Rating the Ryans: Tom Clancy’s hero returns to the screen
As he takes on the role of reluctant hero Jack Ryan, John Krasinski (“The Office,” “A Quiet Place”) isn’t just trying to fill big shoes. He’s trying to fill a lot of shoes.
Four other actors have played the brilliant analyst-turned-field operative who jumped from the pages of Tom Clancy’s bestselling thrillers to box-office success and a five-film franchise.
Krasinski makes five, bringing the character to TV in Amazon’s eight-episode “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan.” The series debuts Friday, set in the present day and telling a story not based on any of Clancy’s novels.
None of the portrayals is bad, but some are better than others. Let’s rank Ryans (from last to first):
5. Chris Pine
In “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit” (2014), Pine, 33 at the time, shows Ryan’s nerdy, data-analysis side, sussing out a Russian financial scheme designed to crash the U.S. economy.
However, Pine’s solid, earnest document sleuth takes too quickly to field work, demonstrating a skill set that doesn’t work as well for an analyst more comfortable doing research. The portrayal yields a potent Ryan but loses the fish-out-of-water charm that is central to Jack’s appeal.
4. Ben Affleck
“The Sum of All Fears” (2002) veers sharply from Clancy’s 1991 novel, presenting a younger, not-yet-field-tested character rather than the deputy director of the CIA.
Affleck, then 29, and Pine have the misfortune of starring in weaker films. But the higher stakes in “Sum” — potential nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia — and Ryan’s naivete and awkwardness in Affleck’s film, edge out Pine.
3. John Krasinski
The reimagination of the franchise in “Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan” takes the character back to the early days of his CIA career and his introduction to future wife Cathy (Abbie Cornish).
Krasinski’s Ryan is a desk jockey whose talent for crunching numbers leads him to a potential terrorist threat, sarcastically dubbed “a brand new bin Laden” by his skeptical new boss (Wendell Pierce). But it looks like Jack may be right.
The episodic format gives “Jack Ryan” the chance to take its time developing the character from novice to pro.
2. Harrison Ford
The “Star Wars” legend, the only actor credited with multiple Ryan films, earns this spot based on the second of his two outings, 1994’s “Clear and Present Danger.”
In this version — Ford was 52 when “Danger” premiered — an older, wiser Ryan is appointed head of CIA intelligence operations, and fights a twopronged battle. As he seeks congressional funding to take on Colombian drug cartels, he learns a secret West Wing cabal and a cartel double agent are scheming to kill the cartel’s leaders and exterminate a U.S. black-ops team to eliminate any evidence.
The internal skulduggery tests Ryan’s analytical skill and field readiness, making the film a bigger challenge for the character and a better showcase for Ford than the less-complex, IRA-focused “Patriot Games” in 1992.
1. Alec Baldwin
In 1990’s “The Hunt for Red October,” set in the Cold War ’80s, Ryan is a book-smart, field-averse CIA analyst who rejects conventional wisdom by theorizing that a rogue Soviet submarine captain (Sean Connery) isn’t bent on attacking the U.S., but instead seeks to defect and hand over his state-of-the-art technology.
A youthful Baldwin, then 31, deftly conveyed Ryan’s creative intellect and wet-behind-the-ears callowness. It was a combustible mix that drew the CIA analyst into problems only he could detect, while raising questions for viewers (and himself) about whether he was capable of solving them.