The War
Against Drugs Up Close And Personal-Harrison Ford’s “Clear And Present Danger”
(1994)-A Film Review
DVD Review
By Sam
Lowell
Clear and
Present Danger, starring Harrison Ford, Willem Defoe, based on the suspense
novel of the same name by Tom Clancy, 1994
The concept
of “clear and present danger” has a long legal and constitutional pedigree
although of late it has been used rather over-abundantly in presidential
decisions, great and small. The concept “clear and present danger to the
national security interests of the United States” usually invoked on anything
from the “war of terror” to classifying documents which should see the light of
day in a working democracy. In the film under review the cinematic adaptation
of Tom Clancy’s best-seller Clear and
Present Danger the concept is
invoked in the pre-9/11 war of drugs which took up a great deal of the political
and social air in 1990s.
Here’s the
play on this one. A close friend of the President (fill in the blank for a surname
from Washington to Trump), a businessman, had been killed along with the rest
of his family on a sea-going yacht in what seemed at first like just another
bizarre killing spree, maybe drug addled pirates or kill-crazy teenagers
looking for kicks on the high seas. No so fast though. Said businessman had
serious and close connections with the cocaine-rich drug cartels down in
Columbia. Ran a nice little profitable for all concerns laundry business when
nobody needed quarters for the washer. To get to the bottom what happened to
his friend, and to help his scandal-ridden administration in need of a boost
come the next approaching election, the President invoked the “clear and
present danger” policy.
That hem haw
decision made by indirection rather than strange out since it involved covert
operations using American troops triggered two movements-one, setting up a
clandestine para-military operation led by John Clark, played by a made for
Special Ops roles Willem DaFoe, to smash the drug lords, or create a certain
amount of good election winds havoc and-two, sending acting-Director of
Intelligence Doctor Jack Ryan, played by Harrison Ford, on the trail of the whereabouts of a few
hundred million laundered dollars which the fallen President’s friend had been
knee deep in turning over.
Of course in any war, in anything involving
drugs and huge sums of money, there is more duplicity, more big career moves
and thought of secure private contractor employment after the cheapjack public
service by the Administration’s lackeys and the over-the- top drug kings and
their confederates than you can shake a stick at from the sabotages of that
black-ops operation to working hand-in-hand with a high-ranking officer of one
of the cartels. Here’s the beauty of high-end politics-one of the drug lord’s
underlings, a seasoned ex-intelligence officer in Cuba now a hired gun for one
of the lords offered to make the drug trade reasonable including many photo ops
of DEA-types busting big loads in exchange for letting him waste the cartel leaders-and
the Administration through the National Security Advisor signed on. Problem: that
high-end Special Ops team was going to be left hanging in the wind-cooked with
no way back.
That is
where our man Jack, straight-shooter Jack, a guy who does not leave his men
behind get that straight gets into the act. Like I said there is a
Washington-drug lord conspiracy formed to make the President look like he is on
top of the war as in any other war-time situation. But it is all a house of
cards after the President’s national security advisor brokers a deal with that
high-ranking official to kill his boss and take over the operations. Nice,
right. Well Jack finds out about this and spends the rest of the film
attempting to expose the budding conspiracy while naturally in a suspense
thriller dodging bullets at every turn in order to get Clark and whoever was
left in the rotting jungles of Columbia. Yeah, even I know you don’t let the
guys who you sent on dangerous missions hang in the wind. When Jack figures out
the high level of duplicity going all the way to the President (remember fill
in the blank for a name) he screams bloody murder before a Congressional
oversight committee. Good thing he had old Clark and his men at his back.
Pretty good thriller.
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