John Krasinski, Michael Kelly and director Andrew Bernstein recently chatted about ‘Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War.’
In Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan: Ghost War,’ the latest chapter in Amazon MGM’s long-running Tom Clancy franchise, the small-screen world fans spent four seasons inside finally gets a feature-length canvas.
(Courtesy Prime)
Directed by Andrew Bernstein and produced under the Prime Video banner, the film picks up the analyst-turned-operative played by John Krasinski as he’s pulled into a covert mission with stakes higher than anything the series ever staged.
The story finds Ryan reunited with his longtime partner James Greer, played by Michael Kelly, on an operation that takes them deep into territory where loyalty, intelligence, and instinct are the only things keeping them alive. What unfolds is part spy thriller, part character study, and part overdue payoff for fans who watched these two build one of streaming’s most quietly compelling on-screen partnerships.
Where the series leaned on slow-build geopolitics, Ghost War trades in scale. Bernstein, whose resume runs across nearly every major streaming service, brings a feature filmmaker’s eye to a franchise that has always been bigger than its medium. The action is sharper, the canvas wider, and the stakes more intimate, but the heart of the story is still the same thing that made the show land in 143 countries on day one of its first season: characters audiences are genuinely invested in spending more time with.
Courtesy of Prime
The Knockturnal sat down with Krasinski and Kelly during the film’s New York press day at the Crosby Street Hotel, and separately with director Andrew Bernstein, to discuss a wide range of topics — from the leap from series to feature, the role AI is starting to play in production workflows, what it has been like to build this universe with a global partner like Amazon, and surprisingly, Jell-O.