'Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit' competent, not compelling, reviews say - Los Angeles Times
Advertisement

‘Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit’ competent, not compelling, reviews say

Share via

When it comes to reviews of “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit,†superlatives are in short supply. Most movie critics agree that the reboot of the Tom Clancy action franchise, starring Chris Pine and directed by Kenneth Branagh, is competent — or “serviceable,†or “workmanlike,†or even “fairly diverting†— but not particularly compelling.

The Times’ Kenneth Turan writes that compared to previous films in the franchise (such as “The Hunt for Red October†and “Patriot Gamesâ€), “as well as the modern gold standard of the genre as represented by the ‘Bourne’ epics, ‘Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit’ comes off as a reasonable facsimile, serviceable but not compelling, something that could pass for the real thing if you’re not looking too hard.â€

Pine is “a capable actor†and “acceptable in this latest rebooting,†though he lacks the gravitas of co-star Kevin Costner. Branagh pulls double duty and is “excellent†in his role as a shady Russian plutocrat, but ultimately “there is no shaking the feeling that Branagh and his cast are a kind of an espionage film B team, capable of mild diversion but nothing more.â€

Advertisement

PHOTOS: Winter movie sneaks 2014

The New York Times’s A.O. Scott says much of the film is formulaic and little of it is surprising: “Jaws clench, tempers explode, credits roll.†But at least it’s not dull, he writes, adding, “‘Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit’ is a competently made, moderately diverting variation on a genre standard.â€

Pine, for his part, “is a naturally appealing screen presence who conveys the kind of old-fashioned, homespun decency that doesn’t make you feel as if you’re being gamed,†and “although Mr. Branagh’s performance is best classified as twirled-mustache generic, the other performances are generally likable.â€

Advertisement

The Boston Globe’s Mark Feeney notes that “Shadow Recruit†isn’t based on a Clancy novel but was thoroughly reworked from a script for a movie called “Dubai.†Feeney writes, “Maybe all those alterations are why the movie feels so generic, in its high-gloss, big-budget way. “Jack Ryan†is slick, loud, assured, overplotted (way overplotted), fairly diverting, and pretty much empty.â€

RELATED: More movie reviews by The Times

Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune calls the film “workmanlike†and adds, echoing Turan, “ ‘Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit’ has plenty of action, almost all of it staged and edited in the manner of a Paul Greengrass “Bourne†movie (hand-held frenzy, without the Greengrass spatial clarity).â€

Advertisement

Though the film is “well acted up and down,†Phillips says, it “feels caught halfway between being an idiotic spy picture for adolescents, and a reasonably grown-up thriller for reasonably grown-up grown-ups. The latter isn’t the target demographic for the average franchise re-launch. But that’s what the film is, at heart: an average franchise re-launch.â€

ALSO:

Oscar nominations 2014: Is the academy over Tom Hanks?

From ‘Titanic’ with Buddhist monks to Spielberg in Saudi Arabia

Sundance Film Festival: Kristen Stewart ups ferocity for ‘Camp X-Ray’

Advertisement