Top Gun: Maverick, which will undoubtedly feature hotshot pilot Tom Cruise slaughtering a few dozen foreigners in order to complete his character arc. Cruise may do thehardest salute you’ve ever seen, but the real star of (TG: Mcould just as easily be his F / A – Hornet fighter jet.
The movie is a sequel to ‘sTop Gun, which was part of the 1980 s’ obsession with turning cool vehicles into movie and TV stars. Depending on how pedantic you feel like being, this subgenre / cycle / craze kicked off with either The Dukes of Hazzard(**************************************************************** () orKnight Rider( and continued throughFirefox,Iron Eagle,Black Moon Rising, and no less than**********************************************************************************Knight Riderremakes / sequels / video gamesbefore culminating in (Knight Boat)EvenMagnum, PI (Ferrari and)The A-Team‘s van were more recognizable than any of their actresses. (I know I just rattled off more Gen X signposts than a season ofFamily Guy, but bear with me.)
Attempts to revive the genre have been mixed. Why? Because now that you can sit down at a computer and make thousands of spaceships out of pixels and Red Bull, the idea of building an entire franchise around one vehicle seems silly. It was only in the ’62 s —which came after the rise of the summer blockbuster but before CG-everything — that the vehicle show could flourish. (The closest analogs currently on the market are theFast & Furious
movies, which have the technology and budgets to create a world in which muscle cars outnumber people 10 to 1.)
Anyway, thanks to the renewed interest in cool-vehicle franchises spurred by Mr. Cruise’s latest money-printing endeavor, we at Ars decided to settle one of the greatest debates of the subgenre. I have taken it upon myself to decide, once and for all, which is the superior ‘ s murder-copter: Blue Thunder or Airwolf?
Editor’s note:Spoilers for – year-old IPs throughout. ****************************
Blue Thunderwas a 1983 movie starring an experimental, machine-gun-toting police helicopter that eventually tears up Los Angeles. My parents took me to see it when I was five. I cried at the end. Then they got me agnarly Blue Thunder toythat could accommodate my GI Joe figures.)
The movie’s human star is an LAPD helicopter pilot (played by Roy Scheider) whose name is Murphy, because all movie cops are named Murphy. Murphy uncovers a conspiracy involving the chopper that leads him into the aforementioned aerial dogfight over the streets of LA.
Airwolf, by contrast, was atotally different thing. It was a TV show that ran on CBS from (to before squeezing out one more season on the USA network. It also involved an experimental military chopper flown by a sullen ex-Army pilot with the shockingly preposterous name “Stringfellow Hawke” (played by Jan-Michael Vincent). Like Murphy, Hawke has also stolen his chopper — but he is allowed to keep it as long as he runs missions for a CIA-inspired agency called The Firm (sometimes styled “The FIRM”).
Got it? Good. Now let’s turn to the important questions these two helicopter franchises raise. One: Which machine is more awesome? And two: would I emerge from this project with my sanity intact?
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