How old was charlie in top gun (1986)

It’s always exciting to see which familiar faces will return when a sequel to a classic movie is greenlit.

On the other hand, it’s just as intriguing to learn which faces won’t be returning.

When a sequel to Tony Scott’s iconic 1986 movie Top Gun was announced, fans were comfortable in knowing that Tom Cruise would be back to reprise the central role of Pete “Maverick” Mitchell.

It was also announced that Val Kilmer would be back on the scene as the legendary “Iceman”. However, viewers were curious to see if Maverick’s love interest would return.

Now that Joseph Kosinski’s critically acclaimed sequel is finally here, the film is encouraging many to ask what happened to Charlie in Top Gun…

  • TOP GUN: MAVERICK: Why the enemy is nameless
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What happened to Charlie in Top Gun?

Played by Kelly McGillis, we first meet Charlie in the original when Maverick and Goose head out to a bar, determined to party the night away.

Charlie catches Maverick’s eye and he proceeds to try and woo her, opening up the floor to a song and dance – quite literally – in an attempt to impress. However, his advances don’t exactly work out and he continues on into the night with his wingman.

The next day, on the other hand, he discovers that she’s Charlotte “Charlie” Blackwood, an astrophysicist and Top Gun instructor. She gradually begins to take an interest in Maverick romantically.

Unfortunately, things grow complicated for Maverick in the wake of a personal tragedy and they break up briefly before eventually getting back together by the end of the movie.

Fast forward to the events of Top Gun: Maverick decades later and Charlie isn’t so much as mentioned. We never know what happens to her after the events in Top Gun. Yet, it’s arguable that being as ambitious as she is, Charlie may have just decided to focus on her career down the line.

Despite sparks flying between the two, there was nothing concrete to suggest that the couple would be together forever.

  • TOP GUN: MAVERICK: A tribute to Tony Scott

Top Gun: Maverick | Official Trailer

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Top Gun: Maverick | Official Trailer

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Penny for your thoughts

Instead, Top Gun: Maverick introduces a new love interest called Penny (played by Jenniffer Connelly). It’s established that they also have a history, reinforcing the idea that Maverick has simply gone on to have many Charlie’s in his life since the original, so to speak.

Turning to speculation, it’s likely that Charlie is a high-ranking official.

So high, in fact, that she hasn’t needed any direct contact with Maverick for a long time; we learn in the new movie that Maverick has basically failed to achieve the mobility in his field that was expected of him, despite being a great pilot.

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I like the sound of Kelly McGillis – who at 64 was unsurprised not to be asked back to Top Gun 2 pic.twitter.com/asD3oUN5TY

— Jenny Eclair (@jennyeclair) May 25, 2022

‘I look age-appropriate for what my age is’

Although the reason for Charlie’s absence in the 2022 sequel isn’t addressed within the film, the actress who played Charlie has revealed that she wasn’t asked to reprise the iconic role in Top Gun: Maverick.

The 64-year-old actress previously told Entertainment Tonight that it was because of her age and appearance. “I’m old and I’m fat and I look age-appropriate for what my age is, and that is not what that whole scene is about,” she argued.

Despite this, that doesn’t mean that she wasn’t thrilled for Jennifer Connelly earning the part, as she added that she’s “so glad she got that opportunity” during the interview.

Top Gun: Maverick is now in theaters.

In other news, Barbarian filming locations: Where was the movie filmed?

Stunt pilot Art Scholl was killed during the production of the movie, aged 54. He died when his Pitts S-2 camera plane failed to recover from a flat spin and plunged into the Pacific Ocean. Scholl's last words over the radio were "I have a problem - I have a real problem." The exact cause of the crash was never determined, and neither the aircraft nor Scholl's body were ever recovered. The film is dedicated to him.

Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson had to convince Paramount Pictures chairman Frank Mancuso to greenlight the film.

The Pentagon charged Paramount Pictures $1.8 million to use all of their planes and aircraft carriers for the film.

Val Kilmer did not want to be in this film, but was forced to by contractual obligations. Tony Scott reassured him, "I know that the script is insufficient, but it will get better, Val. Wait until you see these jets. They take your breath away." Kilmer ended up liking the movie, saying "All in all, the movie was both a blast and an education."

Charlie's "older man" date at the officer's club is the real-life "Viper", Pete Pettigrew. He is a retired Navy pilot and TOP GUN instructor, and shot down a MiG during the Vietnam War. He served as the technical consultant on the film.

Anthony Edwards is the only actor who didn't vomit while in the fighter jets.

When the students are being briefed by Charlie in the hangar, Maverick explains that he gave "the bird" to a MiG. She asks how he saw the MiG up close, and he says he was flying inverted. Right then, Ice coughs "bullshit" and the guys laughed. The "bullshit" line was ad-libbed by Val Kilmer, and everyone's reactions are genuine.

All of Maverick's stunt flying in the film was done by Scott D. Altman, who later went on to become an astronaut.

Jerry Bruckheimer on convincing Tom Cruise to sign on to the film after his initial reluctance: "So they (the Navy Blue Angels) take Tom up there, and they do five Gs. They do barrel rolls, they do everything. He's heaving in the plane. He gets on the tarmac, runs to a pay phone ... and he said, 'I'm in. I'm doing the movie. I love it. This is great.'"

The character portrayed by Kelly McGillis is based on Christine Fox, a civilian flight instructor the producers met on a visit to Miramar while doing research to prepare for the film. Fox eventually rose through the ranks at the Pentagon, retiring in May 2014 as Acting Deputy Secretary of Defense, the highest post ever held by a woman at the Department of Defense.

The F-14 pilot who "flipped the bird" at the MiG pilot was Scott D. Altman of VF-51, who eventually became a NASA astronaut flying as pilot on two missions and as commander on two more missions.

The Navy only authorised two actual missile shots to be filmed for the film. You can clearly pick out these two shots, ultimately shot from several angles each in order to use both shots repeatedly during the dogfighting scenes, because the aircraft firing the missile is holding a steady altitude and heading, something that would never happen in a real close-in dogfight. All other missile shots shown in the film were conducted using miniatures of both the planes and rockets. The company that produced and fired the model missiles did such a good job that the Department of the Navy conducted a preliminary investigation into whether any additional live firings of missiles, beyond the two originally authorised, were done for the filmmakers.

Paramount Pictures commissioned Grumman, the makers of the F-14, to develop and install special camera mounts on the plane. This allowed the filmmakers to use real aerial point-of-view footage of the Tomcat in flight.

No one had ever "buzzed the tower" at Miramar before. The Navy pilots, who were flying the scenes for the film, drew straws to see who would get to do it. It went to Lieutenant Commander Lloyd "Bozo" Abel. Michael Ironside just happened to be at the hangar that day, and the plane flew low enough that he could see into the cockpit as it flew by. He said it was one of the most spectacular things he'd ever seen.

The tension between Maverick and Iceman isn't just down to good acting, Tom Cruise and Val Kilmer kept their distance from each other and never socialised.

For the opening of the film, director Tony Scott wanted to shoot aircraft taking off and landing on the aircraft carrier, back-lit by the sun. The carrier captain had changed course of the ship, and when Scott asked if the ship could continue on the previous course and speed, he was told that turning the ship cost $25,000. Scott then wrote the captain a quick $25,000 check so the ship could be turned and he could keep shooting for another five minutes. According to Scott, the check bounced.

Meg Ryan and Anthony Edwards became an item after filming concluded.

After the "car chase" when Charlie tells Maverick that she didn't want anyone to find out she was falling for him, Maverick originally had a line to say. Tom Cruise forgot the line and "ad libbed" by kissing Kelly McGillis instead. Tony Scott liked it so much, he left the scene like that.

Riding on the back of this film's success, the U.S. Navy set up recruiting booths in the major cinemas to try and catch some of the adrenaline charged guys leaving the screenings. They had the highest applications rate for years as a result.

Rick Rossovich (the actor who played 'Slider') stated in the DVD commentary that he was kicked off the ship used for filming because he smarted off to an officer. Rossovich had gone to sleep in the bunk to which he was assigned, but didn't like being so close to the nuclear reactors that powered the ship, so he moved. When he smarted off to the officer who wanted his bunk back, Rossovich was told to report to the Captain, who ordered him thrown off the ship for disrespect.

This film is credited with starting the home video industry. Originally, VHS tapes were priced at $100 upon their first release, and were sold mainly to video stores. This film was priced to own immediately upon release, made possible by Pepsi Cola buying ad space at the beginning of the tape. Since then, pricing VHS tapes to own right away became a common practice.

When Tom Cruise went up in a real F-14 for the first time, he was with Lieutenant Commander Lloyd "Bozo" Abel. After Bozo did some maneuvers, Cruise finally had no choice but to reach for his sick bag. However, as he did so, Bozo did a maneuver that put Cruise's head to the floor of the cockpit as he struggled to activate the intercom to tell Bozo what was happening. When Bozo finally leveled the plane, Cruise hit the intercom and said, "Bozo, didn't you see I wasn't in your rear-view mirror?" Bozo replied, "Sorry, but then again, they don't call me 'Bozo' for nothing."

Pete "Maverick" Mitchell's first name was Evan in early scripts of the film. It was later changed to Pete as an homage to Pete Pettigrew, who worked on the film. (Pettigrew appears in the bar scene early in the film as Charlie's older male date.)

Tom Cruise had to wear lifts in his scenes with Kelly McGillis. Cruise is 5'7" (1.70 m) while McGillis is 5'10" (1.78 m).

The elevator scene (in which Maverick and Charlie meet after his workout) was filmed post-production. Kelly McGillis's hair had already been colored for another movie role, which is why she is wearing a hat. Tom Cruise's hair is longer in the shot as well.

In the beginning it is revealed that Maverick was put "in hack" twice. This is Naval slang for being confined to quarters, usually during a port call and thus not being allowed to leave the ship.

The film was inspired by an article in the May 1983 issue of "California" magazine about the U.S. Navy's Top Gun School.

Ally Sheedy turned down the role of Charlie because she didn't think that anyone would want to see a movie about fighter pilots. She later regretted this decisión and also considers it the biggest mistake of her career.

According to Anthony Edwards, "A lot of the humor was discovered at the moment. The script was skeletal."

At six feet five inches tall Tim Robbins is unlikely to have been able to be a naval aviator as he would be too big for the F14's cockpit.

Following the movie, some of the F-5s used as the "MiG-28s" maintained their black paint schemes and served as "aggressor" aircraft simulating enemy planes in the real-life Top Gun program.

Michael Ironside stated, in the DVD commentary, that he was so convincing as an officer, that when he heard someone running towards him below decks, he got on to the sailor who was running. The sailor saluted and slowed down until he got out of Ironside's line of sight and started running again. The sailor never knew that Ironside was an actor on the film.

Numerous critics complained that the movie largely amounted to a Navy recruitment film. The U.S. Navy stated that the film's popularity resulted in a 500 percent increase in the number of recruits wanting to enter into their aviation program. Paramount offered to include a Navy Recruitment ad on the initial home video release in exchange for debits owed to the U.S. Navy for their cooperation. However, the ad agency who produced ads for the U.S. Military informed the Pentagon that the movie itself was enough of a propaganda tool, and that an official recruiting ad would be redundant.

Most of the actors who portrayed F-14 crewmembers received backseat rides in the F-14, and several of the scenes which appear in the film were filmed with the actors in the air.

Terri Nunn of Berlin states in an interview that she and her band were in Taiwan when they received a call letting her know that the song "Take My Breath Away" was being nominated for an Oscar and asking her to fly out to Los Angeles to perform the song at the Academy Awards. She told them that she would only do it if she could sing the entire song. She was told that that wouldn't be the case as the song was going to be sung in a medley with the other nominated songs. Nunn turned it down. Nunn says she deeply regrets her decision, especially upon finding out that "Take My Breath Away" won the Oscar for "Best Song."

The pilot that gets "flipped off" by Maverick and Goose is Admiral Robert Willard, the lead flight choreographer for the film. He was Commander of the United States Pacific Fleet (2007-2009) before transferring to United States Pacific Command.

Tom Cruise had never ridden a motorcycle until this film. He went to House of Motorcycles in El Cajon, California, to learn. They taught him in the parking lot of their shop.

When Maverick receives his orders to the carrier following the graduation ceremony, there is a pilot standing behind him, with a mustache and wearing sunglasses. The pilot is "Heater" C.J. Heatley, a real-life former F-14 air show demonstration pilot and Top Gun instructor.

The highest-grossing movie of 1986.

Anthony Edwards had no idea he was going to sing and pretend to play piano in one scene. Tony Scott was listening to Jerry Lee Lewis that morning and added it in last minute.

Cougar was supposed to have crashed while trying to land back on the carrier, and his death was supposed to be why Maverick "slid into Cougar's spot", but this was summarily cut by the Navy. As this was intended to be a recruitment tool for the Navy, they didn't want negative attention drawn on a particularly hazardous aspect of serving on a carrier, or flying fighters.

Tom Cruise said that Maverick was the first character he ever played who was "larger than life." It was also the first time he'd been involved from the early stages, helping with the script.

The ship that Viper served on with Maverick's father, the U.S.S. Oriskany, was the first United States warship slated to become an artificial reef, under authority granted by the fiscal 2004 National Defense Authorization Act (Public Law 108-136). It was sunk with controlled charges 24 miles (39 km) south of Pensacola on May 17, 2006. It is now popularly known as the "Great Carrier Reef", a reference to Australia's Great Barrier Reef.

From the very beginning, the filmmakers wanted Tom Cruise for Maverick. He kept turning it down until Jerry Bruckheimer arranged for a ride along with the Blue Angels.

Charlie Blackwood is based on a woman named Christine Fox who is tall, blonde, leggy, and has a penchant for clacking high heels. At the time the movie was being produced, the filmmakers wanted the character of Charlie to either be a groupie or a gymnast, but when the producers met Fox-whose call sign was "Legs"- they changed the role. The fictional Charlie is an astrophysicist, but Fox is a mathematician who worked at the Center for Naval Analyses, which was located across the street from TOP GUN. "They always know when I'm coming," Fox told People in 1985, "because I'm one of the few people around here whose heels click." From December 2013 to February 2014, Fox served as the acting U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense, making her the Defense Department's highest-ever-ranking female officer.

The line "I feel the need...the need for speed" ranked at number 94 of AFI's list of 100 Years 100 Movie Quotes.

During a break in the filming of the hangar scene a group of Navy officers being used as extras approached Tony Scott and complained about the unrealistic collection of patches on the flight suits of the actors. He replied, paraphrasing, "We're not making this movie for Navy fighter pilots, we're making it for Kansas wheat farmers who don't know the difference."

Director Tony Scott and producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson were so impressed with the song "Take My Breath Away" that they decided to film more romantic scenes between Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis to feature the song.

In order to stay in character, Tom Cruise would sit far away from the rest of the cast in between takes.

During the filming of some sequences from civilian aircraft, longtime Hollywood stunt pilot Art Scholl was killed. A Pits stunt plane he was flying crashed off the Pacific Coast. The film is dedicated to his memory.

A test audience, who saw the movie before it was released, were annoyed that there was no love scene. The producers obliged, and five months after the production had wrapped, they summoned Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis to Chicago to film the infamous elevator scene and the sex scene. During their time away from the set, McGillis had lost approximately sixteen pounds, and Cruise was actually filming The Color of Money (1986), so his hair was much longer in those two scenes. McGillis' hair was also much darker, hence why she hid it underneath a cap in the elevator scene.

Kenny Loggins was not the first choice to record the song "Danger Zone" for the film. TOTO and REO Speedwagon were two of the groups considered prior to Loggins.

Top Gun (1986) was the highest grossing film of 1986. It took in 177 million dollars in the U.S. alone, and 356 million dollars worldwide. Australian hit Crocodile Dundee (1986) was the second biggest film of the year, with Platoon (1986) coming in third.

In preparation for his role, Tom Cruise was allowed to take three rides in the F-14 Tomcat. He vomited during the first trip, but was okay during the other two.

During the filming of Top Gun, most of the actors playing the F-14 Fighter Pilots including Val Kilmer, Rick Rossovich, Barry Tubb, & Whip Hubley stayed at the Bahia Resort Hotel in San Diego on the west side of Mission Bay. Tom Cruise & Anthony Edwards stayed up in La Jolla as to reflect their respective character's separation on film from the other pilots.

The motorcycle ridden by Tom Cruise in the movie is a Kawasaki Ninja 900/GPz900R, then the fastest production motorcycle in the world.

The signature volleyball scene featuring a glistening Tom Cruise and Val Kilmer has remained a pop culture fascination for 36 years. To capture the magic, Scott burned an entire day on filming, something the studio did not expect for the scene, which was only a paragraph long in the script. That scene was scripted as a real game," editor Chris Lebenzon says on this week's episode of THR's Behind the Screen podcast. "They kept score and everything and Tony shot it like a commercial, and they were angry." Added fellow editor Billy Weber: "The studio was so pissed off. The head of production, Charlie McGuire, he said, 'I'm gonna fire him' because he spent a whole day shooting this scene." Reflects Weber on the anger over that volleyball scene: "And then of course it turns out it's one of the most famous scenes in a movie."

Charlie's Porsche 356 Speedster is a replica. Instead of a Porsche logo on the front, it appears to have an Intermeccanica logo. Intermeccanica is an Italian company that makes replica cars.

An original draft of the script specified that the final showdown involved North Korean aircraft. The final script made the nationalities of the enemy planes unknown and simply specified they were MiGs over the Indian Ocean.

Matthew Modine turned down the role of Maverick because he objected to the film's Cold War politics. Patrick Swayze, Emilio Estevez, Nicolas Cage, John Cusack, Matthew Broderick, Sean Penn, Michael J. Fox, Scott Baio and Tom Hanks all turned down the role. Charlie Sheen, Jim Carrey, Rob Lowe, Kevin Bacon, Eric Stoltz, and Robert Downey Jr. were considered for the role. Sheen (who was deemed too young for the role) would later go on to spoof the role in the comedy Hot Shots! (1991).

The final combat scenes were inspired by 2 real life incidents, the capture of the US Navy spyship USS Pueblo by North Korea in 1968 and the 1980s Gulf of Sidra engagements where F14 Tomcats downed 4 Libyan MIGs in air to air combat.

Judas Priest were asked to contribute the song "Reckless" to the soundtrack, but declined because they thought the movie would flop. Two years later, they contributed a cover of Johnny Be Good (1988) to the movie of the same name, which turned out to be a flop.

In early drafts of the film, the character (Tim Robbins) whose call sign is Merlin actually had the last name of Merlin, and his call sign was Wizard.

The piano scene and the final bar/jukebox scene were shot in a San Diego restaurant called Kansas City BBQ, at the corner of Kettner Boulevard and West Harbor Drive. The restaurant housed many props and memorabilia from the film. However, on June 26, 2008, Kansas City BBQ suffered a grease fire that destroyed much of the interior of the establishment. The restaurant has since been repaired to its original state, but much of the Top Gun memorabilia on display was damaged, and some destroyed. The two most prominent pieces that remain are the piano (relocated to another corner of the bar) and one of the original Maverick flight helmets used during filming, which sits in a locked display case behind the bar. The helmet shows some slight damage, as the heat from the fire caused the plastic visor to bubble and warp.

This movie was made with the close cooperation of, and script oversight by, the U.S. Military and the Department of Defense Entertainment Media Office. In a May 2022 Washington Post article titled "'Top Gun,' Brought to You by the U.S. Military," Theo Zenou reports that the movie's producers Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson agreed to allow the military to have a say in the story line to get access to some of the planes, aircraft carriers, and other equipment they needed: "they needed military-grade equipment. As Time revealed in 1986, the DOD offered them a sweet deal: For $1.8 million, they would have 'the use of Miramar Naval Air Station' as well as "four aircraft carriers and about two dozen F-14 Tomcats, F-5 Tigers and A-4 Skyhawks, some flown by real-life Top Gun pilots.' It's unlikely the film could have gotten made without the Pentagon's considerable support. A single F-14 Tomcat cost about $38 million. The total budget for "Top Gun" was $15 million. In exchange for DOD backing, the producers agreed to let the department make changes to the script. Maverick's buddy, Goose, no longer perished in a midair collision because, according to the Navy, "too many pilots were crashing." Meanwhile, Maverick's love interest, Charlie, went from being a service member to a civilian because Navy regulations forbid officers and enlisted personnel from having relationships."

In 1986, jet fuel was pretty cheap - about 1 dollar per gallon. However, Paramount still paid 10,000 dollars an hour every time they went up to film an F-14.

The call-sign 'Ghost Rider' that Maverick uses for his plane was the name of a real F-14 squadron (VF-142), and a model of a Tomcat from that squadron can be seen behind Sundown in the shot where Maverick tells Slider he stinks.

The address that Charlie (Kelly McGillis) gives Maverick (Tom Cruise), when inviting him to dinner, 100 Laurel Beach, is (like most films) a false address. There is a 100 W. Laurel Avenue in downtown San Diego, but it is several miles from the beach. The actual location used for shooting was 100 S. Pacific Street in Oceanside, which is in North San Diego County. The area has since been redeveloped for commercial and tourist uses, but the house was preserved as a landmark. It is locally referred to simply as "The Top Gun House", and until 2008, was still a rentable property. In 2019, the house was moved to another location in order to undergo renovations.

The original soundtrack release initially only included original songs written expressly for the movie. In 2000, the soundtrack was re-released to include "You've Lost That Loving Feeling", "Great Balls of Fire" and "(Sittin' On) The Dock Of The Bay", songs which were prominently featured in the movie.

Tom Cruise's flight suit was later put on display at Planet Hollywood.

James Tolkan's character is referred to as "Stinger" in the credits, but is never addressed as anything other than "Sir" throughout the film.

Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis didn't get along during or after filming. However, they did briefly reunite in 2010, for the premiere of Prince Of Persia: The Sands Of Time (2010).

Bryan Adams was asked to allow his song "Only the Strong Survive" on the soundtrack, but he refused because he felt that the film glorified war.

Kelly McGillis fell for Barry Tubb (Wolfman), literally. "She fell down in the middle of the street, and she had my heart." The two later dated from 1986 to 1987.

While many terms used in the movie either match or are closely based on real terms used by naval aviators and the pilots in general, the term "going ballistic" is a real phrase that was incorrectly used to describe a pilot successfully reaching maximum speed, when it actually meant that the pilot was going too slow to maintain control of his aircraft, i.e., the aircraft is ballistic like a ball thrown in the air and will be influenced by gravity rather than the control surfaces, as there is too little airflow over them. The phrase is used in Air Combat Maneuvers where the aircraft is put into a vertical or nearly-vertical climb and slows below an acceptable control speed. The pilot is then just along for the ride as gravity takes over and the airplane begins to descend and accelerate back to flying speed. The call is given over the radio to warn other pilots that the aircraft cannot maneuver to avoid a collision.

Aircraft carriers used in the film were USS Ranger (CV-61) and USS Enterprise (CVN-65).

In several locker scenes, one of the lockers is labeled as belonging to "TEX". This is the call sign for one of the Top Gun instructors and MiG pilots that worked on the film, Lieutenant "Tex" William Spence.

Giorgio Moroder wrote most of the music for the songs on the soundtrack. Tom Whitlock, who wrote the majority of the lyrics to these songs, was the mechanic who worked on Moroder's sports car.

Tom Whitlock wrote the lyrics for "Take My Breath Away" while driving home from the studio, and then spent a few hours at home polishing them.

Charlotte "Charlie" Blackwood's character metamorphosed out of a character called 'Kirsten Lindstrom' and was originally a classic bimbo. Dawn Steel, then head of Paramount Pictures, allegedly refused to authorise the project until she was made a more real, intelligent woman.

The producers knew the film was big when leather jackets and white t-shirts became "in" again.

During the pilot briefing before the final air battle, Stinger mentions that the MiGs carry the Exocet anti-ship missile. This is a real missile; however, it is of French manufacture and has never been used by the Soviet Union, nor any of the countries that made up the Soviet Bloc.

Tom Cruise first met Tony Scott while working for his brother, Ridley Scott, on Legend (1985). Cruise reunited with Tony Scott, Jerry Bruckheimer, and Don Simpson on Days of Thunder (1990), which Cruise co-wrote with Robert Towne.

Louis Gossett Jr. was considered for the role of Viper. Gossett, however, did play the older, mentor-type role in another 80s fighter jet film, Iron Eagle (1986).

Two video games based very loosely on the movie were released on the Nintendo NES. While the first game really had no storyline, the second actually served as a "sequel" storyline, regarding Maverick going up against a new group of villains.

The exchange "call the ball", "[X] has the ball" is a part of real life carrier landings. The "ball" in question is a marker on the (Improved) Fresnel Lens Optical Landing System, a set of lights on the carrier's deck. The marker - called "meatball" - shows the pilot how well they are lined up for the landing, whether they are lined up correctly or too high/low, too far left/right. The first part of the exchange - "call the ball" - is the Landing Signal Officer in effect asking the pilot "Do you see the marker on the (I)FLOLS?". The response "[x] has the ball" means "Yes, I do see the marker". This means the landing can proceed. Otherwise the LSO is very likely to call off the landing and the pilot will have to go around and try again.

The aircraft used for the fictional MiG-28s are Northrop F-5E (single seat) and F (two seat) Tiger IIs, which were used by TOP GUN as aggressor aircraft.

Although the title is "Top Gun", the preferred usage in the military is "Topgun" as seen on the caps several aviators wear.

John Travolta was considered for the role of Maverick, but his agent's asking price for him was too high, especially in light of his recent box-office flops.

Various artists auditioned to song writers/producers Tom Whitmore and Georgio Morroder to win the right to perform Take My Breath Away in the movie (and release it as a single). Martha Davis from the Motels and Patty Smythe were in the running. But Terri Nunn from Berlin, who hated love songs and had never released a ballad before, took home the honors by performing the song tragically, like a desperate woman at the end of her rope, as opposed to passionately like the other women did; this won the producers over and landed her the song, which became her biggest hit.

To capitalize on the film's popularity, the Navy set up booths outside theaters in order to recruit moviegoers to join the Navy - and it worked. When recruiters talked to applicants, about ninety percent said they had seen the movie. The Navy also wove in "Danger Zone"-sounding music and Top Gun-esque shots for its 1987 "Join the Navy" commercial.

During a 2014 appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live! (2003), Jimmy asked Tom Cruise about the first time he had travelled the world to promote a movie. Cruise said that it was during the foreign press junket tour for Top Gun, which he said took four months to complete, as he'd spend weeks in every city they visited in Italy, France, and Japan. Cruise told Kimmel that he was the one who came up with the idea of premiering films in other countries, though he said that "It took me a few years to get it going." Kimmel quipped, "So all these other actors must want to kill you."

Counting mentioned and not otherwise mentioned in the movie but only by their callsigns, real names of the pilots/RIOs are: -Maverick (Tom Cruise): Lieutenant Pete Mitchell. -Goose (Anthony Edwards): Lieutenant (Junior Grade) Nick Bradshaw. -Iceman (Val Kilmer): Lieutenant Tom Kazansky. -Hollywood (Whip Hubley): Lieutenant Rick Neven. -Wolfman (Barry Tubb): Lieutenant (JG) Leonard Wolfe. -Slider (Rick Rossovich): Lieutenant (JG) Ron Kerner. -Sundown (Clarence Gilyard Jr.): Lieutenant (JG) Marcus Williams. -Chipper (Adrian Pasdar): Lieutenant Charles Piper. -Cougar (John Stockwell): Lieutenant Bill Cortell. -Merlin (Tim Robbins): Lieutenant (JG) Sam Wills. -Stinger (James Tolkan): Commander Tom Jardian. -Charlie (Kelly McGillis): Charlotte Blackwood. -Jester (Michael Ironside): Lieutenant Commander Rick Heatherly. -Viper (Tom Skerritt): Commander Mike Metcalf. -Red Neck (Duke Stroud): Air Boss Emmett Johnson.

When the film was first released on VHS, it included a fighter pilot-themed Diet Pepsi commercial prior to the film. When the pilot opens his bottle of Diet Pepsi, but is unable to release it from its cup holder, the pilot flies inverted (much like Maverick does at the beginning of the film) in order to pour the soda into his cup.

Just before the film started production, one of the producers announced that they wanted to use the Bruce Springsteen song "Born in the U.S.A.", but attempts to secure the song were unsuccessful. This was fortunate, as the song was about a Vietnam war veteran's disenchantment with America. Somewhat embarrassingly, the song was also a favorite of then-president Ronald Reagan who, like the Top Gun producer, was only familiar with the song's tag line and not the complete lyrics.

Due to their roles as movie villains, the "MiG" pilots have no name or identity, never talk, and their faces are covered by their visors, giving them a more sinister appearance in order to be "the enemy".

The scene in which Maverick follows Charlie into the bathroom, was filmed at the Headquarters Building at Recruit Training Command, San Diego. [The Naval Training Center installation was later demolished in the late 1990s to make way for more Navy housing. Before the headquarters building could be inspected for demolition, the bathroom counter that "Maverick" leans on and "stress tests" was stolen.]

Brooke Shields and Debra Winger were strongly considered for the role of Charlie Blackwood, but producers wanted an unknown for the part: Kelly McGillis

Don Simpson was known for being a very hands-on producer but was noticeably absent during the making of Top Gun. This was mainly due to the fact that he was in rehab, being treated for his major dependency on prescription drugs. His use of illegal narcotics also led to him becoming increasingly paranoid, to the extent that he rarely left his home.

During the final furball, Stinger orders, "Ready Willard and Simkin on cats 3 and 4" - a reference to dogfight Choreographer "Rat" Robert Willard and Casting Director Margery Simkin.

Tony Scott was hired to direct because he filmed an ad of a car racing a jet, similar to one scene.

Charlie's house is actually located in Oceanside, California, and still stands today as a tourist attraction.

Kelly McGillis was cast because the producers loved her in Witness (1985).

The U.S.S. Oriskany launched John McCain on his fateful flight to The Hanoi Hilton, during the Vietnam War.

Throughout the years many films tried to emulate various aspects of the movie in mostly failed attempts to copy its unprecedented success, one of the more notorious examples being Nicolas Cage's Fire Birds (1990), a movie infamously known among its critics as "Top Gun with helicopters."

Tony Scott calls the film the "purest form of escapism" and says it "mainlines entertainment."

It is reported that the title of the popular racing video game franchise Need for Speed was inspired by a quote from this film said by Maverick and Goose, "I feel the need... the need for speed!" Tom Cruise would later write, produce and star in the racing-themed Days of Thunder (1990) once again directed by Tony Scott.

Tatum O'Neal, Jodie Foster, Daryl Hannah, Diane Lane, Sarah Jessica Parker and Linda Hamilton all turned down the role of Charlie. Carrie Fisher was also considered for the role.

One of the first films to be selected for the Cinema 52 project, in which a subject watches a film 52 times over the course of a year. Revelations of note about Top Gun resulting from this experiment include: Tom Cruise blinks 469 times, the word "the" is spoken 223 times, and the average time between Air Boss Johnson coffee spills is 27 minutes and 23 seconds.

The trick of hitting the air brakes and letting the MiG fly by was used by Robert L. Scott in God is My Co-Pilot.

Both John Carpenter and David Cronenberg turned down the chance to direct.

While Navy squadrons do stencil crew names onto aircraft, the airplanes are not assigned for missions on this basis. They are simply rotated in a pool, and at any given time some number of planes are out of rotation for maintenance purposes. Each airwing flew two squadrons of F-14s numbered in the 100s and 200s. Other aircraft types had planes in higher ranges. The lowest numbered airplane in each squadron is nicknamed "nuts", and these are all stenciled with the airwing commander's name. Each squadron has its own commanding officer, and his crew's names would be on the plane numbered -01. The executive officer is on aircraft -02, followed by senior officers in descending order. There are more crews than airplanes, so junior officers are only on airplanes if they are crewed with a senior aircraft commander. In the case of the F-14, radar intercept officers ("backseaters") are in the line of command all the way up to squadron CO, so it is possible to find an F-14 with a senior RIO in the rear seat and a more junior pilot in the front. This was true in 1986.

Berlin's song "Take My Breath Away" was originally considered for the soundtrack of 9½ Weeks (1986).

The call sign 'Sundown' is a reference to VF-111, a squadron of F-14s called The Sundowners that have the same sundown graphic on their tail fins as on Sundown's helmet. VF-111 supplied the F-14s used for Maverick and Goose, and Iceman and Hollywood's Tomcats. In some shots 'VF-111' is visible on the under-engine fins of the F-14s.

One of the unused call-signs 'Tombstone' can be seen on a black fighter pilot helmet with three red arrows in promotional photos featuring Jerry Bruckheimer and Don Simpson.

Veteran stunt coordinator and helicopter pilot Monty Jordan was on set frequently during filming, and assisted pilot Art Scholl in the aerial sequences. He served as a stand-in occasionally for Michael Ironside, and was also cast unnamed as a U.S. Navy Commander in several scenes during filming.

Art Scholl, the stunt man that was killed while filming Top Gun, was also the pilot in the motorcycle/plane race in Iron Eagle.

Tony Scott had only a few minutes to film the sex scene.

An official release of Harold Faltermeyer's score for the film has never been done. Two pieces of score appear on the current soundtrack, but the complete score has yet to be released.

The squadron patch "Maverick" and "Goose" are seen wearing, which reads "VF-1" is actually that of VAW-120, the "Greyhawks" (formerly VAW-110, the "Firebirds"), which is actually an E2 Hawkeye / C2 Greyhound squadron. Both aircraft are carrier-capable twin-turboprop craft. VF-1 was an F-14 squadron based at Naval Air Station (NAS) Miramar, until its disestablishment on October 1, 1993.

"Take My Breath Away" was also offered to The Motels, who subsequently recorded and submitted their own demo of the song. Lead singer Martha Davis knew the song would be a huge hit, but was ultimately satisfied that their version was passed over, as she wanted her and the band to be better remembered for the songs they wrote themselves.

Second movie released in 1986 where the aircraft carrier USS Ranger substituted for the USS Enterprise for interior shots, the other being Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home (1986).

In 2011 China Central Television News broadcast a training exercise by the People's Liberation Army Air Force with one plane firing a missile at another, however the resulting explosion matches a blast from Top Guns final fight scene.

In the UK, in May 2022, when Sky re-showed this to tie in with the release of "Top Gun: Maverick", they used the newer Paramount 100th Anniversary version. This newer HD/Ultra HD version revealed just how much film grain was in the original Super 35mm film stock. The colour balance also appeared to be somewhat darker overall than the earlier VHS and Analogue tv "pan and scan" versions.

Jon Voight was considered for the role of Viper.

This was Tony Scott's first experience with filming in the Super 35 format. This was chosen due to the heavy weight of anamorphic lenses, which would cause the cameras to fall off the fighter jets when they turned on their corner and to allow the cameras to fit inside the cockpits of them.

Giorgio Moroder had Danger Zone written mostly but for legal reasons couldn't use his planned band for it, Jefferson Starship. He called Kenny Loggins, who had already written Playing With The Boys and asked him to sing the vocals. Loggins also adjusted some of the vocals and added to the music for the final recording.

Instead of the songs from the film's iconic soundtrack, the first trailer for the movie only featured one unrelated number, The Cars' song "Stranger Eyes" from their album "Heartbeat City".

Harold Faltermeyer's music score was the first to be performed and recorded on the polyphonic 16 bit stereo Synclavier Digital Music System.

Anthony Edwards, Michael Ironside, and Rick Rossovich all appeared on the TV series "ER"

On the Missile Control Panel were the following labels: SP/PH- Sparrow (Medium Range Missile) / Phoenix (Long Range Missile) SW - Sidewinder (Short-Range Missile) GUN

One of the deck officers on the carrier is named Scott, a reference to director Tony Scott.

This is the eighth acting credit of both Tom Cruise and Meg Ryan. They were the same age during the filming and both made their debut in 1981.

Discussing a possible sequel was one of the last things Tony Scott did with Tom Cruise before he committed suicide in 2012. That sequel finally came to fruition ten years later.

Tom Cruise's payday for the film was $1 million - the first time he had earned that much.

Tom Cruise was initially reluctant to take on the film, thinking it would just be Flashdance (1983) in the sky. However, after having had some box office disappointments with All the Right Moves (1983) and Legend (1985), he felt he needed a hit.

Voted #3 Must See Movie of all time by listeners of Capital FM in London.

Mickey Rourke was offered a role, but turned it down.

Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.

Linda Fiorentino told Charlie Rose that she turned down the role of Charlie Blackwood because it glorified war.

The song Charlie and Maverick discuss at her house is 'Sittin' on the Dock of the Bay' by Otis Redding. Eerily and appropriately, Otis Redding had died in an airplane crash.

The leather jacket Maverick wears has the American flag on the back, over it it says FAR EAST CRUISE 63-4.

Kenny Loggins's upbeat song Danger Zone is played three times in the film, which is more than any other song. There is even a thrilling scene in which Maverick races a Tomcat taking off on his motorbike with the song playing.

Most of the cockpit sequences were shot on the ground because most of the cast looked like they were about to vomit when they were filmed up in the air.

Val Kilmer and Meg Ryan would later co-star in The Doors (1991).

The love scene between Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis was included at the behest of the studio who were concerned about the degree of male eroticism in the movie.

The character of Charlie was originally written as just an accessory to the male lead. Then head of Paramount, Dawn Steel, refused to greenlight the film until the character was made more substantial.

The naval pilots who performed the onscreen dogfights were only paid an extra $23 on top of their usual salary.

Tom Skerritt was also in Alien (1979), directed by Tony Scott's older brother, Ridley Scott.

In 1996, the video game Top Gun: Fire at Will was released on PC and Playstation. This would be the only Top Gun game to feature an actor from the original movie, with James Tolkan playing the commander in the game, though his call sign was Hondo, not Stinger, as in the film.

The film cast includes one Oscar winner: Tim Robbins and one Oscar nominee: Tom Cruise.

Tom Cruise and Tim Robbins later appeared in War of the Worlds (2005)

During the opening dogfight, music from Thief of Hearts (1984), also composed by Harold Faltermeyer, can be heard over-scoring action. The sequence had originally been temp-tracked to this music, so it was used when Faltermeyer had left the project and the score incomplete.

Goose plays Great Balls of Fire, by Jerry Lee Lewis, on the piano. His wife is played by Meg Ryan, who was married to Dennis Quaid. Quaid played Lewis in the film Great Balls of Fire.

First film role for Adrian Pasdar (who portrays Chipper).

Included among the American Film Institute's 2001 list of 400 movies nominated for the top 100 Most Heart-Pounding American Movies.

Tom Cruise later objected to the film's sanitized portrayal of war. In a 1990 Playboy interview, he said "Some people felt that 'Top Gun' was a right-wing film to promote the Navy. And a lot of kids loved it. But I want the kids to know that's not the way war is... That's why I didn't go on and make 'Top Gun II' and 'III' and 'IV' and 'V.' That would have been irresponsible." Cruise produced and starred in the sequel 36 years later.

According to Steve Lukather, the producers of Top Gun approached the band TOTO which offered two songs, "Only You' and "I'll Be Over You' which were not accepted. The band played a demo of Danger Zone but the producers wish to added studio players to Toto's version resulting the the Band declining their version of Danger Zone to be accepted.

Tom Cruise, John Stockwell and Rick Rossovich appeared together in the 1983 movie Losin' It .

Rick Rossovich (Slider) co-starred in the 1st season of ER. A show Anthony Edwards (Goose) was well known for.

First feature film role for Clarence Gilyard Jr. (who portrays Sundown), all of his previous filmed roles were in TV series and TV movies.

Included among the American Film Institute's 2004 list of 400 movies nominated for the top 100 America's Greatest Music in the Movies for the song "Take My Breath Away."

In the elevator scene as Maverick enters, there is a framed photograph of a ship on the wall behind him. The ship is the USS Los Angeles (CA-135).

Many of the actors of the film's cast appeared on Oliver Stone's films: Tom Cruise starred in Born on the Fourth of July (1989); Meg Ryan and Val Kilmer were in The Doors (1991) - Kilmer was also in Alexander (2004) and John Stockwell appeared in Nixon (1995).

Warren Skaaren and Chip Proser did uncredited rewrites on the screenplay.

Val Kilmer would play the late vocalist Jim Morrison in the 1991 biopic "The Doors." In 2012's musical "Rock Of Ages," Tom Cruise played fictional vocalist Stacee Jaxx who was partially based on Jim Morrison.

Selected for preservation in the National Film Registry in 2015.

Tom Cruise (Maverick) is 16 days older than Anthony Edwards (Goose).

Tim Robbins and Meg Ryan later appeared in I.Q. (1994).

When Maverick tells Charlie his name, she teasingly asks if his parents were being mean to him. Nine years after the release of this film, Sun Microsystems founder Scott McNealy named his son Maverick Scott McNealy, a professional golfer.

Goose plays "Great Balls of Fire" by Jerry Lee Lewis in the company of his wife, played by Meg Ryan. Ryan would later marry Dennis Quaid, who played Lewis in the film Great Balls of Fire.

Meg Ryan went on to play the love interest of two of her cast mates in subsequent films: Val Kilmer in The Doors (1991) and Tim Robbins in I.Q. (1994).

When Maverick and Charlie are talking after their dinner at her house, she says Maverick is the only one who's been up against a MiG-28. This is incorrect. Cougar was also in the dogfight against the MiG-28s in the opening scene.

In Spain, Ghost Rider call-sign was translated literally as "Jinete Fantasma", instead the real "Motorista Fantasma" as the Marvel Comics character published in 1972 seen in Ghost Rider (2007), since that the character was totally unknown in Spain at those times.

Val Kilmer appeared with Tom Cruise's wife, Nicole Kidman, in Batman Forever. Anthony Edwards appeared with Tim Robbins's partner, Susan Sarandon, in The Client.

In production at the same time as Iron Eagle (1986), another air force gung ho movie.

Tim Robbins later became well known for his relationship with Susan Sarandon. Sarandon appeared in Thelma & Louise for Tony Scott's brother, Ridley Scott.

The first shot of Charlie entering the hangar is of her legs. The real-life person her character was based on is the strategic analyst Christine Fox, whose callsign was "Legs".

Barry Tubb ("Wolfman") appears in the hangar briefing wearing a cowboy hat. A native of Snyder, Texas, he would be best known for his role three years after this as the cowboy Jasper in Lonesome Dove (1989).

When Maverick and Goose are being chewed out the first time at Miramar the tower chief is covered in coffee a second time. When this happens, the steward with the3 coffee exposes a product-placement Pepsi logo that is on the underside of the tray.

The Japanese release of the film has four different dubs: the 1989 Fuji TV dub, the 2005 NTV dub, the 2005 DVD dub, and the 2009 TV Tokyo dub. The voice cast from the 2009 TV Tokyo dub returned for the theatrical Japanese dub of Top Gun: Maverick in 2022.

Julianne Phillips was in consideration for the part of Charlie.

How old was Charli in Top Gun?

She was 5'11". He was 5'7". Besides, she was 27 and he was 24 and the difference was palpable. After I saw them together for a “chemistry meeting” on the Paramount lot, I walked away conclusively uttering, “She looks like his mother.”

How old was to Cruise in Top Gun?

Tom Cruise was just 23 years old when he first played Pete "Maverick" Mitchell in 1986's Top Gun.

How old are they in Top Gun?

Maverick's age isn't clarified in Top Gun, though the pre-production process reveals that he's supposed to be 23.

How old is Kelly McGillis in Top Gun?

65 years (July 9, 1957)Kelly McGillis / Agenull