Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit does its best to sound intelligent by bringing geopolitical battle lines into the picture, it lacks the intensity to be categorised as espionage cinema, writes Paloma Sharma.
Based on a character created by American author Tom Clancy, Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit is the fifth installment of the Jack Ryan series.
Jack Ryan’s was one of the many lives that 9/11 changed forever. Ryan (Chris Pine), then a PhD student at the London School of Economics, drops out to become a marine in the US military and serve his country.
An exceptionally intelligent soldier, Ryan is wounded fatally in Afghanistan while saving two of his men when their chopper is attacked by a missile.
Although he manages to survive, his leg is rendered almost completely useless. That's when he meets Cathy (Keira Knightly), a final year medical student who needs to assist him in order to earn her credits in physiotherapy and become a full fledged doctor.
But Cathy is not the only one who has an eye on him.
When a shadow from the CIA comes knocking on Jack's door with an offer that the patriot in him cannot refuse, little does he know that a decade later everything that he holds dear will be endangered.
Let's be honest here - Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit is no Bourne, but it isn't a Mr and Mrs Smith