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‘Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse’ Review: A Routine Mission

Aside from a few set pieces, this action film, starring Michael B. Jordan, is a surprisingly dull adaptation of Clancy’s 1993 novel.

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‘Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse’ | Anatomy of a Scene

The director Stefano Sollima narrates a plane crash sequence in his action thriller starring Michael B. Jordan.

I am a Stefano Sollima and I’m the director of Without Remorse. This sequence comes after the midpoint of the film, when the team is about to parachute to their location. Their plane is shot down and crashes in the ocean. What was important to me was Kelly’s, played by Michael B. Jordan, psychology in such an extreme situation. I wanted to create an intimate relation with the protagonist. So I decided to shoot the whole crash mainly from Kelly’s, Michael’s, point of view, only briefly showing the outside of the plane. The audience needed to be reminded of his determination for revenge. He has to get back the gear to finish the mission. And to shoot this sequence practically, we bought an actual plane, which we cut into pieces. And then we divided the crash sequences into four parts. The first was the crash in the ocean. Outside of the cockpit we built this slide that would release tons of water. And the second part was the rotation. The first class was half-way in a huge tank, and around it we built a rotating mechanism with pistons and motors. That way the entire cast could move while the plane rotated. And the third part was the mechanism that breaks the plane in half. This huge metal rig would split one part of the aisle and then sink it in the tank. At this point, Kelly either aborts the mission or gets the gear. And this is the fourth and final part. Kelley dives in the sinking tail of the plane and uses air pockets to get the oxygen he needs. And this was also all done by Michael himself. He trained for months to be able to hold his breath longer, while swimming and moving in the water in full gear. And this whole cargo scene is all built on Kelly’s breath. The rhythm, the music, the cuts, are all dictated by when Michael would need to get air. I tried to keep these shots on Kelly holding his breath as long as possible, to really have the audience feel his struggle. We need the air like he needs air. High strings creep in every time Kelly’s slowly losing the oxygen in his body. And this sound is released once he refills his lungs. But it’s too late now. And we have the strings back for one last time, the sound of the metal that starts compressing. And we feel his struggle. And then he grabs the last and most important equipment. And finally he gets to the surface, and, at the end, just like Kelly we are finally able to take a breath of relief.

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The director Stefano Sollima narrates a plane crash sequence in his action thriller starring Michael B. Jordan.CreditCredit...Nadja Klier/Paramount Pictures
Tom Clancy's Without Remorse
Directed by Stefano Sollima
Action, Adventure, Thriller, War
R
1h 49m

Situating the bulk of its action in 2019, “Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse” updates Clancy’s 1993 novel by opening with a prologue in Aleppo, Syria, and making reference to the Russian military presence in the country. But the geopolitics and relative lack of cyber-anything otherwise date the movie to a barely post-Cold War period, while the plot mechanics grind along like holdovers from Charles Bronson’s heyday.

Michael B. Jordan plays John Kelly, a Navy SEAL whose pregnant wife (Lauren London) is killed when Russian operatives invade their home, intending to terminate him. A sympathetic colleague from the SEALs (Jodie Turner-Smith) and the defense secretary (Guy Pearce) relax protocol to help Kelly get revenge, but a C.I.A. official (Jamie Bell) gets peeved, signaling to viewers that he’s secretly working for the other side — or at least that the screenwriters, Taylor Sheridan and Will Staples, need them to think that. (Either way, Bell could dial down the superciliousness.)

The director, Stefano Sollima (“Sicario: Day of the Soldado”), manages the proceedings with a minimum of zest, relying on a score by Jonsi (of Sigur Ros) for ambient energy. Even the visuals are gray and indifferent, and the briefer-than-expected running time does not correspond to a brisk pace.

Three set pieces — an ambush outside Dulles airport; a creatively executed hostage-taking at a prison; a plane crash — elevate the movie’s pulse, but most of “Without Remorse” is surprisingly dull, more concerned with laying franchise groundwork than with being exciting on its own terms. Jordan makes a sturdy enough action hero, but the character as portrayed doesn’t give him any contours to play.

Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse
Rated R. The human toll of espionage. Running time: 1 hour 50 minutes. Watch on Amazon Prime Video.

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section C, Page 6 of the New York edition with the headline: Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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