Directed by: John McTiernan
Starring: Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn, Tim Curry, Sam Neill, Fred Dalton Thompson, Peter Firth, Richard Jordan, Joss Ackland, James Earl Jones
The Hunt for Red October is the first Tom Clancy novel adapted to the big screen featuring CIA analyst Jack Ryan, who in later years would become a full-fledged action hero, but in this 1990 adventure he is in the center of the action, but mostly trying to convince the Americans that legendary Soviet submarine captain Marko Ramius (Connery) is planning to defect after stealing Russia's latest technological marvel: a submarine undetectable by sonar.
Ryan hinges his belief on a brief meeting he had with Ramius at a state dinner years before, plus years of studying the man and his maneuvers. The Hunt for Red October's suspense draws on whether Ryan can convince his superiors that Ramius is not planning to start World War III. It's quite a gamble, especially for those who believe Ryan solely on faith and without concrete evidence. Ramius plays his intentions close to the vest. He kills a KGB agent assigned to accompany him on the sub ("Where I'm going, you cannot follow") and only his XO Borodin and a few others aboard know his true motives. The movie slowly reveals what we and Ryan suspect, but Ramius doesn't make it easy. He is a revered captain so used to government scrutiny that he knows he has to play a silent game of chess and know his opponent's moves before they do. Ramius soon has to outwit the American subs who are being ordered to blow him out of the water.
Of course, Connery plays the Lithuanian Ramius with a Scottish accent. He's Sean Connery and you're not, so we forgive that premise. Liam Neeson and Arnold Schwarzenegger do the same thing to the point that no explanations are needed as to why they have respective Irish and Austrian accents. They just do, and we move on. His aura of mystery is crucial to the success of The Hunt for Red October. Meanwhile, Jack Ryan (Baldwin) is collected, analytical, and expends plenty of energy pleading his case. He is allowed more emotion than Ramius because he's not operating a prototype nuclear submarine and perhaps hiding an agenda. The Jack Ryan of the recent Jack Ryan: Ghost War is unrecognizable when compared with Baldwin's.
The Hunt for Red October allows for suspense and intelligence. It isn't simply mindless action. In the waning years of the Cold War with tensions easing but both sides being cautious, the episode here could prove disastrous if Ryan isn't able to talk the Americans out of blowing Ramius and the Red October submarine out of the water. If anything, The Hunt for Red October is a last gasp before the old Cold War ended and a new one began shortly after.
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