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The Hunt for Red October

The Hunt for Red October

  • Status: Released
  • 02-03-1990
  • Runtime: 135 min
  • Score: 7.382
  • Vote count: 3401

A new technologically-superior Soviet nuclear sub, the Red October, is heading for the U.S. coast under the command of Captain Marko Ramius. The American government thinks Ramius is planning to attack. Lone CIA analyst Jack Ryan 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 Ramius, too. The hunt is on!

Sean Connery

Capt. 1st Marko Ramius

Alec Baldwin

Dr. Jack Ryan

Scott Glenn

CDR Bart Mancuso (USS Dallas)

Sam Neill

Capt. 2nd Vasily Borodin

James Earl Jones

Vice ADM James Greer

Joss Ackland

Ambassador Andrei Lysenko

Richard Jordan

Dr. Jeffrey Pelt, National Security Advisor

Peter Firth

Capt. 2nd Ivan Putin (Political Officer, Red October)

Tim Curry

Dr. Yevgeni Petrov (Red October)

Courtney B. Vance

Petty Officer Ronald 'Jonesy' Jones (USS Dallas)

Stellan Skarsgård

Capt. 2nd Viktor Tupolev (V.K. Konovalov)

Jeffrey Jones

Skip Tyler

Timothy Carhart

Bill Steiner

Larry Ferguson

Chief of the Boat (USS Dallas)

Fred Thompson

Rear ADM Joshua Painter (Enterprise Carrier Battle Group)

Daniel Davis

CPT Charlie Davenport (USS Enterprise)

Ned Vaughn

Seaman Beaumont (USS Dallas)

Anthony Peck

Lt. CDR Philip Thompson (USS Dallas)

Mark Draxton

Seaman (USS Dallas)

Tom Fisher

Seaman (USS Dallas)

Pete Antico

Seaman (USS Dallas)

Ronald Guttman

Lt. Alexander Melekhin (Red October)

Tomas Arana

Igor Loginov (Cook, Red October)

Michael George Benko

Ivan (Red October)

Anatoli Davydov

Officer #1 (Red October)

Ivan G'Vera

Officer #2 (Red October)

Artur Cybulski

Diving Officer (Red October)

Sven-Ole Thorsen

Russian COB (Red October)

Michael Welden

Gregoriy Kamarov (Red October)

Boris Lee Krutonog

Viktor Slavin (Red October)

Kenton Kovell

Seaman (Red October)

Radu Gavor

Seaman (Red October)

Ivan Ivanov

Seaman (Red October)

Ping Wu

Seaman (Red October)

Herman Sinitzyn

Seaman (Red October)

Krzysztof Janczar

Andrei Bonovia (V.K. Konovalov)

Vlado Benden

Seaman (V.K. Konovalov)

George Saunders

Seaman (V.K. Konovalov)

Don Oscar Smith

Helicopter Pilot

Rick Ducommun

Navigator C-2A

George H. Billy

DSRV Officer (Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle)

Reed Popovich

Lt. Jim Curry

Andrew Divoff

Officer Andrei Amalric (Russian Foxtrot Bomber)

Peter Zinner

ADM Yuri Padorin, Chief Political Officer, Soviet Navy

Tony Veneto

Padorin's Orderly

Ben Hartigan

Admiral (Briefing)

Ray Reinhardt

Judge Moore (Briefing)

F.J. O'Neil

General (Briefing)

Robert Buckingham

Admiral #2 (Briefing)

A.C. Lyles

Advisor #1

John McTiernan Sr.

Advisor #2

David Sederholm

Sunglasses

John Shepherd

Russian Foxtrot Pilot

William Bell Sullivan

Lt. CDR Mike Hewitt

Gates McFadden

Caroline Ryan

Louise Borras

Sally Ryan

Denise E. James

Stewardess

Peter Jason

Commander, USS Reuben James (uncredited)

Shane Black

Crewman, USS Reuben James (uncredited)

Mark Rodney

Assistant Joint Chief of Staff (uncredited)

Wuchak

**_Submarine strategies with Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin and Scott Glenn_** Just before Gorbachev’s rise to power in the USSR, a notable naval commander (Connery) takes a technologically advanced submarine on its maiden voyage to conduct missile drills off of America's east coast. Something happens to draw the ire of the Soviet brass while a CIA analyst (Baldwin) believes the captain might be defecting. James Earl Jones, Sam Neill and Courtney B Vance are on hand. Based on the 1984 Tom Clancy novel, “The Hunt for Red October” (1990) is a well-done Cold War thriller and the first of currently five movies involving the character of Jack Ryan. The next two are “Patriot Games” (1992) and “Clear and Present Danger” (1994) featuring Harrison Ford in the role. Then Ben Affleck would take over for one installment, “The Sum of All Fears” (2002), before Chris Pine’s “Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit” (2014). To appreciate this movie, you have to be in the mood for military-oriented drama/suspense rooted in global politics and an all-male cast (except for a cameo by Gates McFadden). Like “Ice Station Zebra” (1968), the scenes mostly consist of men dialoguing & strategizing in the cramped quarters of submarines or vessels; as well as political rooms/offices. A saboteur is no doubt lurking nearby. The movie runs 2 hours, 15 minutes, and was shot in America, e.g. Port Valdez, Alaska (opening sequence); Lake James, North Carolina (closing scene); the state of Washington (Port Angeles & Keyport); naval bases in Los Angeles and Connecticut; USS Blueback; San Diego; as well as Liverpool, England (standing-in for Moscow). GRADE: B

CinemaSerf

When British intelligence sends some photographs to CIA analyst "Jack Ryan" (Alec Baldwin) he immediately races to his boss (James Earl Jones) with what seems like a fantastic tale about a submarine that uses a hydro-dynamic drive. That renders it almost silent to traditional sonar and therefore a threat to NATO. Next thing we know, the Soviet's have mobilised their Atlantic fleet and it occurs to "Ryan" that they could have a defection on their hands. He now has to convince his sceptical superiors that this isn't just a wild goose chase, and that "Ramius" (Sean Connery) has a plan to bring his state of the art warship to the USA. Meantime, onboard the "Red October" we discover a complex plan that will test the mettle of the crew - officers and men alike, as they ostensibly conduct routine sea trials and missile drills - but with an ulterior motive that the audience knows all about, but the crew - well they're very much in the dark as the peril grows. This is a solidly entertaining story of political intrigue and deception and the claustrophobic settings of the submarines work well to give both Connery (who makes no attempt at all to disguise his thick Scots accent) and the much better than usual Baldwin room to manoeuvre. The supporting cast isn't the best - Scott Glenn, Sam Neill and Courtney B. Vance could have been cheerfully fired from a torpedo tubes early on, but they feature only sparingly as the adventure builds to an excitingly paced denouement. Could it really have happened?

kevin2019

"The Hunt for Red October" is an extremely well paced film throughout and it never leaves us in any doubt that Jack Ryan's assumptions about captain Marko Ramius are unfailingly correct and if anything could have sapped the interest and made this nothing more than an overlong and water logged exercise in boredom then this is it, so it is amazing this never actually happens and indeed the opposite just happens to be true. The film also features a wonderfully tense game of cat and mouse through the briny depths as the submarines Konovalov and Red October track each other and it provides a very satisfying conclusion to captain Viktor Tupolev's pursuit of Ramius in which Ramius outsmarts the other captain with fatal results for his opponent.