slow and thoughtful exploration of human memory through the vehicle of artificial intelligence. Short of fully duplicating a human brain, our ability to create AI representations of real people will always be limited by the memories we are able to supply but — even then — factually accurate memories may not reflect the story that an individual has made their personal history. The initial parallel between Marjorie’s Alzheimer’s and the AI Walter’s incomplete memories emerges through friendly exchanges. The shifting tone to more adversarial dialogue with AI creates a tenser atmosphere reminiscent of Ex Machina. However, Marjorie Prime‘s stage play roots are evident and it is easy to imagine it working better in that medium, notwithstanding some great performances, most notably from Jon Hamm and Tim Robbins. The pacing and deliberately untelegraphed time shifts will be tedious to many viewers, but patience is rewarded with some intriguing ideas and a pleasantly subtle closing scene.

7/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2023 Priyan Meewella

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