Even though Top Gun: Maverick ended the character arc of Tom Cruise's Maverick perfectly, the Top Gun hero still needs to return to Top Gun 3.
As such, Top Gun 3 could show how Top Gun's hero adjusts to an idyllic but less dramatic life he has built by the end of Top Gun: Maverick. [Top Gun](https://screenrant.com/tag/top-gun/) sequel [Top Gun: Maverick](https://screenrant.com/tag/top-gun-2/) managed to wrap up the story of Maverick perfectly, Top Gun 3 still needs to happen. Top Gun 3 could allow Cruise to see Maverick transition into a happy retirement wherein the eternal searcher finally settles down and enjoys life. However, paradoxically, Top Gun 3 needs to happen, and the film should still feature Cruise. However, by the end of Top Gun: Maverick, Maverick has saved Goose's son Rooster, earned Rooster's respect, and learned to forgive himself. Moreover, Top Gun: Maverick gives a perfect ending to its hero, meaning there is an argument to be made for the franchise ending with this sequel.
In Slate's annual Movie Club, film critic Dana Stevens emails with fellow critics—for 2022, Bilge Ebiri, Beatrice Loayza, and David Sims—about the year in ...
(More on Athena in a bit.) So maybe, as we proceed, you folks can tell me about the smallest, least-seen titles on your lists (or hovering just outside your lists), and make a case for why they deserve to be seen by more of us. [Athena](https://www.vulture.com/article/movie-review-netflix-athena-romain-gavras.html), Romain Gavras’ riveting, enthralling tale of a French banlieue uprising. I am, after all, [a Joe Wright dead-ender](https://www.vulture.com/2022/03/the-woman-in-the-window-is-not-the-film-joe-wright-made.html). His epic treatment of the event—complete with slow-motion invading armies, cascades of fire, gonzo stunts, and battles against medieval parapets, often shot in [bravura long takes](https://www.vulture.com/2022/09/how-romain-gavras-made-the-opening-shot-of-athena.html) that careen through the devastated corridors and courtyards of this huge housing complex—lends the proceedings a mythic grandeur that makes it about more than just this one incident, suggesting an entire civilization on the brink of collapse. [Joe Wright’s Cyrano](https://www.vulture.com/article/movie-review-joe-wrights-cyrano-starring-peter-dinklage.html) was Number 16. I think [I even talked about it a bit last year](https://slate.com/culture/2021/12/best-movies-2021-musicals-west-side-story-annette-musicals.html) on this here Movie Club. And honestly, they weren’t even much of an enemy, because it wasn’t much of a war movie; the first Top Gun was more a sports movie, a college bonding movie, a hot-for-teacher movie. (Yes, even Blonde, a film I thoroughly adore.) In fact, one of them did migrate over the course of the past 12 months: Last year, The first half of the 1980s saw a lot of slick aerial combat flicks, like Firefox and Blue Thunder and Iron Eagle (a movie that feels like a cynical Top Gun rip-off but somehow came out months before Top Gun). [Movie Club](https://slate.com/tag/movie-club-2022), film critic Dana Stevens emails with fellow critics—for 2022, Bilge Ebiri, Beatrice Loayza, and David Sims—about the year in cinema. So, here is what I consider to be my real list, my top 25 films of the year.