 |
The
Sum of All Fears |
| Rated
PG-13 |
| Runtime:
2hr 4min |
| Starring:
Ben Affleck, Morgan Freeman, Bridget Moynahan, Liev Schreiber,
Alan Bates |
|
MFG
Rating: 4/5
|
The
Sum of All Fears is the fourth Tom Clancy novel to be made into
a movie joining The
Hunt for Red October, Patriot
Games and Clear
and Present Danger. This time out Jack Ryan is played by Ben
Affleck. If you overlook the obvious timeline problems Affleck's
age presents and view this as a standalone film, it is quite entertaining.
In
this installment, we find Dr. Jack Ryan just starting his career
at the CIA working as a low level analyst. This is a much younger
Jack Ryan than we met in the previous stories, and he is only just
beginning to date the future Mrs. Ryan. The timeline issue here
is that this is not a prequel, it is set in the current day, although
Jack himself has obviously gone thru some sort of time warp. Bottom
line here is just put the timeline out of your head and sit back
and enjoy the movie, anything else will drive you crazy.
The
story here has Jack getting the attention of the Director of the
CIA, played extremely well by Morgan Freeman, with his excellent
research on the man who has just become the Russian President. Ryan
ends up involved in a major international crisis involving a nuclear
device that is destined to be detonated in the U.S. and a standoff
between the US and Russia that could lead to all our nuclear war.
As is usually the case with a Clancy novel, his expertise of national
security and warfare makes the story quite believable. We enjoy
that touch of realism, but if you're looking for escapism you may
find this story perhaps TOO believable in light of recent world
affairs.
The
film has a few flaws. Although I haven't read the book, I get the
distinct impression that most of those are from trying to cram a
huge novel into a 2 hour movie. It is also pretty obvious that the
movie tries to soften the blow of hitting us with a terrorist scenario
that could actually happen. First off, at some point the bad guys
here were changed to be "Neo-Nazi's" instead of Arabs.
Second, Ryan's girlfriend adds virtually nothing to the storyline.
We get the idea she is there to provide some tender timeouts. Instead
of "comedic relief", we feel like we're being hit with
"romantic relief".
If
you forget the books and forget the previous movies, so the timeline
issues do not drive you crazy, this is a very good movie. We have
no problem accepting Affleck as a young Jack Ryan, he does a great
job. It is not the type of movie we'll watch over and over, but
it presents a very compelling story and presents one of those scenarios
that makes you think. Unfortunately, the events portrayed in this
movie could easily happen in real life. We hope they never do, but
we also cant help but be sucked into such a gritty realistic story.
If you're looking for a more serious, more mature movie this summer,
The Sum of All Fears is a good choice.
-
Billy Bob
|
Gun Play
Some
guns, but they are small potatoes compared to the other weapons
in play here.
Blood & Gore
Lots
and lots of flesh wounds.
Car Chases
No
chases as such, but some fast reckless driving.
T&A
Jack's
girlfriend stays pretty well covered unless you're into feet.
Chuckles
Morgan
Freeman gets some good lines. |
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