Clear and Present Danger (Special Collector's Edition)
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Canada Movie Reviews of Clear and Present Danger (Special Collector's Edition)Movie Review: A more cerebral Ryan This is a completely different film to its predecessor, Patriot Games - not necessarily better or worse, but its tone and direction are much more different, and its use of Ryan certainly is. We see far more of James Earl Jones' character Greer in this movie, and that is a good thing: he is a strong figure, a mentor and a sounding-board for Ryan, and watching his decline and death brings both counterpoint and perspective to the other on-screen events. The other supporting cast don't serve a single-minded purpose as they did in Patriot Games, rather they interact more, engage in political manouvreing, and indulge in self-serving machination. Ryan tries to weave his way through all this, choosing the path he believes is right, often with great doubt and a lack of confidence. This is not Patriot Games, where the goals and the target were clear and distinct, and where the cast either attacked or defended you - this is a far more politically unstable movie. Corruption is an underlying theme in this movie. It is not necessary big-money corruption, merely the act of cover-up, subterfuge and failure to follow due process. The president wants vengance against Colombian drug lords so orders covert military operations, against the express wishes of Congress, while bit-players in the CIA and NSC manouvre to protect themselves if and when it all goes bad. When it does, they surrender the troops in a fit of deal-making and cover-up, while the key drug lord himself has been double-crossed. Ryan, in the guise of intelligence expert rather than fighter (though he sees his share of that) puts all the pieces together and goes to any extent to do what is right: firstly to rescue the troops from Colombia, and then to expose the stench of presidential and bureacratic corruption. Can you guess if he is successful? The stand-out scene is when Ryan returns and confronts the President in the Oval Office, bunting away his offers and then his threats. Ford's acting in this scene is terrific: he conveys frustration, sadness and raw fury, barely restrained by respect for the office, as he squares off against the most powerful man in the world. But in the end he leaves with his dignity intact, which is the underlying moral of the story: that doing the right thing is ultimately dignifying. In essence this is what Tom Clancy's Ryan is all about. |
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