Top Gun: Maverick Betrays Hollywood's Weakness In China - BBC
Maybe your like
- Home
- News
- Sport
- Business
- Innovation
- Culture
- Arts
- Travel
- Earth
- Audio
- Video
- Live

Getty ImagesSome are cheering the release of Top Gun: Maverick - an action thriller - for supposedly "standing up to China". That misses the point, writes Isaac Stone Fish.
Thirty-six years after flying high in the 1980s original, Top Gun: Maverick, a sequel to the adventure-thriller film in which Tom Cruise and Val Kilmer fight baddies for the US Navy, is breaking box office records in America.
Besides spectacular dogfights with fighter jets, it is getting praise for another reason. When a trailer for the film was released in 2019, Taiwanese and Japanese flags were removed from Cruise's bomber jacket - appeasing Beijing (which claims Taiwan and disapproves of Japan) but upsetting Americans.
But when Paramount released the film late last month, it had reinstated the flags. Americans and Taiwanese cheered. Some critics claimed this was evidence Hollywood was finally standing up to China.
Not so fast.
For a film that is supposed to be about US military might, it neither mentions nor even implies the presence of China in the film - a notable omission given what US military brass routinely describe as America's top security challenge.
There are routine public warnings of the threat Beijing poses to national security. "China is the strategic threat to this country," US Chief of Naval Operations Admiral Michael Gilday has said.
"China increasingly is... challenging the United States in multiple arenas - especially economically, militarily and technologically - and is pushing to change global norms," said last year's annual US government threat report.
That, in the world of Top Gun, China doesn't even exist is an example of how subtly Beijing exercises influence in Hollywood.
The film is not playing in China - but that's not really what it's about.
There's no need to ban a film when, as Top Gun: Maverick shows, a studio will censor itself when it comes to how it portrays - or won't portray - Beijing.

Getty ImagesYet surprisingly, there are no clear rules over how, why, and when Beijing responds.
Take, for example, the 2011 comedy, Johnny English Reborn, distributed by United Pictures.
In the film the actor Rowan Atkinson played one of his famous characters, the eponymous bumbling British spy.
- Hollywood censors films for China, report suggests
- China and Taiwan: A really simple guide
- Chinese fighter jet 'chaffs' Australian plane
It opens in a monastery in Tibet - sensitive to Beijing, because it wants only carefully controlled portrayals of that Himalayan region - and only gets more controversial from there. English must prevent international criminals from murdering the Chinese premier, who is portrayed as cowardly and foolish.
Admittedly, such a film is less likely to pass muster in the age of Xi Jinping. But what happened to Atkinson and the studio for the film?
Apparently very little: I've seen no indication that Beijing punished Universal for the portrayal, and Atkinson remains incredibly popular in China: On dozens of flights I've taken in China, both before and after 2011, the most common face I remember seeing on Chinese airline televisions - even more than Chinese Chairmen Xi, Hu Jintao, or Mao Zedong - is Mr Bean's.
The lesson from this, and from hundreds of other films that address (or don't address) China is that sometimes Beijing metes out its tolerance or punishment of a studio or actor with no apparent logic - and that is part of the strategy to keep Hollywood on its toes. The capriciousness gives China power.

Getty ImagesSometimes films that contain elements critical of China screen throughout the country, and other times, they don't.
Sometimes those who criticise Beijing, like actors Sharon Stone and Richard Gere, who offended the party through their activism on Tibet, find their careers damaged. While some, like actor Christian Bale - who backed a Chinese activist - or director Judd Apatow - who made comments about Uighurs - have faced no apparent reprisal.
Consistent with Chinese Communist Party techniques for exercising power, this is a feature, not a bug. It means studios are always left wondering.
Filmgoers have become inured to Chinese censorship - which is perhaps why a flag patch is misread as being "tough to China".
But if American admirals can speak directly about China, Hollywood's reliance on mumbled and muted flag symbols for its most patriotic of pictures looks strikingly weak by comparison.
Isaac Stone Fish is the author of America Second: How America's Elites Are Making China Stronger, from Penguin Random House
Hollywood censors films for China, report suggests
Top Gun sequel gives Cruise first $100m opening
China sends 30 planes into Taiwan air defence zone
FilmUnited StatesHollywoodTom CruiseRelatedSupport for young filmmakers making medieval film
Tarsem Singh Jassar on filming in 'amazing' city
Avatar composer reveals the secrets behind a soundtrack that took seven years to create
More from the BBC20 mins ago

Witkoff to meet Zelensky for latest Ukraine war talks
Donald Trump's envoy will meet the Ukrainian president and European leaders in Berlin to discuss the latest peace plan.
20 mins ago5 hrs ago

Trump officials sue Georgia county to force release of 2020 voting records
The lawsuit comes as Donald Trump continues to question his 2020 election loss to Joe Biden, despite any reliable evidence.
5 hrs ago5 hrs ago

Six injured as house explodes in California
A natural gas line leak triggered the house explosion, injuring six people and damaging several nearby properties.
5 hrs ago6 hrs ago

US lifts sanctions against Brazilian judge in Bolsonaro case
It comes as the White House welcomes a conservative-led effort to cut the former president's prison sentence.
6 hrs ago7 hrs ago

New photos from Epstein estate show Trump, Andrew and Bill Clinton
The photos, which do not imply wrongdoing, are part of a trove of images the House Oversight Committee received from Epstein's estate.
7 hrs agoTag » What Happened To Top Gun 2
-
'Top Gun: Maverick' Movie Release Postponed To 2022 Due ... - CNBC
-
Top Gun: Maverick - Wikipedia
-
Top Gun: Maverick - Critics Praise 'thrilling' Sequel - BBC News
-
Top Gun: Maverick | NEW Official Trailer (2022 Movie) - Tom Cruise
-
Top Gun: Maverick - Official Trailer (2022) - Paramount Pictures
-
TOP GUN 2 Maverick Behind The Scenes Trailer - YouTube
-
How A.I. Helped Val Kilmer Get His Voice Back For 'Top Gun: Maverick'
-
Top Gun: Maverick (2022) - IMDb
-
Top Gun 2 Maverick: Tom Cruise Sequel's Cast, Release Date, Trailer ...
-
'Top Gun: Maverick' Ending Explained: Does Maverick Survive The ...
-
Top Gun Maverick Trailer, Cast, Release Date And More - Digital Spy
-
'Top Gun: Maverick' Puts Tom Cruise On Track To Best Will ... - Forbes
-
Why Tom Cruise's Love Interest In "Top Gun: Maverick" Looks Different
-
How They Made Top Gun: Maverick | Top Gear