Michael B. Jordan seeks revenge in 'Without Remorse' | Movie Review
In the new Tom Clancy adaptation, "Without Remorse," Michael B. Jordan is a Navy SEAL about to trade military life for private security when his pregnant wife (Lauren London) is executed in their Washington D.C. home. It's part of a calculated ambush: The assassins are picking off the men in his unit because of a mishap in Aleppo where the Americans attacked the Russian military instead of Syrians. They were following orders without knowing the full story and soon the Russians are in the U.S. retaliating. Jordan's John Kelly was the target, but he happened to be on the couch with noise-canceling headphones and not the bed when they broke into his home.
It's somewhat frustrating that movies like this tend to be so similar that it almost ensures zero emotional investment in the inciting incident whatsoever. The dead, pregnant wife is a launching-off point and the screenplay (written by Taylor Sheridan and Will Staples) doesn't do us (or them) any favors. Never has there been a more generic couple than the Kellys. One of the precious few scenes with them together has them reminiscing about what appears to be a prom photo that's framed in their dining room. Soon enough, she's dead and John and the movie can really get started.
I suppose it's just as well, since no one is coming to "Without Remorse" for a story about a couple. It just feels like a wasted opportunity to show Jordan in full expectant father mode instead of just fast-forwarding through loaded signifiers to get to a motive.
The good news is that "Without Remorse" is pretty great when it comes to the action, and there is a lot of it. Director Stefano Sollima, who directed the "Sicario" sequel (which Sheridan wrote), keeps the engines moving forward and the set pieces dynamic and distinct from the start. And although John Kelly might not be the most layered guy on the page, it's impossible to take your eyes off him — the power of movie star charisma? He's best when he's playing opposite Jodie Turner-Smith, playing Lt. Cmdr. Karen Greer. She is steely and intimidating without being cliche and makes you want a spinoff about how she got her position.
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Clancy's novel was published in 1993 and it's a story that has been bouncing around Hollywood almost as long as it's been on shelves with everyone from Keanu Reeves to Tom Hardy circling the project at various points in the past two decades. But besides the names used, the book and the film seem to have almost nothing else in common. Instead of setting it during the Vietnam War, Sollima and the writers have made it modern with escalating tensions between Russian and the U.S. Jamie Bell co-stars as a humorless and Robert Ritter as a suspect CIA officer who was the reason for the Aleppo snafu. Guy Pearce adds some gravitas as the Secretary of Defense. With its glossy pedigree, it will be no surprise to anyone that this was originally intended as a Paramount theatrical release before the pandemic.
A movie poster for "Tom Clancy's Without Remorse," starring Michael B. Jordan. (Image courtesy of Paramount Pictures)
Although it has a few twists and turns that you might not see coming, "Without Remorse" is also in some ways exactly what you expect it'll be. It doesn't exactly have anything revelatory to say about global diplomacy or the American military and it takes itself very, very seriously, which makes it a little disarming to see Brett Gelman show up at a key moment. It's also setting up at least one sequel. Jordan will likely be replaying John Kelly (by the end he's John Clark) in "Rainbow Six." Maybe by then the filmmakers will allow themselves to have some fun with his character. Even so, he's just the shot in the arm that the Clancy-verse needed.
"Tom Clancy's Without Remorse," an Amazon Studios release available Friday, is rated R (under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian) by the Motion Picture Association of America for violence. Running time: 109 minutes. Two and a half stars (⭐⭐ 1/2⭐) out of four.