The Hunt for Red October Movie Review
The Hunt for Red October Review
"The Hunt for Red October" Overview

Rating: PG
1990
Cast and Crew
Director : John McTiernanProducer : Mace Neufeld
Screenwiter : Larry Ferguson,Donald Stewart
Starring Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn, Sam Neill, James Earl Jones, Joss Ackland, Richard Jordan, Peter Firth, Tim Curry, Courtney B Vance, Stellan Skarsgrd, Jeffrey Jones
If any film in Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan series stands out as the best (or even a
truly great movie), it's The Hunt for Red October. It was Clancy's first book
starring the unlikely hero and the only film to star Alec Baldwin as Ryan.
Baldwin does a great job here -- portraying Ryan not as a gung-ho commando, as
Harrison Ford would interpret the role, or as a know-it-all brat, as Ben
Affleck would shamefully turn in down the line.
Baldwin is perfect, but his sparring partner, Sean Connery, is even better. As
a Russian sub captain defecting to the U.S. -- and bringing his titular, silent
sub with him -- Connery turns in yet another memorable performance, full of
ballsy gusto and cocksureness. Supporting players run the gamut from Sam Neill
to James Earl Jones (the only real fixture in the Jack Ryan cycle) to Tim Curry.
And then there's the story, a clever, underwater, cat and mouse game that spans
the Atlantic Ocean. Connery's Ramius wants to defect, but he can't send a
radio signal to the Americans -- the Russians would intercept it. His officers
are in on the defection as well, but the crew is not, so they must be dealt
with as well, and mass murder is a messy option. When the Russians figure it
out, Ramius finds the Red October being shot at from both sides -- all while
Ryan has figured out the plan and becomes the sole voice of reason in the U.S.
intelligence community (thus sending him across sea and air to save Red October
from destruction (and the world along the way)).
If there's one problem in Red October it's the clumsy digital effects, which
are used for the exterior underwater shots, especially when torpedoes are in
the water. This unfortunately tends to be quite often, looking like the
effects from 1980 instead of 1990. Presumably we have cinematographer Jan de
Bont, who would later become a director himself and give us a few of the worst
movies ever made, to blame for all of this. De Bont has a few memorable shots
that don't involve cartoon torpedoes -- the scene when Ryan enters the Red
October's nuclear missile bank is eerie in its sobering reality: This was the
way World War III might have started, on the back of a stealthy sub carrying
two dozen nuclear warheads.
McTiernan offers a commentary on the finally-released DVD, and a featurette
shows some of the miniature work involved in making the film, plus the
revelation that Kevin Costner was originally cast as Ryan. He backed out to do
Dances with Wolves.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





