The Glen Powell Network

15 Jan

‘Top Gun 3’ in the Works at Paramount

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTERThe news follows Tom Cruise inking a headline-grabbing (though nonexclusive) deal with Warner Bros.
Paramount is hoping to refuel the Top Gun franchise for liftoff once more, for a third film in the storied franchise.

Top Gun: Maverick co-writer Ehren Kruger is penning a script for what would be a new installment, and sources say Maverick director Joe Kosinski would also return to direct. Puck first reported the news of Kruger’s involvement. The intent is to reunite Tom Cruise with his next-gen co-stars Miles Teller and Glen Powell.

The development comes days after Warner Bros. Discovery announced that Cruise had signed a deal to star in and produce movies for Warners, though that pact is nonexclusive. The actor’s recent films have largely been at Paramount, though he did not have a deal there. While some could view the Top Gun news as a tit for tat in the war for Cruise headlines, the reality is this sequel has quietly been in development since late fall.

Paramount could not be reached for comment.

Maverick was a massive overperformer at the box office in 2022, earning $1.5 billion globally and sparking Steven Spielberg to credit Cruise with saving the theatrical business, which had been beleagured by the coronavirus pandemic. The feature followed decades after Tony Scott’s 1986 Top Gun, which helped cement Cruise as a rising movie star.

Don’t expect to see the new Top Gun movie in the near term. Cruise is currently working on an eighth Mission: Impossible movie, which will keep him occupied until at least its release, currently set for May 2025. And it took a few years of development before Maverick became airborne. Still, this development further cements one thing that became apparent after this week: Cruise is still an in-demand star and studios will be battling for his time and attention for years to come.

Posted by jen under Glen Powell, Projects
16 Nov

Glen Powell on Getting Tom Cruise’s Blessing to Do Both ‘Devotion’ and ‘Top Gun: Maverick:’ “There’s Room for Two”

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTERBased on the true story of naval aviator duo Lt. Tom Hudner and Ensign Jesse Brown, ‘Devotion’ also stars Jonathan Majors and Joe Jonas, and marks Powell’s second naval aviation film this year.
When Glen Powell decided he wanted to play real-life naval officer Tom Hudner nearly six years ago, someone else already held the screen rights to the story.

“That person had a couple drinks at a Hollywood party and told me they weren’t planning on making this movie,” Powell recalled to The Hollywood Reporter at the film’s premiere on Tuesday. “And I said, ‘Would you mind if I made it?’ And they were like, ‘Yeah, sure.’ So I went to [author Adam Makos], and I said, ‘Hey, if you let me have this, I promise I’ll tell it in the best way possible.’”

Based on Makos’ novel Devotion: An Epic Story of Heroism, Friendship, and Sacrifice, the film follows the true story of naval aviator duo Lt. Hudner (Powell) and Ensign Jesse Brown (Jonathan Majors) — the navy’s first Black carrier pilot — during the Korean War.

“I knew [this story] stood a chance when Glen Powell came to me,” Makos remembered. “I had to Google him because Glen was not the actor he is now. He wasn’t the superstar yet.” Makos said his test for Powell was for the actor to meet Hudner himself, along with the Brown family.

“Next thing you know, Glen and I were sitting at the kitchen table with Tom having waffles,” the author said. “He treated him like a grandfather.”

Coming off of a breakout role in Top Gun: Maverick as bad boy pilot Jake “Hangman” Seresin, Powell is aware of the unlikely coincidence of starring in two naval aviation movies in one year. When the Top Gun opportunity came about, the actor remembered having to make the tough decision of whether or not he could pursue both projects. It was Tom Cruise’s support that helped pave the way for Powell’s role in the Top Gun sequel.

“I said, ‘Hey, Tom, I already have a naval aviation movie that’s really close to my heart,’” Powell recalled. “And Tom said, ‘There’s room for two. You can do Top Gun, you can do Devotion. You don’t have to choose.’ The fact that Tom gave me the liberty to make both, Black Label and Sony gave me the liberty to make both — I feel like these are two movies that could not be more different from each other, but really complement just the love of aviation and the legacy of our men and women in uniform.”

“I was afraid that Top Gun was going to derail this when he was offered that role,” Makos said of his reservations at the time. “I thought, ‘Jeez, he’s gonna go for that. He’s gonna leave us behind.’ Because who wouldn’t want to act alongside Tom Cruise?”

With Cruise’s blessing, the role of Hangman in Top Gun: Maverick was born — a character much different from Hudner — and Powell moved forward with Devotion.

Directed by J.D. Dillard, the film also stars Majors, who portrays Brown in the film. Dillard — whose own father served as a naval flight officer — noted that Majors and Powell’s off-screen bond mirrors their wingmen relationship on screen.

“I am just so grateful to have caught those men when I did,” said Dillard. “They’ve become brothers and friends in this process, but they’re also incredible actors… The two of them just bring such life and nuance and richness to these roles, and now they’re enormous. They were always on that path, but to sort of watch it happen — I’m so excited for them.”

With upcoming roles in Creed III and Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, Majors took a different approach in his preparation to play Brown. “For me, when you play someone that walked and talked and loved in real life, it’s a matter of inspiration,” Majors said of his process. “You’re not using too much imagination. It’s inspiration — we’re in an acting class now — which has the same amount of energy to it, it just allows you to process it differently. You have to figure out what inspires [Brown] most. It’s clearly flight, but what about flight inspires him? Where do you find that inspiration? When he holds his daughter up, he understands what it is to actually be in the air, so you’re looking for those things. It’s a quieter process because you have to listen to something that’s not present.”

Joe Jonas also makes his big screen debut in the film as real-life naval officer Marty Goode. Jonas — whose grandfather served in the military — prepped for the role by studying photos of Goode and listening to his voice. Once production wrapped, Dillard asked Jonas if he would be up for writing the end-credits song.

“I saw [the film in its early stages] with my buddy Ryan Tedder and there was a grand piano in the screening room, and we just started writing the song,” Jonas remembered of creating the track “Not Alone.” The inspiration was about “being there for somebody, whether you’re there physically or spiritually, whatever it may be, and the importance of that. It took a lot of really digging through the layers, making sure that everything hit the right way that I wanted it to. I’m so proud of how it came together.”

As for his acting career, Jonas said he “would love to do more,” adding “It’s definitely a passion of mine. I’ve got some things brewing. I’ve talked about some projects with Black Label Media, developing some things, so it could be a busy year.”

Devotion hits theaters on Nov. 23.

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