The latest adventure concerning the late Tom Clancy’s Jack
Ryan character/hero can very much be compared to an airport-novel; those short
and sweet paperbacks packed tight with worldwide espionage and double-crosses
and designed for the sole purpose of passing the time away. JACK RYAN: SHADOW
RECRUIT is successful in that, and very little else.
Young Jack Ryan (Chris Pine) is recruited by CIA operative
Agent Harper (Kevin Costner) to uncover and thwart a worldwide financial
terrorist plot by the evil Russian Viktor (Kenneth Branagh). Ryan’s work leads
him on a global trek, where he is joined by his fiancé Cathy (Keira Knightley).
JACK RYAN: SHADOW RECRUIT offers all of the cliché elements
of any given spy story written and filmed over the past fifty years; rich bad
guys with immense power, global-decimation schemes, clandestine meetings in
movie theatres, the sly passing of envelopes and high-tech surveillance inside
disguised vans..etc. While the setup and execution of all of these elements is serviceable
enough, the film never gets past any of these familiar pieces and parts and
instead latches onto them. The plot is paper thin (save the world), and the
characters have absolutely no personal obstacles or storylines to deal with; everyone
is exactly the same as they were when the film started. The big-bad villain is
also cliché and nothing new; just a rich man with an axe to grind who kills off
his own people when they don’t get the job done for him.
Kenneth Branagh, who stars as the dull bad guy, also directs
and feels completely out of his element. Although the interaction between
characters is decent enough, the action scenes are shot way too tight with way
too much goddamn shaky-cam. The buildups to big events have very little
tension, and the characters, when faced with something emotional, seem to
overcome things in the blink of an eye.
Chris Pine doesn’t stink up the joint, but he doesn’t invade
any new territory either. He does everything that is asked of him, and doesn’t
go any further. Keira Knightley feels lost amongst everything, and she has very
little chemistry with Pine…leaving their romance tough to buy into. Kevin
Costner is his usual brilliant Costner-self, and Branagh turns in the best performance
even though his character is a disappointing snore.
The finale is bit predictable and can be seen from a mile away,
as again, SHADOW RECRUIT closely follows an espionage-story template and seldom
deviates. There is enough here to have a decent time, but lacks any sort of
emotional punch or likeable characters to root for. SHADOW RECRUIT is very much
like an airport-novel; a nice little time-waster which is forgotten about the
minute you walk through the gate.
BOTTOM LINE: Rent it
No comments:
Post a Comment
A few rules:
1. Personal attacks not tolerated.
2. Haters welcome, if you can justify it.
3. Swearing is goddamn OK.