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  • Director: John McTiernan
  • Producer: Mace Neufeld
  • Starring: Sean Connery, Alec Baldwin, Scott Glenn, James Earl Jones, Sam Neill
  • Released: 2 March 1990 (United States)

Captain Marko Ramius (Sean Connery) has just taken command of the Soviet Navy’s newest ballistic missile submarine, Red October, which is equipped with a revolutionary new “Caterpillar Drive” that renders it nearly silent. Intentions unknown and with a set of fake orders, Ramius is headed across the Atlantic, possibly to fire his missiles on the U.S. As the Soviet Navy pursues Red October, American CIA analyst Jack Ryan (Alec Baldwin) deduces that Ramius is actually attempting to defect to the West. It’s just a question of who will find Red October first?

Plot

*FULL SPOILERS AHEAD!!!

Note: The film follows the book’s plot (see my review here) fairly closely with some major differences.

Typhoon-class submarine Arkhangelsk (TK-17). Red October is a fictional, experimental variant of this.
Red October heads to sea from Polyarny Inlet near Murmansk. The oblong bulb on top of the rudder is supposed to house a towed sonar array. However, the Typhoon subs didn’t normally carry these. It could be handwaved since Red October is an experimental variant. (This near full-scale mock-up is actually two large barges welded together with a fake hull on top.)
Capt. Marko Ramius burns the real orders and produces a set of fake ones after killing the political officer.
“We shail into hishtory!”
Ramius briefs his crew about their mission. Sean Connery clearly didn’t bother with attempting a Russian accent…but we don’t hold that against him. (The character Ramius isn’t Russian, he’s Lithuanian. But that doesn’t sound like Scottish, either.)
“I’d say we got a new boat, Sir.” STS2 Jones (left) and Captain Mancuso (right) on USS Dallas confer about the new Typhoon [Red October] they’re tracking.
Admiral Padorin reads Ramius’s letter announcing his real intentions. He doesn’t like what he reads since he immediately spills the tea he’s about to drink.
Jack Ryan meets with Skip Tyler at a drydock in Patuxent, Maryland to discuss the strange design of Red October. A Deep Submergence Rescue Vehicle (DSRV) can be seen just to the left of the submarine. (The sub shown here is actually USS Permit (SSN-594). In reality, this was filmed at Point Loma, California. There are no sub bases in Patuxent.)
“I’ll give you three days to prove your theory correct. After that, I’ll have to hunt down Ramius and destroy him.” Ryan and NSA advisor, Jeffrey Pelt (right), develop a plan to intercept Ramius to determine if he’s really defecting.
“I’ll bet that that magma displacement was actually some new Russian sub, and it’s headed for the Iceland coast.” Jonesy presents his theory to Captain Mancuso about the sound he’s picked up.
“When I asked the computer to identify it, what I got was magma displacement.”
USS Los Angeles (SSN-688). In the film, USS Dallas (SSN-700) is one of these Flight I LA-class boats.
Red October transits the canyons of the Reykjanes Ridge.
A Tu-95 “Bear” overflies Red October and drops a torpedo on it as it maneuvers through the canyons.
Red October deploys countermeasures to evade the torpedo.
Red October makes a hard starboard turn just before hitting a canyon wall, successfully evading the torpedo.

“Give me a ping, Vasily. One ping only, please!”

-Captain First Rank Marko Ramius

Ryan corners Loginov who’s attempting to detonate a missile on the submarine.
An Alfa-class submarine in the Barents Sea in 1983. Konavolov is one of these subs.
“Captain scared ’em out of the water!” USS Dallas breaches the surface performing an emergency blow to evade a torpedo.

Historical Accuracies

Historical Inaccuracies/Oddities

The general arrangements of a Typhoon sub. 1 – outer hull; 2 – 533 mm forward torpedo tubes; 3 – pressure hull (forward); 4 – stowable forward hydroplanes; 5 – escape hatches; 6 – torpedo compartment pressure hull; 7 – sonar compartment; 8 – 20 x R-39 ballistic missile tubes; 9 – control room; 10 – escape capsules; 11 – retractable devices; 12 – Fin; 13 – radio room; 14 – reactor compartment; 15 – hangar / payload doors for towed communication buoy; 16 – protrusions to prevent ice damaging the propellers; 17 – turbine compartment; 18 – machine compartment, 19 – hydrodynamic vortex smoothing protrusions; 20 – vertical stabiliser; 21 – rudders; 22 – ducted propeller; 23 – aft hydroplanes; 24 – sonar; 25 – stowable thrusters; 26 – missile compartment; 27 – crew compartment; 28 – 2 x OK-650 nuclear reactors; 29 – propeller shaft; 30 – horizontal stabiliser; 31 – pressure hull (forward); 32 – main pressure hull (starboard); 33 – main pressure hull (port); 34 – pressure hull (fin); 35 – pressure hull (aft); 36 – rapid dive tank; i – attack periscope; ii – navigation periscope; iii – radio sextant; iv – radar/ESM system; v – snorkel; vi & viii – radio communications; vii – direction finding; ix – satellite communication/positioning antenna; x – hull mounted towed sonar array
Amazingly, Red October hasn’t hit a seamount by now, especially since she’s traveling at flank speed. Captain Ramius, Kamarov (the navigator), and the helmsman and planesman on this boat are all supernaturally good at their jobs. And they even dodge a torpedo in these canyons later on!
Sean Connery and Alec Baldwin on the set of Red October‘s control room. The sets were mounted on large gimbals to simulate the submarine changing course and diving.

Positive Criticisms

Negative Criticisms

I don’t have many criticisms of this film, but there are a few.

Final Verdict

Rating: 4.5 out of 5.
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Notes

  1. Polmar & K.J. Moore, Cold War Submarines: The Design and Construction of U.S. and Soviet Submarines (Dulles, VA: Brassey’s Inc., 2004), 197. ↩︎
  2. For comparison, the largest U.S. submarines, the Ohio-class, are 560 feet long and 42 feet at the beam. The upcoming Columbia-class which will replace the Ohio-class are the same size, but 1 foot wider. Nearly two of these side-by-side will fit inside the outer hull of a Typhoon! ↩︎
  3. “Titanic FAQs: What Was Titanic’s Displacement? | Atlantic Liners,” accessed December 11, 2024, https://atlanticliners.com/white_star_home/titanic_home/titanic-faqs-what-was-titanics-displacement/. Titanic displaced roughly 52,000 tons and a Typhoon has a submerged displacement of roughly 48,000 tons! ↩︎
  4. Norman Friedman, U.S. Aircraft Carriers: An Illustrated Design History (Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1985), 394. ↩︎

Bibliography