In this post-9/11 era, Soviet Union no longer exists and
American spy agencies are tracking non-state militant groups
instead. But director Kenneth Branagh said Ryan's longtime
nemesis is still relevant.
"It felt as though there had been a shift around, and the
classic Cold War adversary, America-Russia, had done this flip,"
said Branagh, who also plays the film's principal villain,
Russian oligarch Viktor Cherevin.
"Now, the new financial power, the new empire is Russia," he
added, "and the wood-paneled club rooms of Wall Street feel like
they're connected to an old empire that's somehow connected to
the makers of the American economy in the late 19th century."
The film backed by Paramount Pictures crafts a new origin story
for CIA hero Ryan, portrayed by Chris Pine. It recasts the agent
as a finance wizard and millennial who uncovers what appears to
be a Russian plot to dump $2 trillion onto the open market in
coordination with a terror attack on the United States.
The film's Kremlin-blessed conspiracy is masterminded by
Cherevin, whose weakness is romance and drink, and is intended
to create a run on banks in the U.S., plunging the country into
a second Great Depression.
"Shadow Recruit" begins on September 11, 2001, in London, where
a 19-year-old Ryan is completing his Ph.D. at the London School
of Economics.
Ryan immediately abandons his studies when he feels the call to
enlist in the U.S. military for the Afghan War.
"I very much liked what David Koepp did in taking it out of the
Cold War context, putting it into a credible, modern threatening
situation, (in) which this civilized, modest, I would say,
gentlemanly man with a brilliant mind is put at risk," said
Branagh, a Northern Irishman best known for his film adaptations
of Shakespeare. Adam Cozad and David Koepp wrote the script,
which was not based on a Clancy novel.
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"A QUESTIONING MAN"
Much like the baby boomer Ryan of best-selling novels "The Hunt for
Red October" and "Clear and Present Danger" that were adapted for
the big screen, he has his military service cut short by a
helicopter accident and later is recruited to the CIA by agent
William Harper (Kevin Costner).
Ryan, who struggles to keep his CIA job a secret from his girlfriend
Cathy (Keira Knightley), unwittingly goes from being an agent
tracking financial transactions to an operative fighting Cherevin's
multi-layered plot that he suspects but has no way to prove.
The Ryan character is now in his fifth big-screen
iteration. He last was in theaters in 2002's "The Sum of All Fears,"
about black market nuclear weapons and a white supremacy conspiracy
with Ben Affleck as the spy.
Pine, who navigated the expectations of playing William Shatner's
beloved Captain Kirk character in the new "Star Trek" films, said he
was familiar with the Ryan persona portrayed by Alec Baldwin and
Harrison Ford in the 1990s but leaned on the script for his own,
post-9/11 Ryan.
"I wanted a very questioning man who was very cognizant of the
world, who engaged with the world, a man who was aware of what had
happened in the CIA with extraordinary renditions and water boarding
and torture," Pine said.
"Fear was really my central thing, his experience in the war being
injured, emotionally, psychically, physically, how does PTSD
(post-traumatic stress disorder) play a role in someone who fights
again?" Pine said.
(Editing by Patricia Reaney and Amanda
Kwan)
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