Top Gun Over Moscow (1996).
Van Riper, A. Bowdoin
Top Gun Over Moscow (1996)
Directed by Lance K. Shultz and Lynne Squilla
WGBH/Boston
www.wgbh.org
56 minutes.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The title Top Gun Over Moscow is, in a sense, misleading. This
one-hour installment of the PBS series Nova deals not with elite Russian
fighter pilots, but with Russian fighter-pilot culture in general. The
great aces of the past and the top pilots of the present get their due,
but most of the hour is focused on--to the extent that such a thing
exists--"ordinary" fighter pilots. The title is accurate,
however, in another sense. Top Gun Over Moscow reaches for the same
audience, and uses the same kinds of images, as its starring-Tom-Cruise
namesake. It is aimed squarely at aviation buffs, but also has something
to offer historians.
The central theme of Top Gun Over Moscow is that Russian and
American fighter pilots, though united by a shared love of flying and
mutual respect for each other's skills, are divided by national
differences in fighter-pilot culture. The film is at its most
interesting when it catalogues and analyzes these differences. American
airbases are searched, every day, for debris that might be sucked into
an air intake and damage an engine. Russian bases are visibly scruffier,
but the fighters that fly from them have screens and bypasses to keep
debris out of their engines. American fighters achieve high performance
through cutting-edge design and sophisticated electronic control
systems, while Russian ones emphasize raw power and robust structures.
American fighter doctrine emphasizes kills made at long range using
high-tech weapons, but Russian doctrine presumes that air combat will
always come down to close--in maneuvering and gunfire. The film uses
pilots, designers, analysts, and historians from both countries to
elaborate on the differences, and allows their voices, rather than the
narrator's, to carry the story.
The film is less successful at explaining the historical roots of
these differences. Its historical survey of Russian military aviation,
is too limited in its coverage and too scattershot in its approach to
provide the necessary context. It begins in World War I, but ends--a
half-century short of the present--in Korea. Its coverage of the
intervening four decades, though anchored by noted aviation historian
Von Hardesty, spends most of its time on spectacular-but-peripheral
subjects: the giant Maxim Gorky propaganda aircraft, deliberate ramming
as a combat tactic, and the exploits of all female "Night
Witch" squadrons that harassed German troops with raids in obsolete
biplane bombers. Topics like the capabilities of Soviet industry and the
effects of Stalin's purges-meatier, but less photogenic-are brushed
off in a few sentences or ignored altogether.
Historians of technology have long argued that machines are shaped
by the environment from which they emerge, as well as by the demands of
the job they are designed to do. Russian and American jet fighters
reflect the very different efforts of two very different societies to
solve the same basic technological problem. Top Gun Over Moscow is an
engaging overview of the differences, if not of the multitude of
factors, that underlie them.
A. Bowdoin Van Riper
Southern Polytechnic State University