The film was made to help the U.S. military enlist. The U.S. military provided great support to the film crew. First, the U.S. military provided five squadrons of F-14 supersonic fighter jets and eight active-duty pilots. Second, Miramar Air Terminal and TopGun School offer some excellent flights. The instructors flew the F-14's rival A-4s and F-5s. Also featured in the film include USS Three aircraft carriers including Enterprise. When shooting "Rising Clouds", the director used a real machine to perform many aerobatics in order to express the thrill of aerial combat as realistically as possible. An accident happened during the filming of the film. While filming the scene where the fighter jet is affected by the enemy's awakening and enters a stall spin, the fighter jet piloted by pilot Arthur fails to successfully fly out after entering a horizontal spin. It plunged straight into the Pacific Ocean. In honor of Arthur, the staff also temporarily changed the plot. I appreciate the director's serious approach to this film. No special effects Real machine shots look nothing like any cool special effects! Despite the loss of a plane and a pilot, the result: In 1986 (the year the film was released), the recruiting office in the United States was full. Overall the loss is worth it! The pilot killed by the shooting applauds this! At the same time, this is the first truth this movie tells me: reality is often more moving than fantasy. The second, third and fourth things this movie told me: You have to have a sense of teamwork and not be a lone ranger. And you can't be too confident, too confident is arrogance. More importantly, you cannot be impulsive or individualistic and must understand teamwork. The film's protagonist, Medellin (whose codename "The Lone Ranger" paved the way for the latter) is a very confident and impulsive man, confident in himself. His impulse came from his unparalleled confidence. So in the 2v2 practice, due to Medellin's individualism and his arrogance, he disengaged from his teammates without permission, chased the enemy's plane alone, failed to lock on multiple times, and he didn't notice that the enemy's teammates were already in There. The rear secretly locked itself, causing the team's movement to fail. In another exercise, Medellin and his partner Gus flew on the same plane. Medellin launched an attack, but was accidentally caught in the spiraling airflow of the enemy's tail, causing the twin engines to gasp (you can understand it as gasping). It came to a stop, the plane circled into place, and finally plunged into the Pacific Ocean. When opening the hood, Gus accidentally hit his head on the body of the plane and died (yes, classmate Arthur), Medellin was injured a lot, but also taught him a profound lesson. From there, Medellin began discreetly working with his teammates, and eventually completed his own 3v4 foe with four or four successful feats. Medellin's greatest strength is that he knows his mistakes and can correct him, though he paid a dear price for his correction - the sacrifice of his best friend Gus. But he can correct that, which is fine. Real camera shots are not only very exciting , and at a small price in exchange for success. The film is undoubtedly a success!
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