Las Vegas (Nevada), April 17: Top Gun 3 is real. It’s been confirmed at CinemaCon in Las Vegas. Tom Cruise is back. The same core team is back. On paper, it sounds like a safe continuation.
It isn’t.
Because the last film already felt like the ending.
Top Gun: Maverick didn’t leave much unfinished. It wrapped things up in a way most franchises avoid: clean, emotional, and complete. Maverick found closure. The story landed where it needed to.
So now there’s a problem.
If the story is already complete, what is this new film adding?
It can’t just repeat the same formula. It can’t rely only on nostalgia again. And it definitely can’t assume that bigger action will automatically mean a better film.
That’s where things get uncertain.
The same names returning—Jerry Bruckheimer and Ehren Kruger—suggest the approach won’t change much. Real aircraft. Practical shooting. Minimal CGI. That’s the identity now.
But identity isn’t enough.
Last time, the realism felt fresh because everything else around it felt artificial. This time, the audience already knows what to expect. The surprise is gone.
There’s also a shift in emotional weight. Val Kilmer’s absence will be felt, whether the film addresses it directly or not. His presence grounded Maverick. Without that, the tone changes.
So the focus likely moves forward to Miles Teller and Glen Powell. But that only works if the story is built around them, not just around Maverick again.
Otherwise, it risks becoming a replay.
Right now, there’s no story. No clear direction. Just confirmation.
And that’s where the real question sits.
Not whether Top Gun 3 will be made—but whether it has a reason to exist beyond the success of the last film.
Because if it doesn’t find that reason, everything else—jets, speed, scale—won’t matter.
For now, it’s just an announcement.
The rest is still up in the air.
