Jack Ryan was a TV show. Surely if John Krasinski had not had all his cinematographic ties would go ahead but could also end like this. The sudden choice of making an extra mega bet or a movie that you want, objectively makes little sense. Unless you want to judge the final as the will to put the classic The End writing on the whole franchise.
The problem of Ghost War is that it compresses in about an hour and forty minutes (two bets or a little more) what could have been the plot of a season, making everything so frantic as one of those many actions of the 1990s in which it is important to give an enemy to fight the opponent, to do some shooting and explosions in the middle and get to the victory of the good finals. Preferably beautiful and spectacular. Everything else can be compressed as much as the characters and their characteristics know them. Just keep your subscriber audience glued to Prime Video for less than two hours by sticking us in maybe ten minutes of advertising?
Photo Credit: Jonny Cournoyer / Prime Video
© Amazon Content Services LLC
Objectively Jack Ryan: Ghost War is an operation that doesn’t make much sense to exist, it’s not that final episode to conclude the stories as Good Omens can be (not by chance however considered as third season), but a detached film but always connected to the series, which can’t be seen by those who did not see the previous seasons. It seems almost the answer to a mass movement to prevent the cancellation of the series, but all this was not there. And then maybe there was the desire of actors to make a reunion between friends.
If you’ve seen the four seasons of Jack Ryan and have a free evening from other serial engagements, you’ll definitely pass it dynamically and excitingly. The protagonist has always less that air of the analyst happened there by chance and increasingly that of the positive hero typical of the action, but it was an inevitable evolution after the first season. Although perhaps, the most interesting part of all this episode was the initial one, even before falling into the continuous action, when Jack had returned to be a civil analyst. We hope they don’t make the decision to make these films every now and then, because stopping is the best choice.
L’articolo Jack Ryan: Ghost War, the review: an unneeded mega episode comes from Dituttounpop.it.




