Patriot Games Movie Review
Patriot Games Review
"Patriot Games" Overview

Rating: R
1992
Cast and Crew
Director : Phillip NoyceProducer : Mace Neufeld,Robert Rehme
Screenwiter : W. Peter Iliff,Donald Stewart
Starring Harrison Ford, Anne Archer, Patrick Bergin, Sean Bean, Thora Birch, James Fox, Samuel L Jackson, Polly Walker, J.E. Freeman, James Earl Jones, Richard Harris
Out with Alec Baldwin and in with Harrison Ford -- as CIA analyst Jack Ryan
becomes caught up in an international incident again as he lectures in London,
throwing so much action at us that we are meant to forget they switched the
lead actors on us.
Turns out it doesn't matter much. Ford is of course a talented
action/adventure hero, maybe the best ever. It's too bad that this Jack Ryan
adventure has less epic-ness than Red October; it's written small, with Ryan
caught up in an IRA attack on British bigwigs. After capping off a few of them
in an impromptu streetfight, Ryan finds his family hunted down in America.
Eventually -- of course -- he has to save them (using his litany of superspy
tricks and tactics).
It ain't exactly saving the world, but Patriot Games's earnestness belies its
ultimate simplicity and smallness. It isn't until a second viewing that you
realize how you've been had a bit -- or maybe, it isn't until The Crying Game
through the ultimate spin on the IRA movie so successfully to make any other
film on this topic come off as pretentious. Patriot Games is at least a story
well-told and impeccably produced. I can stand a little preaching as long as
it's well-made. So many IRA films are preachy and ugly, so Patriot Games is
actually a bit of a relief.
Sean Bean was actually early in his scowling bad guy phase when Patriot Games
came out, a stereotype he's yet to shed. Anne Archer's eyebrows alone are worth
half a star; as Ryan's doting wife, she's mopey and hard to relate to. It's a
wonder Jacko tried to save her at all.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





