#two is to make few posters of snipers or spies
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Heheheheheh...
All Medic, yes đ
(except for my pfp of course ^^')
#...i'm thinking of changing my pfp again-#(an excuse to make more poster of my persona lol)#i also am thinking of few things#one is to try making another sfm animation again#as a test of course#two is to make few posters of snipers or spies#(or both maybe)#sounds like a checklist or something now lol#but yeah#that's the plan#oh and to make a poster for an anon request#that too ^^
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Without Remorse Ending Explained
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This article contains Tom Clancyâs Without Remorse spoilers. You can find our spoiler-free review here.
For the most faithful Tom Clancy fans, itâs probably not the ending they anticipated. Amazonâs adaptation of the authorâs John Clark origin story, Without Remorse, ends not with a justification for Cold War paranoia but instead with a greater fear of the enemy within. Defense Secretary Thomas Clay (Guy Pearce) swore to uphold the Constitution and American interests. But in the end, the only oath kept was the one Michael B. Jordanâs then-John Kelly made to his late wife Pam.
âHer name was Pam, and [I swore] youâre going to say it before you die.â And so Clay did in his final moments after John drove the secretaryâs vehicle off a D.C. bridge and into the cold waters below, drowning the old man and making it look like a suicide.
Itâs a relatively downbeat climax to a movie thatâs featured high octane shootouts, fisticuffs, and one gnarly torture sequence in a burning car. Yet itâs worth considering how the movie got to this watery moment, and how it appears to be intentionally tweaking Clancyâs worldview.
Throughout much of Without Remorse, viewers think theyâre watching a simple revenge movie. At the top of the film, John led his team of Navy SEALs on a mission to Syria on the pretext that they were rooting out Syrian sanctioned murderers and thugs. Who they really left dead, however, were Russian spies. Afterward, every member of Kellyâs team was murdered seemingly by Russian agents, as was Johnâs wife and unborn daughter, who were executed while Pam slept.
Following the assault on his wife, Kelly went into Jack Bauer mode and killed every Russian official and underling who could bring him closer to Viktor Rykov (Brett Gelman), the alleged Russian operative who led the attack on Johnâs home at the beginning of the movie. And to be sure, Rykov was certainly there, as both John and the audience saw him with his mask off when John was shot during the home invasion.
However, the big twist of Without Remorse is that Rykov was not a Russian asset; he was an American one. When John, Naval officer Karen Greer (Jodie Turner-Smith), and CIA agent Robert Ritter (Jamie Bell) track Rykov to a Russian apartment, they discover the whole movie has been an elaborate ruse, played at the expense of American intelligence and (soon) the public. John and his family were just collateral damage.
âThere are no other ops, John,â Rykov says when the American special forces team corners him in an apartment, revealing heâs been lying in wait with a suicide vest. âYou and me being here is the real op.â
As Rykov explains before pushing the button, he fancies himself a true patriot, even more so than âthose behind us in Washington.â Heâs been convinced that the best way he can serve his country is by dying in a fiery explosion in Russia. His goal isnât to take John Kelly or his team with him either. Itâs quite the opposite, in fact. Rykov is working for âthose behind us,â and those D.C. insiders needed John, or an American soldier like him, to be in the building when the explosion went off. That way itâd look pretty damning to Russian authorities, especially since snipers working with Rykov murdered the first Russian cops to arrive at the scene.
This plan was executed on the assumption that an international incident would be created when it reached the press that American soldiers were killed on Russian soil while performing an illegal operationâwhich itself would be seen by the American public as retaliation for the illegal operation on American soil that killed Johnâs wife.
That perception is why Rykov personally executed the man who actually shot Pam in her bed. Rykov didnât know John would take more of their men down, but the trigger man handed Rykov his gun, ready to die because it would build the narrative that Russian agents murdered an American family in their own home. If Americans then died in an even bigger clusterf*ck in Russia, the ensuing chaos would usher in a new Cold War. Hence rather than Russians being the bad guys, the villains of Without Remorse are Americans who want to pretend the 1980s never ended.
John, Ritter, and Greer figure out this much when they let John go ghost and report back to Langley he died in the explosion. John âbeing deadâ gives him the freedom to sneak up on the Defense Secretary and test whether he actually had knowledge about Rykovâs op. The fact the Cabinet member didnât balk when John mentions the suicide vestâa detail Greer intentionally left out of her reportâis all he needs to know. Soon enough, with threats against his family, Clay plays ball and spills his guts about the whole setup.
âYou know who won World War II?â Clay whines. âIt wasnât the generals or the admirals, it was the economists. War, tanks, planes, and all that spending lifted this entire nation out of poverty, freed the world from tyranny. A big country needs big enemies. The best enemy we ever had was the Soviet Union. Our fear of them unified our people, gave us purpose. The problem today, John, is half this country thinks the other halfâs its enemy because they have no one else to fight.â
In other words, the shadowy conspiracy (which is still not fully unmasked) involved high ranking officials in the executive branch engineering a phantom menace out of Russia by killing a few Americans and a few Russians in both hemispheres. They only failed to anticipate how hard John Kelly would be to kill. Yeah, thatâs definitely worth a dip in the drink.
Whatâs interesting is that this ending pretty much flies in the face of Clancyâs literary Without Remorse and his generally Cold War-attuned worldview. On the surface, this could be viewed as a naked attempt to play into the worst cynicisms of our age. While the movie was filmed before the Covid pandemic and 2020 election, it very much was written and produced after the 2016 one where Russian intelligence mounted a disinformation campaign designed to sew division in the U.S.
When a newscaster says in Without Remorse that this is the lowest moment in relations between the U.S. and Russia since the Cold War, a viewer doesnât have to imagine what that plot point feels like. Some might therefore read Without Remorseâs ending as a subtle play on the conspiracy theories in the U.S. (some of which were propagated by a former American president) that suggest any reports of Russian election interference are exaggerated.
However, I would disagree with that reading of the Without Remorse ending. While the film certainly plays fast and loose with âripped from the headlinesâ plotting, the film feels as much a subtle critique of Clancy as any sort of movie about modern realpolitik.
It is indeed worth noting how much the cinematic version of Without Remorse differs from its source material novel. As with all Clancy page-turners, the narrative of Without Remorse is arguably too dense to transfer to a two-hour film. So gone are entire subplots involving prostitution rings and the historic crime of funneling Asian drugs to the U.S. inside the corpses of dead American soldiers (the book is set in 1970 during the Vietnam War). But also gone is the fact that the bad guys really are the Russians.
On the page, the man Kelly killx turns out not to be a KGB mole, but there is indeed a Russian asset high up in the U.S. government: heâs a senatorâs aide who is cooperating in Russian efforts to sabotage the Vietnam War effort. And by working for an anti-war dove politician, one can sense the disdain in Clancyâs politics, which imagines anti-war leaders at least playing into Russian interests to undermine American foreign policy. (Oh, what he mightâve thought about his political party in 2020?)
In Clancyâs novels, the villains are almost always the Russians or other foreign threats attempting to besiege Fortress America. For all their technical authenticity and understanding of late 20th century spycraft, theyâre very much fantasies tailor-made for the era Clancy found his initial success in as an author: Ronald Reaganâs 1980s America. In fact, what turned his first bestseller into a bestseller was President Reagan enthusing how satisfying the plot is in The Hunt for Red October.
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This is not to say that Clancyâs worldview was as simplistic or jingoistic as his critics might suggest. After all, that first novel which birthed the best Clancy adaptation to date, John McTiernanâs The Hunt for Red October (1990), is about a Soviet submarine captain attempting to de-escalate the Cold War by defecting and funneling a nuclear Russian sub to the Americans. Of course, this is also because he and most of his officers secretly covet the freedoms borne from the democratic and capitalist West.
Other Clancy novels are not quite so nuanced in their view on Cold War politics, including literary Without Remorse. Yet the movie version of the film ironically brings it closer to the first novel, as well as another book/film which introduced fans to John Clark on screen: Clear and Present Danger.
That tangled narrative involves the perceived menace of South American narcotics at the height of Americaâs drug war and the criminal empire of Pablo Escobar. However, the greatest villain in the story, particularly the movie adaptation released in 1994, turns out not to be drug lords but a corrupt president who uses the War on Drugs as an excuse to turn American special forces into a personal hit squad out for his revengeâhe then leaves those soldiers stranded to die.
The ending to Michael B. Jordanâs Without Remorse very much comes in line with the wary cynicism of Clear and Present Danger, which also feels a lot timelier after the last four years than it did in the â90s.
In fact, 2021âs Without Remorse leads fairly well into the Clear and Present Danger movie. At the end of Without Remorse, John Kelly drowns the Defense Secretary, making it look like a suicide. He is then saved by Karen Greer, who mustâve known about Johnâs plans to drive off the bridge. Remember, she helped set Clay up by omitting Rykovâs suicide vest.
She then escorts John to the airport and gives him his new CIA sanctioned identity, John Clark. Clark is of course the more famous name of Clancyâs protagonist. He is also introduced by that alias in Clear and Present Danger when Robert Ritter, now Deputy Director of the CIA, travels down to Panama City to meet Clark and enlist him in the corrupt POTUSâ secret war against Colombian cartels.
Barring the differences of actors and eras, one could even watch 1994âs Clear and Present Danger movie (also on Amazon Prime) and see a pseudo-sequel to Without Remorse. In the â90s movie, Willem Dafoe plays Clark as a hardened and skeptical expatriate whoâs been living in South America for some time. He and Ritter have a long off-screen history, with the CIA bureaucrat eventually persuading Clark via the governmentâs checkbook to lead an illegal special ops team, which has eerie parallels to the Reagan administrationâs own South American misadventures with the Iran-Contra Affair. In the â94 film, Ritter is a slimy middle man for the corrupt interests of the White House, and it is not hard to imagine Jamie Bellâs 21st century Ritter from Without Remorse going along with a similarly corrupt fiasco.
Of course Clark is still a hero in the earlier movie, eventually teaming up with Harrison Ford as CIA analyst Jack Ryan. They even build trust over a mutual friendship with Rear Admiral James Greer, who is mentioned as Karen Greerâs off-screen uncle in the Without Remorse movie.So in the end, itâs all connected. Or perhaps this can just become the sequel crossover with Amazonâs Jack Ryan TV series?
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