(Don't read this if you want to go in completely blind)
I just watched Top Gun Maverick and it was really good. The action scenes were great, but what really made me like the movie was how the plot and characters were handled, specially the male ones. The cast is diverse but there isn't a single scene or even throwaway line about girlboss or black power or anything of that sort, it's all dealt with extreme respect and I did not expect that at all given the current state of things. The story isn't revolutionary or even too complicated, but the writers were fantastic in how they handled human relationships and values and it felt like a throwback to an America that is now dead and buried. Had it not been for the cellphones I honestly would have assumed the movie was supposed to be set in the 80s, despite being a sequel to the original.
Maverick is what diversity looks like when it is incidental to the story. Ghostbusters 2016 is what diversity looks like when it is central to the story.
I was actually in Naval aviation, and worked along side Naval aviators for 4 years. Maverick is much less hokey than the first one.
I highly recommend it.
Jack Posobiec said much the same thing in a tweet.