The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

John Krasinski tackles terror, career shift in ‘Jack Ryan’

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LOS ANGELES » John Krasinski comes across in conversati­on as a disarming match to his screen image, the sort of easy-going, decent guy he played on TV’s “The Office” and in the romantic comedy “Away We Go.”

Make that his former image. In a burst of creative versatilit­y, he’s fashioned himself into an acclaimed film director with “A Quiet Place” (in which he plays opposite wife Emily Blunt) and muscular heroes in the movie “13 Hours: The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi” and the new Amazon Prime Video series “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan,” debuting Friday.

In low-key style, Krasinski is proving that expectatio­ns are to be ignored. Who could have predicted that gangly, deskbound Jim of “The Office” would be hunting Middle Eastern terrorists as fledgling CIA analyst Ryan, or that the latest iteration of Clancy’s big-canvas work would arrive — cinematica­lly intact — on the small screen?

Such boundary-busting can be traced back to Krasinski’s 2005-13 “Office” days, in the sitcom that he considered “the best thing out there, movie or television.”

“I felt so proud to be a part of it, and so my definition of television and film was always blended. I never saw it as film or television, but rather just the best project going, the best character I can play,” he said, something that’s easier than ever to find on TV with the explosion of “really great shows.”

The specific attraction of “Jack Ryan,” his first series since “The Office,” was both its form and content.

With the debut season’s eight episodes (filming on season two is already underway), it’s possible to reimagine and delve into the title role in ways not possible in a time-constraine­d movie, Krasinski said. And then there’s the character himself, something of a childhood obsession for the actor.

“It may sound hokey, but I think that Jack Ryan was always one of those characters that you actually thought you could be one day. You can’t grow up to be Superman or Spider-Man,” he said. It was plausible to imagine becoming Ryan, a man who “used his brain and his instincts and was able to do extraordin­ary things.”

Casting the part was critical, said series creators and executive producers Carlton Cuse (“Lost”) and Graham Roland (“Mile 22”).

“Carlton told me, ‘We could write the best show either of us have ever written, but if don’t have the right guy playing Jack Ryan the show is just not going to work,’” Roland recalled. A winning “everyman quality” needed for Ryan came across in Krasinski’s work in “The Office,” they said, but it was “13 Hours” that cinched the deal.

“We felt, wow, this is the guy who not only has (Ryan’s) charm and intelligen­ce ... but he also had the physicalit­y to be an action hero,” Roland said.

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