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Original Title: The Hunt For Red October

Genge: Action,Adventure,Thriller

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In November 1984, the Soviet Union's best submarine captain in their newest sub violates orders and heads for the U.S. Is he trying to defect or to start a war?
A new, technologically-superior Soviet sub, the Red October, is heading for the U.S. coast under the command of Marko Ramius. The American government thinks Ramius is planning to attack. A lone CIA analyst has a different idea: he thinks Ramius is planning to defect, but he has only a few hours to find him and prove it--because the entire Russian naval and air commands are trying to find him, too. The hunt is on!
With the release of the new Jack Ryan movie i thought i would take a trip down memory lane. It has been at least 15 years since i had last seen The Hunt For Red October and i must say it is still a fantastic movie.

Sean Connery is brilliant, Alec Baldwin plays in my opinion the best role of his career. The support actors are fantastic and the story is still as reverting today as it was all those years ago.

If you have never seen i highly recommend you do if you have seen take a trip back and watch again I'm sure you will be pleasantly surprised how well it has aged. I can't remember when I have given such a good movie a 7, instead of an 8. The reason it stays in the "not bad" category (7) is the implausible plot: A career military man is not going to defect, especially if he has no solid reason, other than to "go fishing". 2.) A career military man is not going to deliver a cutting-edge weapon into the hands of those who could use it to annihilate his homeland, whether it is Lithuania or Soviet Union. 3.) officers on-board the ship are not going to allow it to be commandeered and handed over to the U.S.

In real life, Capt. Ramius (played by Sean Connery) would have been shot by one of his officers as they arose from the dinner/meeting table, after Ramius announced his intention to defect.

In real life, a cook (or even an engineer) would have no first-hand access, knowledge nor ability to disable the hydro-drive, since it is obviously connected to the nuclear powerplant in the sub.

In real life, a crew member would not have been allowed to have heard the Captain's plans to defect.

In real life, the Captain of the ship would not have mailed a letter to the Soviet government telling them he is handing the ship over to the U.S.

While an attempt is made, in the movie, to link Ramius' "defection" with the guilt he felt for having been at sea when his beloved wife died, it is not given enough emphasis, and I was left forever wondering if the Captain was doing all this "just because he can".

Alec Baldwin is unconvincing as a "C.I.A. analyst", through no fault of his own: He played a great part. What he failed to convince was that he was the military weapons expert/psychologist/biographer that he needed to be.

Connery played his role to a "t" as well; inscrutable, straight-forward, disciplined, haunted.

While many of the tactical scenes in Hunt For Red October are thrilling and some left me breathless, I felt the need to understand Ramius, the man.

The scenes with dialogue between Richard Jordan (as secretary of state?) and Josh Ackland as the Soviet ambassador were particularly well-done and very helpful in establishing the worldwide social ramifications of the event.

One final reason that I was unable to give a "very good" score to this otherwise very good movie was it's formulaic demonizing of Russia. This political rhetoric is going to get us into trouble some day, unless we see it as the hype that it is, formulated and fed to us by the arms industry corporations that own many of the largest broadcasting and media companies in Hollywood. With U.S. corporate/military aggression toward Russia being what it is today, thank your fifty stars that The Hunt For Red October is not real. Colorful and exciting, yet unless you're a young moviegoer, nothing in it takes you by complete surprise. (It's less a nail-biter than a chin-stroker.)
When Soviet captain Marko Ramius (Sean Connery) of the Red October, the Soviet navy's newest Typhoon-class nuclear submarine, starts heading for the U.S. coast, former Marine turned CIA analyst Jack Ryan (Alec Baldwin), who once met Ramius and wrote a bio on him, must determine whether Ramius is trying to defect or to start a war. However, the Red October has suddenly disappeared. The Hunt for Red October is a 1984 novel by American author Tom Clancy. It was inspired by two real events: (1) the deviation of a Soviet Navy submarine to Gotland in 1961 by Captain Jonas Pleskys (a Lithuanian), and (2) a 1975 mutiny aboard the Soviet frigate Storozhevoy, which was an attempt to defect to Gotland by Captain Valery Sablin. Clancy's novel was adapted for the movie by screenwriters Larry Ferguson and Donald Stewart. Ramius' political officer Ivan Putin (Peter Firth) was the only one that Ramius had not personally handpicked for his inner circle. Since the political officer knew what the original orders were and would have recognized as fake the orders that Ramius subsequently substituted, Ramius had to dispense with him. Yuri Gagarin [1934-1968] was a Soviet cosmonaut and the first human in space. Ramius refers to him when he mentions "the days of Sputnik and Yuri Gagarin" in his address to the crew. On 12 April, 1961, Gagarin was launched into space aboard the Vostok 1. After about 1 hour 48 minutes, he returned to earth, landing safely in Siberia. Twenty-three (23) days later, on 5 May, 1961, Alan Shepard [1923-1998] would become the first American in space. Gagarin died at the controls of a malfunctioning MIG fighter in 1968. Russian newspapers reported that Gagarin remained at the controls to avoid hitting a school, rather than ejecting from the craft to save his own life, further elevating Gagarin's status as a hero. Ryan describes the caterpillar drive as a "magneto hydrodynamic drive" system, a propulsion system that allows the Red October to run virtually silent. In short, it's a cloaking system allowing a submarine to sneak up on its targets without being detected. Two reasons. Ramius wanted to defect because of the circumstances surrounding his wife's death a year before the story opens. What happened to his wife is not shown in the movie but talked about in depth in the book. She was killed because the corruption of the Soviet system allowed a drunk doctor (the son of a Politburo member) to operate on her with poor quality drugs and, as a result, she died from a simple operation. This showed Ramius the corruption of the Soviet system. The other reason is that Marko hates the cold war, its cost on the lives of him and his men, and above all else he wants to avoid a real war. Marko knows that the Red October was created as a "first strike" weapon to get a first nuclear strike on America in event of a war, and therefore give them a significant advantage in the war and increase the odds of it happening. When Marko and his friend are talking about what they want for the future, Marko talks about the peace he enjoyed when fishing as a young man. Marko states earlier that he came up with his plan (to defect) when he saw the plans for the Red October. He steals the Red October to prevent the Russian government from being able to use it to start a war. The American bigwigs knew that Ramius sent a letter to his wife's uncle, Admiral Yuri Illyich Padorin, after which the majority of the Soviet naval force was ordered to hunt down the Red October and destroy it. Their first assumption was that Ramius was a rogue, intending to attack the U.S. under his own volition. Then Jack Ryan remembered that it was the first anniversary of Ramius' wife's death. It dawned on Ryan that another explanation for Ramius taking a course for the American coast and for the Soviet fleet to issue orders to destroy the sub was because the letter Ramius sent to Padorin contained his intention to defect. Ryan was sending a message from the Dallas by way of Morse code with flashing lights on the periscope. Ramius saw the message from the Red October. Ryan requested that Ramius acknowledge the message with a single ping, so Ramius ordered the sonar ping in order to verify the range to the other submarine (which was just an excuse he gave). The crew on the Red October did not know that Ramius was responding to a message sent from the Dallas. The exchange of cigarettes between military men in the field is often seen in films as a sign of good will. After successfully dodging the Russian topedo by speeding at it head on before it can arm itself, Ramius notes that Captain Tupolev (Stellan Skarsgård) won't make that mistake again and prepares for battle. Suddenly, gunfire erupts, fatally wounding Ramius' first officer Vasily Borodin (Sam Neill) with a bullet meant for Ramius. The as-yet unidentified sniper runs into the missile bay, intending to rig a missile in order to blow up the Red October. He is followed by Ryan and Ramius, who takes a bullet in the shoulder. Ryan continues going after the saboteur whom he identifies as Loginov (Tomas Arana), the Red October's cook, just before he shoots him. Meanwhile, the Konovalov has fired a live torpedo at the Red October. With the help of the Dallas, the Red October takes evasive measures, causing the torpedo to search out another ship, finally settling on the Konovalov, blowing it out of the water. The President's national security adviser, Jeffrey Pelt (Richard Jordan), explains to Soviet ambassador Andrei Lysenko (Joss Ackland) that recovery of the Red October wreckage is too difficult at this time but that the crew is safe and will be returned to the Soviets. Lysenko mentions that the Konovalov has also been lost, causing Pelt to tsk.Some time later, Ramius, Ryan, Mancuso (Scott Glenn), Melekhin (Ronald Guttman), and the Red October head up the Penobscot River in Maine. Ryan assures Ramius that this is the last place satellites will ever try to look for the sub. 'Welcome to the New World, sir,' Ryan then says to Ramius. In the final scene, Ryan flies back to London with Stanley's new baby brother. The book explains this a bit better than the movie. Loginov was GRU (Glavnoye razvedyvatel'noye upravleniye), which was the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Soviet Union. He was secretly assigned to the Red October on her maiden voyage and remained under cover as a cook's assistant. This is hinted at early in the film. When Ramius is speaking with his Political Officer, he says, "How many agents did the KGB put aboard my boat?" To which the officer responds, "...If the KGB or the GRU has agents aboard, I would be the last to know." The novel reveals that before leaving Murmansk, Loginov was briefed by his military intelligence superiors on the details of the Red October's official orders (that it was to rendezvous with the Konovolov). Thus, when Ramius announced over the ship's P.A. system that their orders were to sail to New York to conduct missile drills, there was a shot of Loginov in the galley with a perplexed look on his face. This was a subtle foreshadow that Loginov knows that the real orders were not being followed. That announcement, coupled with the "accidental" death of the political officer and then witnessing Ramius removing and keeping the second missile key, compelled Loginov to sabotage the caterpillar drive. He only did one—the initial sabotage of the caterpillar drive. All the other ones with the reactor plant and caterpillars were done by the Chief Engineer under Captain Ramius' orders. These were done in a controlled way to cause fear and panic among the non-defecting crew. It was part of their cover story. The only other sabotage the Loginov tried was at the end when he tried to set off a "range safety package" (RSP) on one of the missiles. An RSP is normally on board a test missile so if something goes wrong and the missile heads off course, they can self destruct the missile. On operational missiles, the RSP is normally removed to prevent the intentional destruction by the enemy in-flight to targets. It is explained in the book that an RSP was left installed on one missile for the purpose of being a self destruct device for the whole sub in case of just such an emergency requiring destruction of the sub. Loginov, being a GRU agent, was taught how to do this. Fortunately, Jack Ryan shoots him before he is able to touch the wires together and blow up the Red October. In the book the US president personally plays a leading role in the events and several other US submarines and a Royal Navy aircraft carrier are also involved in the search. There is a subplot involving an American spy in the Kremlin who provides NATO with the details of the Soviet fleet's mission to sink the Red October and another with a KGB spy who is turned by the FBI and used to relay false information back to the Soviets. We see the Soviet Politburo discuss the information but there is no scene where the Red October has to evade an air-dropped torpedo and the GRU agent on board never sabotages the caterpiller drive. Ryan never boards the USS Dallas which never receives any orders to sink the Red October whilst another Soviet submarine is destroyed by a reactor accident during the hunt. Following the fake radiation leak the Soviet crew are conveyed from the Red October by an American Deep Sea Rescue Vehicle mini-submarine (DSRV) rather than abandoning ship and presume that Ramius and the officers scuttled the vessel in order to prevent it falling into American hands. The evacuated crew never witness any of its combat with the Soviet Alfa class submarine which is sunk by the Red October ramming it rather than the USS Dallas luring its own torpedo onto it. An obsolete US Navy submarine is then blown up in the spot where the Red October was supposed to have exploded in order to provide wreckage that will convince the Soviets that their boat is definitely destroyed. So far, Clancy has written 12 novels that feature Jack Ryan. They are: The Hunt for Red October (1984), Patriot Games (1987), The Cardinal of the Kremlin (1988), Clear and Present Danger (1989), The Sum of All Fears (1991), Without Remorse (1993), Debt of Honor (1994), Executive Orders (1996), Rainbow Six (1998) (mention only), The Bear and the Dragon (2000), Red Rabbit (2002), and The Teeth of the Tiger (2003). Of the 12 books in the Ryan universe, five have so far been made into movies—The Hunt for Red October, Patriot Games (1992) (1992), Clear and Present Danger (1994) (1994), The Sum of All Fears (2002) (2002), and Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (2014) (2014). Without Remorse is currently in development without an expected release date.




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