The Jack Ryan Collection (Hunt For
Red October/Patriot Games/Clear & Present Danger/Sum OF All Fears/Blu-ray/Paramount)
Picture:
B Sound: B Extras: C+/C-/C+/D Films: B-/C/B/D
For w
while there, it looked like Paramount and Tom Clancy would have a spy franchise
to rival the James Bond films, if only they could hold things together. Jack Ryan was a very interesting character,
one of the more well-realized CIA agents anywhere and the books were a hit. When The
Hunt Of Red October went into production, the Cold War was about to end,
though no one knew it. The captain was
played for two weeks by Klaus Maria Brandauer, but the studio decided to
replace him with no less than Sean Connery.
Alec Baldwin would play Ryan and the film was on its way and John
McTiernan (Die Hard) turned in one of his better directorial efforts.
The
result was a surprise hit in early 1990 and one of the better submarine films
(with U-571 being on the lesser side
and the likes of Crimson Tide and
the underrated K-19 – The Widowmaker
being the few after that worked) Connery gives one of his most underrated
performances and the result is a film that holds up very well. There is the noticeable cheap visual effect
at one points since they ran out of time and money, but very little of it has
aged badly and with a supporting cast that includes Scott Glenn, James Earl
Jones, Sam Neill, Joss Ackland and then actor Fred Thompson giving fine
performances, it is the kind of solid blockbuster Hollywood used to make all
the time before such films became outright stupid too often.
Just as
it looked like Baldwin would go on to do a whole series of these films, he
shocked Hollywood by bowing out of the series, though his career eventually
recovered critically and after The
Shadow did not work out as was hoped.
All were further shocked when no less than Harrison Ford was landed as
his successor as Ford was at the top of his game, but unfortunately Patriot Games (1992) where Ryan takes
on IRA terrorism and his whole family (including the underused Anne Archer) is
put in jeopardy as a result.
Unfortunately, the usually savvy Phillip Noyce turned in a tired,
formulaic pseudo-thriller with no edge or energy, following a feel-good
pseudo-patriotic 1980s formula that was lame.
The box office was disappointing, especially considering Ford’s
presence. Sixteen years later, post-9/11,
this is really bad.
Fortunately,
Noyce and Ford reunited for Clear &
Present Danger (1994) in what is the best film in the series, involving a
truth to power plot including drug kingpins, CIA operations, secret backroom
deals, the breaking of federal law and echoes of wrongdoing that go to the
highest echelons of that power. A bigger
hit than Ford’s first outing, the film holds up very well thanks to a strong
screenplay by Donald Stewart, Steven Zaillian and John Milius, as relevant now
as it was when it first arrived. Willem
Dafoe, James Earl Jones, Henry Czerny, Harris Yulin, Donald Moffat, Joaquim de
Almeida, Ann Magnuson and Thora Birch also star.
Because
of its political leaning and ageism in Hollywood, Ford would experience the
first backlash of his career and the next film did not materialize despite the
money the last film made. Clancy himself
started to publicly come out against he series, calling it B-movie material at
best. He was correct in the case of Games and may have been saying this for
purely political reasons in the case of Danger
and Ford’s perceived liberalism, so Ford eventually moved on and the franchise
seemed dead. Then they turned to Clancy
(who almost penned a Magnum, P.I.
film for his friend Tom Selleck) and they started up the series again with a
third Jack Ryan.
This time
it would be Ben Affleck and the resulting film, The Sum Of All Fears (2002) would not only be an outright disaster
as a film, but its attempt to be 9/11 relevant was a joke, almost an insult and
the film rightly bombed. In its plot
about a Soviet revival, it is even more embarrassing in the face of the August
2008 Russian invasion of Georgia, but the Paul Attanasio/Daniel Pyne (and Pyne
has fared much better with the likes of White
Sands, which seems more like a fluke on his resume now) script is a wreck,
including a nuclear explosion that wipes out a U.S. city and an ending which
conveniently ignores the event and worse.
Affleck was a scapegoat for this junk project and though he slept-walked
through it, he was far from the only problem.
Though it was written before 9/11 (Muslim terrorists were replaced with
another enemy) and this wrapped post-9/11, it was left a mess just the
same. All this is why this series
mercifully ended.
As many
of you may know, all four films were intended for issue in the HD-DVD format
and though the set was cancelled, some boxes did manage to reach the press,
including us. One reason is because it
was it was missing the few extras on each film the box said were included. The other is that the films looked and
sounded bad.
The 1080p
2.35 X 1 digital High Definition image in all four cases still have their
problems and are slightly cleaned up versions of the previous masters, but I
have seen all four on 35mm film and they all look better than this. The first three look like aged prints from
older HD masters, while the fourth has some more clarity, but still has detail
and depth issues throughout and all but the fourth were shot in real anamorphic
Panavision. The last one was in lesser,
cheaper-looking Super 35mm film.
As for
sound, each film is offered in Dolby True HD 5.1 mixes and lesser Dolby Digital
as well. Ironically, when Dolby Digital
was introduced to the consumer via 12” LaserDiscs, the first disc to offer the
5.1 AC-3 signal was the Laser of Clear
& Present Danger. That and Sum are digital 5.1 films, while the
first two were Dolby 70mm mag stereo 4.1 sound mixes that could only be heard
originally in 70mm blow-ups of the film.
In all four cases, the sound disappoints considering how good TrueHD can
sound. The first three films sound
second-generation, too compressed and lack the soundfield they should
have. October and Danger have
better soundfields than this. Sum is the newest film, only slightly
more dynamic, yet the soundfield sounds choppy and incomplete. What happened? The titles got caught up in a remastering
mess and the format war. They will need
to be redone down the line.
Extras
include a trailer and making of featurette on all four releases, while October has an audio commentary by John
McTiernan and Fears adds two audio commentary tracks with Robinson (one where
Clancy joins him for some odd reason, the other with cinematographer John
Lindey) plus a visual effects featurette.
- Nicholas Sheffo