
TOP GUN 3 Director Joseph Kosinski Teases "Ambitious" Idea With Help From the Navy and Lockheed — GeekTyrant
After Top Gun: Maverick rocketed past the billion-dollar mark and reignited the legacy of Pete "Maverick" Mitchell, the big question became: What's next? The answer is starting to come into focus, and it sounds like something that could push the franchise into uncharted airspace.
In a recent interview with ScreenRant, Top Gun: Maverick director Joseph Kosinski confirmed that Top Gun 3 is in active development, and it won't be more of the same. He shared:
'Ehren Kruger is writing the script as we speak. It's a big idea that I spent almost a year developing — working with some friends at the Navy and Lockheed. And yeah, Ehren's into it now, so we'll see how it comes along.'
I love that whatever he's cooking for this third film required months of collaboration with actual Navy personnel and Lockheed engineers. It's all because the idea was just too big to ignore. He added:
'It was about coming up with an idea that — again — felt like a new challenge. Something that opens up the story in a way you just can't let go. And I think the idea is so ambitious. That's what's exciting to me.'
Kosinski isn't the only returning name in the cockpit. Christopher McQuarrie, who co-wrote Maverick and has been busy steering the Mission: Impossible franchise, is also onboard, and according to him, the story came together faster than expected.
'It wasn't hard. I thought it would be, and that's a good place to go from is you walk into the room going, 'Come on, what are we going to do?' and Ehren Kruger pitched something and I went, 'Mhm actually,' and we had one conversation about it and the framework is there.'
That "framework" will build on the emotional and thematic core of Top Gun: Maverick , a film that found new depth in Maverick's role as a mentor, his unresolved history with Goose's son, and his brush with obsolescence in a rapidly modernizing military.
While details on Top Gun 3 remain tightly under wraps, the involvement of Lockheed and the Navy suggests that whatever Kosinski and team have planned, it's going to lean heavily into the bleeding edge of aerial warfare, and probably ask some tough questions about the future of fighter pilots in an age of unmanned drones and AI systems.
Until then, Top Gun fans can take comfort in knowing that the next mission is in the works and that it's being crafted with the same care, technical precision, and story-driven focus that made Maverick a modern action classic.
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Business Insider
28 minutes ago
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LOS ANGELES -- LOS ANGELES (AP) — 'Jaws' turns 50 this week, and its legacy of the summer movie blockbuster remains strong. The titles that have packed the most summer moviegoers into theaters since 1975 represent some of the best known films of the last half century, including five 'Star Wars' movies, Pixar favorites like 'Toy Story 3' and 'Finding Nemo,' superheroes galore and both 'Top Gun' films. They also include some surprises, and movies both less bombastic and less enduring. Combined, the top-earning summer films between 1975 and 2004 have more than $15 billion through the summer months, a figure not adjusted for inflation, according to the tracking firm Comscore. It's also worth noting that box-office tracking before 1981 was not as robust as it is today — and there was essentially no summer movie season in 2020, when the coronavirus pandemic shuttered theaters across the country. Here's a list of the top summer movie each year, along with the film's gross earnings from its release date through Labor Day, according to Comscore's data. ___ 1975: 'Jaws,' $260 million 1976: 'The Omen,' $60.9 million 1977: 'Star Wars,' $221.3 million 1978: 'Grease,' $132.5 million 1979: 'Alien,' $79 million 1980: 'Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back,' $222.7 million 1981: 'Superman II,' $59.2 million 1982: 'E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,' $242 million 1983: 'Star Wars: Episode VI - Return Of The Jedi' $222.3 million 1984: 'Ghostbusters,' $189.1 million 1985: 'Rambo: First Blood Part II,' $139 million 1986: 'Top Gun,' $131.3 million 1987: 'Beverly Hills Cop II,' $151 million 1988: 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit,' $130.7 million 1989: 'Batman,' $239 million 1990: 'Ghost,' $125 million 1991: 'Terminator 2: Judgment Day,' $183.1 million 1992: 'Batman Returns,' $159.8 million 1993: 'Jurassic Park,' $316.6 million 1994: 'The Lion King,' $262.3 million 1995: 'Batman Forever,' $181.4 million 1996: 'Independence Day,' $282 million 1997: 'Men In Black,' $235.1 million 1998: 'Armageddon,' $193 million 1999: 'Star Wars: Episode I - Phantom Menace,' $421.4 million 2000: 'Mission: Impossible II,' $214 million 2001: 'Shrek,' $263 million 2002: 'Spider-Man,' $403.7 million 2003: 'Finding Nemo,' $332.7 million 2004: 'Shrek 2,' $436.7 million 2005: 'Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith,' $380 million 2006: 'Pirates Of The Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest,' $414 million 2007: 'Spider-Man 3,' $336.5 million 2008: 'The Dark Knight,' $504.8 million 2009: 'Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,' $400.6 million 2010: 'Toy Story 3,' $409 million 2011: 'Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows II,' $375.6 million 2012: 'Marvel's The Avengers,' $620.3 million 2013: 'Iron Man 3,' $409 million 2014: 'Guardians Of The Galaxy,' $281.2 million 2015: 'Jurassic World,' $647.4 million 2016: 'Finding Dory,' $482.9 million 2017: 'Wonder Woman,' $409.5 million 2018: 'Incredibles 2,' $602.6 million 2019: 'The Lion King,' $523.6 million 2020: 'Tenet,' $20 million 2021: 'Black Widow,' $182.7 million 2022: 'Top Gun Maverick,' $701.3 million 2023: 'Barbie,' $612.3 million 2024: 'Inside Out 2,' $650.8 million ___ Source: Comscore