This time around, director
Phillip Noyce takes over for John McTiernan, and brings with him
the undisputable charisma of Harrison Ford. While the first film
focused on Sean Connery’s Ramius more than the character of
Jack Ryan, Patriot Games chiefly follows the nonstop politically-fueled
adventures of our favorite analyst. There is no time for paranoia
as the more irrational agitators within the IRA journey to the States
to plan political strikes and to attack Ryan’s family. Despite
the realistic action sequences, Patriot Games slows its pace as
it includes numerous scenes to establish characters’ motives,
jobs, backgrounds, and relationships. Because of this attention
to detail, the audience can become more involved with the heroes
and villains, but die-hard action junkies might grow impatient.
Patriot Games is not an out-and-out action film – it also
has the substance of a great mystery, and the nerve-wracking anticipation
of a suspenseful thriller. From start to finish it is essentially
a chase movie – although Ryan and Miller frequently switch
roles of hunter and target.
The original music by James Horner is reminiscent of Aliens,
with its eerie violins and the constant contrast of serenity with
violence. Patriot Games is a very serious film, and is not riddled
with comic relief. The villains are craftier than the average
blow-em-up actioner, and subsequently the protagonists must also
be smarter to uncover the various plots. With this focus on intelligence,
the film spends time tracking enemy movements, brooding over traitors,
anticipating double crosses, and watching as soldiers in night
vision goggles and stealth gear descend upon Ryan’s house
– all staples of a Tom Clancy novel.
More modern than Red October, and certainly more intense (Patriot
Games garnered an R rating as opposed to October’s PG),
Jack Ryan is the new hero in town to watch. More realistic than
James Bond and Jason Bourne combined, the audience can take extra
delight in seeing Ryan pick up enemy weapons to use against them
– a sensible factor many movie heroes predictably fail to
do.
- Mike Massie