
‘Top Gun: Maverick' filmmakers drive into Formula One, with Brad Pitt and Lewis Hamilton
By LINDSEY BAHR
'Top Gun: Maverick' filmmaker Joseph Kosinski came to Formula One like many Americans: 'Drive to Survive.'
In that popular Netflix series, he saw the potential for a cinematic event, full of immersive thrills, the high stakes of the competitive racing world and the idea that your teammate could be your greatest rival.
'I don't think there's any other sport that's quite like that,' Kosinski said. 'It's ripe for drama.'
The movies have loved car racing since their earliest days, and the popularity of F1 has exploded in recent years. Giving it the 'Top Gun' treatment made sense. But it would take nearly four years for that dream to become 'F1,' which is speeding into movie theaters on June 27.
It was a complex operation that would involve unprecedented coordination with the league, groundbreaking innovation in camera technology, and letting one of the biggest movie stars in the world, Brad Pitt, drive a real race car at 180 miles an hour on film. Many, many times.
Hollywood, it turned out, was a little easier to convince to make the film than the league. By the time Kosinski and producer Jerry Bruckheimer approached them, Pitt had already agreed to star and they'd decided to go with Apple to help make the movie at the level they needed, with the guarantee of a robust theatrical release (which Warner Bros. is handling). Then came the Formula One meeting.
'When you come in, the first thing they think is you're going to make them look bad,' Bruckheimer said. 'I went through this with when I went to the Navy the first time on 'Top Gun.''
There were many concerns: About anything going wrong, accidents, and the question of the villain. But, the filmmakers explained, this story wasn't about a villain. It's a competition between two drivers — a younger driver (Damson Idris) and an older driver (Pitt) trying to make him better.
Bruckheimer said it took almost a year to get the league on board, and then they had to go around to the individual teams to explain it to them as well. But once everyone bought in, they committed and opened their world to the filmmakers.
'The amount of, let's say, conversations regarding things not related to the actual filmmaking has been massive just from a coordination point of view,' Kosinski said. 'But there's no way we could have made this film without that partnership with Formula One.'
Among the things they got to do: Build a garage at the Grand Prix for their fictional team; Drive on the track during Grand Prix weekends in front of hundreds of thousands of spectators; Put their Formula One cars on the track with the film's cars (and drivers); Have Pitt and Idris stand at the end of the national anthem in both Silverstone and Abu Dhabi; And sit in on drivers meetings and technical briefings.
'It was full-on integration of these two worlds coming together,' Kosinski said. 'There's no way the film could have happened or look like it does without that partnership. I think you'll see the result of that on screen because you couldn't recreate what we were able to capture by doing it for real.'
In true 'Top Gun' spirit, part of 'doing it for real' meant trying to create the experience in the driver seat for the audience. Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton, who was involved in the film from the earliest days, told Kosinski that he'd never seen a film that had really captured what it felt like to be in one of those cars.
'These Formula One cars, they deal in grams,' Kosinski said. 'Adding 100 pounds of camera equipment works against the very thing you're trying to capture. It became a technical engineering project for a year to figure out how to get very tiny cameras that are IMAX quality onto one of these cars.'
During 'Top Gun: Maverick,' they had six Sony cameras inside the cockpit. Here, engineers were able to slim those down to about a quarter of the size (he estimates a 10x10 cm cube). Panavision also developed a remote control that allowed director of photography Claudio Miranda to pivot the cameras left and right, which they didn't have on 'Maverick."
They had 15 camera mounts built into the cars and were able to run up to four at a time keeping the weight penalty to a minimum, and the close-ups real.
'Every time you see Brad or Damson's face, they're really driving that car,' Kosinski said. 'It's not being driven for them.'
And once it was go-time on the tracks, it was a race against the clock.
'It was a technical feat and an organizational feat,' Bruckheimer said. 'You get limited access and we'd get in there between some of their qualifying laps and have eight minutes to get on the track and off the track. It's precision, you can't be at nine minutes.'
When Hamilton first saw some of their racing footage cut together, Kosinski got a confidence boost.
'He smiled and said, 'It looks fast,'' Kosinski said. 'I was like, 'Oh, thank God.' If Lewis says that we're in a good place.'
'This movie needed an icon kind of at the center of it,' Kosinski said. 'It's a big, complicated, expensive film. And I needed one of our, you know, top, top movie stars.'
Kosinski knew Pitt liked cars. About a decade ago he, Tom Cruise and Pitt actually developed a car movie that never came to be. Plus, he said, 'I just felt like it was a role that I always wanted to see him play.'
The character is fictional driver named Sonny Hayes who was 'the greatest who never was.' A phenomenon in the 1990s, he was destined to be the next world champion before an accident at a Grand Prix ends his Formula One career.
'Now he drives in every type of racing league you could imagine, but not Formula 1,' Kosinski said, from Le Mans to swamp trucks. 'He likes to challenge himself to a new racing league and master it, but then he walks away.'
The audience meets him driving the midnight shift at the Daytona 24 hour race where he meets his old teammate and now Formula One team owner (Javier Bardem) who asks him to come back to help them win one race to save them from being sold.
'It's a story about a last place team, a group of underdogs, and Sonny Hayes in his later years having one more chance to do something he was never able to, which is win a race in F1,' Kosinski said.
After the pitch, they went to the racetrack with Hamilton and Pitt 'was hooked.'
Pitt trained for three months before cameras started rolling to get used to the physical demands of the precision vehicles. He and his co-star really drove the cars at speeds up to 180 mph, and sometimes in front of a couple hundred thousand people.
'The happiest day was when they said, 'OK, it's a wrap on driving,' and he (Brad) climbed out of the car,' Bruckheimer said. 'That was the best day for me because it is dangerous, it really is.'
The film, everyone has acknowledged, was enormously expensive. They had the advantage of advertising on the cars, which helped offset some of the costs, but the operation was akin to building a real F1 team, Bruckheimer said. They built six cars, which they transported all around the world along with production.
'It's like an army exercise moving vast groups of people and machinery around the world,' Bruckheimer said.
But it was much less than the $300 million figure going around, both Kosinski and Bruckheimer said.
'It's expensive, don't get me wrong. It's an expensive movie. But it was substantially lower than that number,' Bruckheimer said. 'Hollywood is a very competitive place, and our friends sometimes inflate our budgets to make them look better.'
The biggest question is whether audiences will turn out in blockbuster numbers. So far, test scores have been very high across genders. And they promise you don't need to be an expert or even a fan of the sport to enjoy the film, which will teach you everything you need to know.
'It's emotional, it's exciting, it has humor. It's got great music with a Hans Zimmer score and a bunch of phenomenal artists,' Bruckheimer said. 'We hope it's a perfect summer movie."
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
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Japan Today
9 hours ago
- Japan Today
Rapper Sean Kingston sentenced to 3.5 years in prison for $1 million fraud scheme
FILE - Sean Kingston, right, and his mother Janice Turner arrive at the 40th anniversary American Music Awards, Nov. 18, 2012, in Los Angeles. (Photo by Jordan Strauss/Invision/AP, File) By DAVID FISCHER Rapper Sean Kingston was sentenced on Friday to three and a half years in prison after being convicted of a $1 million fraud scheme in South Florida. Kingston, whose legal name is Kisean Paul Anderson, and his mother, Janice Eleanor Turner, were each convicted by a federal jury in March of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and four counts of wire fraud. Turner was sentenced last month to five years in prison. Before U.S. Judge David Leibowitz handed down Kingston's sentence, the singer apologized to the judge and said he had learned from his actions. His attorney asked if he could self-surrender at a later date due to health issues, but the judge ordered him taken into custody immediately. Kingston, who was wearing a black suit and white shirt, removed his suit jacket and was handcuffed and led from the courtroom. Kingston, 35, and his mother were arrested in May 2024 after a SWAT team raided Kingston's rented mansion in suburban Fort Lauderdale. Turner was taken into custody during the raid, while Kingston was arrested at Fort Irwin, an Army training base in California's Mojave Desert, where he was performing. According to court records, Kingston used social media from April 2023 to March 2024 to arrange purchases of high-end merchandise. After negotiating deals, Kingston would invite the sellers to one of his high-end Florida homes and promise to feature them and their products on social media. Investigators said that when it came time to pay, Kingston or his mother would text the victims fake wire receipts for the luxury merchandise, which included a bulletproof Escalade, watches and a 19-foot (5.9-meter) LED TV, investigators said. When the funds never cleared, victims often contacted Kingston and Turner repeatedly, but were either never paid or received money only after filing lawsuits or contacting law enforcement. Kingston, who was born in Florida and raised in Jamaica, shot to fame at age 17 with the 2007 hit 'Beautiful Girls,' which laid his lyrics over Ben E. King's 1961 song 'Stand By Me.' His other hits include 2007's 'Take You There' and 2009's 'Fire Burning.' © Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.


Yomiuri Shimbun
a day ago
- Yomiuri Shimbun
Taylor Swift's New Album Has Everyone Seeing Orange: An Exploration of the Color
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The positive sentiments are precisely how Swift described the mood she wanted to capture on the album: 'so exuberant and electric and vibrant.' Here's an exploration of the color orange, from pale peach to deep terra cotta. Orange brings all the feels Laurie Pressman, vice president of Pantone Color Institute, said Swift's shifting of her color story to a bright orange feels like a 'new personality coming out.' 'And she looks so happy,' Pressman said. 'She's glowing and she's basking.' The orange hue Swift is going with is the perfect expression of positive vibes, Pressman said. The closest shade in Pantone's vast library of color is called 'Exuberance.' 'Even when you go down to the peaches, which are very pale,' she said, referencing the spectrum of orange, 'there's a deliciousness, there's a warmth that comes with that. There's just a softness, a tactility. There's a sweetness to it.' In its deeper tones, orange is also all goodness, Pressman said. 'Going all the way over to the darker terra cottas, there's an earthiness and authenticity, but also warmth. Whereas red is about being bold and dramatic, orange is more friendliness, more approachable,' she said, noting a previous era of Swift's. As saffron, it can have religious connotations The saffron shade is a different story in a contemporary context in India, said Dheepa Sundaram, who researches Hindu nationalist politics as an assistant professor of religion at the University of Denver. In ancient Hinduism and Buddhism, she said, monks and other spiritual figures who renounce worldly life clothe themselves in saffron garb as a way to express their piety. 'Some people have speculated that it's because saffron (the spice) was really cheap as a dye and sort of fit with the poverty roles of monks and aesthetes. Kings and royalty preferred more expensive colors like the colors of rubies and emeralds,' Sundaram said. (Nowadays, though, saffron is among the world's most expensive spices.) Fast forward a couple thousand years, give or take, to a right-wing policy strategy wielded by Prime Minister Narendra Modi's powerful Bharatiya Janata Party that aims to implement Hindu nationalist views and embraces the saffron color as a symbol. Incendiary, anti-Muslim songs have been dubbed 'saffron pop.' 'The color saffron has become their color. They have sort of positioned themselves as true Hindus, and this has become part of that schtick,' Sundaram said. So what about that glittery Portofino orange? Swift and Kelce frolicked last year in Lake Como, but did they also hit up Portofino and soak up some orange-hued charm in the coastal village known for its colorful buildings? That's unclear, which didn't stop the mayor of Portofino and the Portofino Yacht Marina from jointly hopping on the orange Tay train for the album announcement. On Tuesday, the Italian Riviera playground for the rich and famous, via Instagram, issued the 'it' couple an open invitation to visit. 'We are ready to welcome you, and we are already preparing an official Portofino Yacht Marina T-shirt for you… with a logo in perfect orange!,' read the Italian-language post. 'Between sunsets on the sea, music and the magic of the main square, Portofino awaits you. And it already shines in your color.' The luxe destination features ocher- and terra cotta-colored buildings along the port that reflect on the water, particularly during sunsets. The gingers are ready for it! We went directly to the source, redheads, to suss out the orange appeal. Sara Schafer, a 40-year-old lawyer in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, is the ginger-haired mother of two ginger-haired daughters. All three are dedicated Swifties. Schafer also proudly owns a bright orange car. 'We're all really excited. It's a great day when we have Swiftie news,' she said. 'I love everything orange. It's like happy sunshine.' Scott Walls, a hospital operations manager in Norwalk, Connecticut, is also a ginger, but he doesn't count himself among the Swifties. He's a huge New York Knicks fan, though. And what are the Knicks' team colors? Bright orange and blue, often proudly worn by mega-fans like Spike Lee. 'I've got a ton of Knicks stuff,' said Walls, 32. 'And it's funny that growing up in Westchester (New York), I played on a basketball team that had orange and blue as the colors.' He encountered some light teasing as an orange-haired kid growing up in small-town Pelham. 'Sometimes people would make comments. I didn't like it so I'd fight back. My brother is also a redhead and he would celebrate it more,' Walls said. Schafer added: 'You know what they say, redheads are the feistiest. We feel everything more deeply.' Orange has a young appeal in home decor Amy Wax, a color expert focusing on residential and commercial design, called orange a universally feel-good hue that evokes youthfulness in interior spaces. 'I've done dining rooms in a really, really rich rusty orange. It kind of takes the traditional red dining room and updates it. It feels more contemporary,' she said. Swift's stage design featured orange touches, including a projection of a mysterious orange door, confirmed by Swift on the podcast as a clue she was heading into a new era. Orange also works for transitional spaces like hallways. 'A light orange in a hallway can feel very pleasing and energetic,' Wax said. Orange blends beautifully with browns, cream colors and other neutrals, she said. Who can pull off wearing orange? Natalie Tincher, founder of the BU Style consulting company and personal wardrobe stylist, said people shouldn't fear wearing the color. There's likely a shade out there for everyone. Swift's own tour included lots of orange stage costumes, including the work of the late Italian designer Roberto Cavalli. Vibrant orange will pop and softer oranges can lend harmony with softer skin tones, Tincher said: 'Incorporate it into a scarf, a handbag or a trouser if you don't want it reflecting your face.' And what company is known for its orange luxury goods? That's right, Hermès. The 'Hermès Orange' and 'Hermès Amber' are signatures of the French fashion house known for its silk scarves and pricey handbags. On a more egalitarian level, and despite the seasonal nature of — dare we utter the words — pumpkin spice, Tincher sees orange in some shade or another as perfectly acceptable year-round. For the bright, bold shades, consider pairing a loud orange with a lighter tone, Tincher said. Or go all in with a bright monochromatic orange look. 'And browns are very big right now as a neutral so you could do a rich brown with a bright orange,' she said. 'Mom's rules aren't the case anymore.'


The Diplomat
a day ago
- The Diplomat
Three Decades On, the Korean Wave Continues to Build Momentum
The global popularity of Korean culture is no longer a new phenomenon. This year alone, 'K-Pop Demon Hunters' became the most-watched animated film on Netflix, the New York Times placed the Korean film 'Parasite' at the top of its '100 Best Movies of the 21st Century' list, and the Korean musical 'Maybe Happy Ending' won six Tony Awards. Last year, Han Kang became the first Korean writer to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature. Meanwhile, BTS is widely regarded as the biggest pop band of this generation, and 'Squid Game' remains Netflix's most-watched series of all time. Even as Hallyu, or the Korean Wave, continues to gain global traction, critics have persistently questioned its sustainability. In its early years, skeptics doubted whether Korean pop music had the quality to succeed abroad. Later, they argued that Korean popular culture lacked the originality to sustain momentum. Structural challenges such as language barriers and limited diversity were also seen as major obstacles. Yet despite these concerns, the Korean Wave has not only endured but has continued to grow and evolve over the past three decades. The rise of Hallyu has been less a sudden burst than a steady, sustained movement. By the late 1990s, Korean pop music and dramas had achieved notable success in neighboring countries, and during the 2010s, their popularity began to spread beyond Asia. A major turning point came in 2012, when Psy's 'Gangnam Style' became the first video to surpass 1 billion views on YouTube, placing Korean pop culture squarely on the global stage. Since then, artists like BTS and Blackpink have propelled K-pop into the mainstream across major global music markets including North America, Europe, and Latin America. Korean dramas have followed a similar trajectory. After a string of major hits in Asia, K-drama's global popularity surged in the 2020s, fueled largely by streaming platforms. Today, more than 80 percent of Netflix subscribers worldwide have watched at least one Korean show, and in terms of viewing hours, South Korean content ranks second only to that from the United States. 'Squid Game' remains Netflix's most-watched original series, and its final season became the first show ever to top the streaming platform's charts in all 93 countries where Netflix publishes Top 10 rankings during its first week of release. While pop music and dramas ignited Hallyu, they have not defined its boundaries. As Korean entertainment gained global recognition, interest quickly spread to lifestyle sectors such as food, cosmetics, and fashion. Korean cuisine, in particular, has become a major symbol of this cultural shift. Once consumed primarily within diaspora communities, Korean cuisine has entered the global mainstream, ranging from street snacks like tteokbokki and kimbap to Michelin-starred fine dining. This cultural shift is mirrored in trade statistics: K-food exports grew at an annual rate of 5.9 percent from 2015 to 2019, then accelerated to 9 percent per year between 2020 and 2024, reaching $7.02 billion in value. Language is another domain where the impact of the Korean Wave is clearly visible. Once primarily studied by heritage learners, Korean is now among the most popular languages on Duolingo, the world's largest language learning platform. It has even surpassed languages spoken in countries with far larger populations and greater geopolitical influence, such as China and Russia. Korean is one of only seven non-English languages fully supported across all 28 Duolingo interface languages. Interest in official certification has also grown. The number of test takers for the Korean language proficiency exam (TOPIK) doubled from 218,869 in 2020 to 428,585 in 2024. At home, Hallyu is reinvigorating domestic engagement with cultural heritage. As global interest grows, South Koreans are reimagining tradition not just as a marker of identity but as a source of creative inspiration. K-pop artists are at the forefront of this movement, showing that tradition can be both relevant and fashionable. Blackpink's Jennie incorporated motifs from ancient golden crowns in her 'Zen' music video, while BTS's Suga (as Agust D) drew heavily on traditional instruments and clothing in his track 'Daechwita.' This reinvention of heritage, now widely referred to as 'hip tradition,' captures how once-sacred symbols are being transformed into accessible, stylish expressions of creativity. The traditional dessert yakgwa also exemplifies this trend. After going viral on social media in the early 2020s, it inspired a wave of modern reinterpretations, including yakgwa cookies, scones, and financiers. Similar trends can be seen in museum gift shops, where miniature replicas of ancient sculptures and drinking glasses printed with classical Korean paintings frequently sell out. This renewed appreciation has led to a surge in museum attendance. The National Museum of Korea welcomed 2.7 million visitors in the first half of 2025, a 64.2 percent increase from the previous year. Foreign visitors also hit a new high, reaching nearly 98,000. Perhaps the most significant shift lies in who is now creating Korean-inspired content. A case in point is the animated film 'K-Pop Demon Hunters.' Set in Seoul, the film features Korean-inspired fashion and cuisine, along with a tiger and magpie duo drawn from traditional Korean paintings. What makes the project particularly noteworthy is that it was entirely conceived, produced, and distributed by non-Korean companies for global audiences. This marks a meaningful shift. Non-Koreans, who were previously engaged with Korean culture primarily as consumers, are now stepping into new roles as creators, investors, and cultural ambassadors. The film's commercial success highlights the enduring appeal and growing market potential of Korean-inspired content, signaling even more cross-cultural collaborations on the horizon. Three decades on, the Korean Wave has grown from a regional trend into a global phenomenon spanning continents, industries, and generations, demonstrating that it is far more than a passing trend. While cultural tastes will inevitably evolve and certain aspects of the Korean Wave may ebb or fade, its breadth, from entertainment to lifestyle, and its depth, reflected in the rising popularity of the Korean language and the reinterpretation of cultural heritage, indicate that Hallyu is here to stay.