Jack Ryan: Ghost War Review – ⭐⭐ / 5 Stars
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War is slick, polished, and consistently watchable, thanks largely to John Krasinski’s grounded performance and the film’s strong action design. However, the movie plays things far too safely, relying on familiar spy-thriller tropes instead of delivering the political sharpness and emotional depth that made the original series stand out. It works as a one-time binge for fans of the franchise, but it never fully evolves into the gripping big-screen event it could have been.
| Title | Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War |
| Director | Andrew Bernstein |
| Lead Cast | John Krasinski, Wendell Pierce, Michael Kelly, Sienna Miller, Betty Gabriel |
| Genre | Spy thriller, action |
| Streaming On | Amazon Prime Video |
| Release Date | May 20, 2026 |
| Runtime | Around 2 hours |
| Flickonclick Rating | 2 / 5 |
Some characters refuse to retire. Jack Ryan is clearly one of them. After four seasons on Amazon Prime Video that turned John Krasinski into a believable spy, the franchise has now jumped to a full-length film called Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War.
The series had a loyal fan base, sharp writing, and a clear voice. The big question now is whether the movie keeps that same energy or trades it in for a louder, safer Hollywood version.
Directed by Andrew Bernstein and streaming on Prime Video from May 20, 2026, Ghost War tries to be both a fresh start and a familiar comfort watch. It mostly lands somewhere in the middle.
The film follows Jack Ryan as he digs into a chain of suspicious international money transfers. The trail quickly grows into something much bigger — a hidden terrorist network operating across Europe and the Middle East. Before long, the desk-job analyst is pulled back into the field, working alongside familiar CIA faces and a few new global players.
Wendell Pierce returns as James Greer, Michael Kelly is back as Mike November, and Sienna Miller joins the world as MI6 operative Emma Marlowe. Betty Gabriel rounds out the central team as Elizabeth Wright. On paper, it’s a strong lineup, and on screen, the chemistry between them is one of the film’s biggest strengths.
John Krasinski is still the right Jack Ryan. He plays Ryan as a tired, thinking man rather than a swaggering action hero. There’s an honesty in his performance that grounds even the noisiest scenes. Krasinski makes you believe Ryan is a guy who would rather be reading reports than dodging bullets — and that’s exactly why the character works.
The action is well-made. The London chase sequence has been picked out by several critics as a real highlight. Combat scenes are cleanly shot, the pacing is brisk in stretches, and the technical polish is hard to fault.
The supporting cast carries real weight. Wendell Pierce brings warmth and quiet authority to Greer. Michael Kelly keeps the story clear whenever things start getting tangled. Sienna Miller fits naturally into the spy-world atmosphere without feeling forced.
This is where things get harder to ignore. Ghost War feels safe. Too safe.
The series was bold enough to engage with messy real-world politics — unstable regimes, terrorism, CIA grey areas. The film steps back from all of that. Its enemies are vague, its villains forgettable, and its conspiracies feel intentionally non-specific, almost as if the studio didn’t want to upset anyone.
There’s also the problem of familiarity. Helicopter entries, exploding cars, men running through collapsing buildings, betrayals you can see coming — Ghost War checks every box on the spy-thriller list without adding anything fresh.
Indian viewers will notice another awkward moment. The Dubai scenes lean on that tired “Arabic” Hollywood soundtrack, and at one point, Hindi is passed off as Urdu in a major sequence. It’s the kind of detail that pulls you straight out of the story.
Variety India argued that the script would have worked far better stretched out as a full television season. There’s a fair point in that. The TV series had room to breathe. The film, by squeezing everything into two hours, ends up feeling rushed in emotion and slow in plot at the same time.
Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War is the film equivalent of a comfort meal — you know exactly what you’re getting, and it goes down easily, but you won’t be thinking about it tomorrow. Krasinski is still a great Jack Ryan, the supporting cast keeps the story warm, and the action set pieces have real polish. But the film never takes the kind of risks the show was willing to take. It plays defence when it should be playing offense.
If you loved the series, this is worth a single watch. Just don’t expect it to surprise you. In a world where real spy games — cyberattacks, sanctions, leaks — have become messier than fiction, Ghost War feels strangely cautious about looking the modern world in the eye.
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