Right-wing pundits have tried to claim the sequel’s box office success as their success but there are enough examples to show that this isn’t the case

Top Gun: Maverick is poised to continue its epic box office run this weekend; with no major competition at US multiplexes, it’ll soon zoom past the $250m mark in domestic grosses alone, with $400m or more still well within its sights. It could wind up the highest-grossing movie of the year, at least until Avatar 2 drops. If you read the analysis of certain right-leaning pundits, Top Gun: Maverick’s triumph is their triumph, and a rebuke of “woke culture” – by which is meant, movies and TV shows that do not exclusively feature white men in their leading roles.

It is indeed true that Top Gun: Maverick does not go out of its way to celebrate inclusion and diversity in the sometimes-cloying, corporate way most closely associated with various Disney properties. (If there’s no “first gay character in Top Gun” that we know of, that’s OK; Disney will continue assigning similar designations to minor and/or desexualized characters for years to come!) It stars Tom Cruise, reprising his role as white man extraordinaire Pete “Maverick” Mitchell, fighter-pilot hero of the first Top Gun, training a new generation of recruits for a suspiciously Star Wars-like mission behind unspecified enemy lines. Many, though not all, of the trainees who get the most screen time are also white men.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Vulnerable children ‘forgotten’ in Covid vaccine rollout, say UK charities

Ministers urged to help families struggling to protect children with underlying health…

New variety of apple discovered by Wiltshire runner

Archie Thomas stumbled across solitary windfall fruit that could be cross between…

Women’s Champions League quarter-finals: tie-by-tie analysis and verdicts | Suzanne Wrack

Arsenal face a difficult task to overcome Wolfsburg with Lyon and Barcelona…

Covid second wave hits recovery in UK high streets, data suggests

Footfall drops back since first week of September and is a third…