“The Hunt for Red October” was based
on Tom Clancy’s debut novel about a rogue Soviet sub captain who attempts to
defect to the West. The book was a
bestseller and Hollywood was interested.
The U.S. Navy was interested in cooperating due to the desire to have a
boost to submarine recruitment similar to the effect “Top Gun” had on naval
aviation. The Navy vetted the script and
was pleased. It allowed inspection of
the non-classified sections of American subs so the production could create
realistic interior sets on soundstages on gimbals for pitch and roll. For the first time, the USN allowed the
filming of a sub in dock. For exterior shots, the production built a 500-foot
mock-up that could submerge and surface.
The movie was directed by John McTiernan who was famous for action films
like “Die Hard”. This was his only war
movie. “The Hunt for Red October” was a
big hit.
The movie is set in the Cold War
before the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The movie opens with a title card informing the audience that there was
an incident in 1984 where a Soviet sub sank in the Atlantic due to a radiation
problem. Very suspicious, right? “But according to repeated statements by both
Soviet and American government nothing of what you are about to see actually
happened.” Wink, wink. Now that the seed is planted, we learn that
there is a Soviet Typhoon class ballistic missile submarine captain who wants
to defect to the West and bring his boat with him. The rest of the officers are on board and if
they aren’t, Capt. Ramius (Sean Connery) will take care of them Ninja
style. A CIA analyst named Jack Ryan
(Alec Baldwin) has discovered that the Red October has a revolutionary
propulsion system called a “caterpillar drive” that makes the boat very
difficult to be picked up by passive sonar (which is basically the ability of
another sub to hear the sub when they are both under water). Coincidentally, the USS Dallas (an attack
submarine) is on duty monitoring Soviet subs in the Atlantic. It’s ace sonar operator Jones (Courtney
Vance) picks up the Soviet boat and then loses it when the caterpillar drive is
initiated. Ryan connects the dots and
convinces the CIA that the reason why the Soviet navy has sallied in large
numbers is to track down the Red October before it can defect. We need to make contact with Ramius and
facilitate his gifting this amazing technology.
Since its your crazy theory, you can do the contacting, Mr. CIA
analyst. Meanwhile the entire Soviet
navy is determined to sink its ship. In
particular, one of Ramius’ proteges is chasing him in an attack sub called the V.K.
Konovalov. It’s like “Fast and Furious”
underwater. The movie would have been
better titled “The Chase of Red October” as the boat is actually easy to find.
“The Hunt for Red October” is an
entertaining rendering of a popular novel.
It has been a long time since I read the book, but as good as it was,
the movie is better. The plot makes clearer
the motivation of Ramius. The book
emphasized the death of Ramius’ wife due to a corrupt system. Sean Connery insisted in clearer motivation
so John Milius was brought in to write dialogue where Ramius speaks about
having an impact on the Cold War. He is
a “good Russian”. Connery also insisted
that the movie make it clear that the incident is occurring before the Gorbachev
era. Once the motivation and goal is
firmed up, the movie is very manipulative to get to the desired
conclusion. Not that that is
particularly unusual for a Hollywood action movie. You decide on the outcome and then arrange
the dots to get there in as exciting a manner as possible. And plausibility be damned. I already mentioned “Fast and Furious” as a
good example.
The connecting of the dots is
competently done by an outstanding cast.
Alec Baldwin was the original Jack Ryan and he does a good job in
portraying him as a reluctant hero. An
egg-head who was also a Marine so it is fairly believable that he can go from
policy wonk to action hero. Scott Glenn is well-cast as the captain of the USS
Dallas. The Navy may have been hoping
for a “Top Gun” type recruiting result, but the sailors are not mavericks. Glenn went on board the USS Houston and was
allowed to parrot orders to get a feel for the captaincy of a sub. Mancuso is not a Captain Queeg. In fact, he even listens to a CIA analyst at
the risk of his boat and its crew. This
is the modern Navy, young men. But the
key recruiting bait is Sonar Operator Jones. Hey potential African-American
submariners, you can now be a Sonar Operator instead of a cook in today’s
silent service. (And in just a few years
with “Crimson Tide”, you could actually become an executive officer.) Not only can you be a sonar expert, but you
can go aboard a Soviet sub with a select group even though the enemy sub
already has a sonar operator. (But they
did not have a black guy.) Sean Connery
is solid especially after he no longer has to fake a Russian accent. He is so good you forget he plays a traitor
and murderer.
The movie is refreshingly free
of submarine movie clichés. It does have
the claustrophobic setting. The sets are
authentic looking. The Navy cooperated
with the mise-en-scene for the Dallas and set designers winged it with the Red
October by putting in lots of dials, buttons, and assorted gizmos. The underwater shots are excellent, but
clearly CGI. This is an improvement over
models, however. The special effects are
good and unfortunately encourage some silly pot developments, as I will point
out below. The sound effects are
outstanding as evidenced by the film’s lone Academy Award for Sound Editing. Speaking of sound, the soundtrack is one of
the best for a war movie.
So, it’s a good movie then? Yes, but it is a bad war movie. Plot devices that have the average viewers on
the edge of their seats, have hard-core war movie lovers pulling their hair. There is much that is ridiculous in this
movie. Let me name a few things that I
found laughable. Ryan is an unheralded
CIA analyst and yet he convinces the head of the CIA and a submarine captain to
take action on his theories even though he presents no convincing
evidence. Although Ramius is meant to be
a positive character, he is certifiably insane if you look at some of the
things he does. He sends a letter to the
head of the Soviet Navy telling of his intentions, which makes his goal
infinitely more difficult. This was a
plot requirement, obviously. By the way,
he made this decision without consulting his fellow mutineers. He traverses an underwater twisting cavern at
a recklessly high speed. The movie is
also chock full of implausibilities - all of which propel the narrative. It is an incredibly small ocean as three
submarines keep running into each other.
Well, not literally running
into each other, but coming within a whisker of each other. They are so close that torpedoes don’t have
time to arm themselves! The final
showdown between the Red October and the Konovalov strains credulity for anyone
familiar with how subs actually fight.
This is intercut with an equally ridiculous showdown between Ryan and a
patriotic Soviet (and that’s exactly what he is!). There’s more, but I won’t bore you with the
details. You may now yell “it’s just a
movie, for Christ’s sake!” It is
just a movie, but this blog reviews war
movies. It is definitely a war movie so
it should be held to a higher standard than “Die Hard”. And the technical adviser should also be held
to a higher standard.
Will it crack my 100 Best War
Movies? No. In fact, although there is a fairly large
submarine subgenre, few are well done.
“Das Boot” stands out because its competitors are weak. It is hard to make a realistic submarine
movie, although the dynamics are rife for drama. Those dynamics tend to be cliched. One thing about “Hunt” is it avoids the
tropes of the subgenre, but it substitutes the tropes of the action genre. Enjoy.
GRADE = C
Totally agree here. Decent movie, terrible "war" movie. I'd loved the book when I read it back in the 80's, but a recent re-read exposed the novel to be so-so.
ReplyDeleteThe subs WERE models. I remember seeing a show on how they filmed them to look like they were deep under water. Lots of smoke and blue-green wavy lights and "ta-da", you gots subs in the briny deep. Torpedoes, though, were clearly CGI and...even back when the movie came out they didn't look that good.
Fun fact: I read somewhere that production was rumored to be held up because the studio was trying to figure out how to get womenz in to the plot! "Cue shower scene and...ACTION!" Probably not true...but then again it wouldn't have surprised me.
You are of course right that this is not really a war movie. It would have done better if the movie had added scenes from the book showing the carefully nonlethal confrontation between Western and Soviet fleets, but that would have distracted from the focus of the film.
ReplyDeleteI love this movie. Some of my favorite parts:
1. That marvelous opening scene giving us a sense of the size of the Red October.
2. Russian sub commanders coldly running risks to achieve their objectives, as though they were playing a chess and had no skin in the game.
3. Jonesey training the new sonar operator and in the process teaching us the concepts of submarine tactics used by the film.
4. The well meaning but unperceptive Russian doctor cluelessly being manipulated by the officers.
5. Every scene where the American official and the Soviet diplomat amiably lie to each other.
Thanks for the input. The movie does have its strengths.
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