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Ronin (film)

Ronin is a 1998 American action thriller film directed by John Frankenheimer and written by John David Zeik and David Mamet, under the pseudonym Richard Weisz. It stars an ensemble cast consisting of Robert De Niro, Jean Reno, Natascha McElhone, Stellan Skarsgård, Sean Bean, and Jonathan Pryce. The film is about a team of former special operatives hired to steal a mysterious, heavily guarded briefcase while navigating a maze of shifting loyalties. The film was praised for its realistic car chases in Nice and Paris.

Ronin
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Frankenheimer
Screenplay by
Story byJ.D. Zeik
Produced byFrank Mancuso Jr.
Starring
CinematographyRobert Fraisse
Edited byTony Gibbs
Music byElia Cmiral
Production
companies
Distributed byMGM Distribution Co.[2]
Release dates
  • September 12, 1998 (1998-09-12) (Venice Film Festival)
  • September 25, 1998 (1998-09-25) (United States)
Running time
121 minutes[3]
CountryUnited States[4]
LanguageEnglish[3]
Budget$55 million[5]
Box office$70.7 million[5]

Frankenheimer signed to direct Zeik's screenplay, which Mamet rewrote to expand De Niro's role and develop plot details, in 1997. The film was photographed by Robert Fraisse in his native France from November 3, 1997, to March 3, 1998. Professional racing car drivers coordinated and performed the vehicle stunts, and Elia Cmiral scored the film, his first for a major studio.

Ronin premiered at the 1998 Venice Film Festival before its general release on September 25. Critics were generally positive about the film's action, casting, and technical aspects, while the plot attracted criticism. The film performed moderately well at the box office, grossing $70.7 million on a budget of $55 million. Ronin, Frankenheimer's last well-received feature film,[6] was considered to be a return to form for the director. Film critic and historian Stephen Prince called the film Frankenheimer's "end-of-career masterpiece".[7] The car chases, which were favorably compared with those in Bullitt and The French Connection,[8][9] were included on several media outlets' lists as among the best depicted on film.

Plot

At a bistro in Montmartre, IRA operative Deirdre meets with two Americans, Sam and Larry, and a Frenchman, Vincent. She takes them to a warehouse where the Englishman Spence and the German Gregor are waiting. Conversations between the men show that they are all ex-government agents or ex-military-turned-mercenary. Deirdre briefs them on their mission: to attack a heavily armed convoy and steal a large, metallic briefcase, which functions as the film's MacGuffin. Its contents are never revealed. The team's first task before the main mission is to acquire weapons; this turns into a setup. Although the team survives and they get the weapons, Spence is exposed as a fraud by Sam. He is dismissed by Deirdre and the others continue the mission. As the team prepares, Deirdre meets with her handler, Seamus O'Rourke, who tells her that the Russian mafia is bidding for the case and that the team must intervene before they get it. During a stakeout, Sam and Deirdre act on their mutual attraction.

Deirdre's team successfully ambushes the convoy at La Turbie and pursues the survivors to Nice. During the gunfight, Gregor steals the case and disappears. He negotiates selling it to the Russians, but his contact attempts to betray him. Gregor kills the contact, then has Mikhi — the Russian Mafioso in charge of the deal — agree to another meeting. The team tracks Gregor through one of Sam's old CIA contacts and corners him in the Arles Amphitheatre during his meeting with two of Mikhi's men. Sam chases Gregor; Gregor flees but is caught by Seamus. Deirdre and Vincent confront the two Russian thugs, causing a shootout. Sam arrives to help, killing one, but catches a ricochet from the other when Vincent knocks away the thug's gun in order to kill him. Seamus kills Larry and escapes with a reluctant Deirdre and the captured Gregor. Vincent takes Sam to a villa owned by his friend, Jean-Pierre. After removing the bullet and letting Sam recuperate, Vincent asks Jean-Pierre to help them find Gregor and the Irish operatives.

In Paris, Gregor is persuaded through violent interrogation to give the case back to Seamus and Deirdre. After retrieving it from a post office, they are pursued by Sam and Vincent in a high-speed chase. Vincent shoots out their tire, sending their car off an unfinished overpass. Gregor escapes with the case while road workers rescue Deirdre and Seamus from the burning vehicle. Unsure where to go next, Sam and Vincent decide to track down the Russians; one of Jean-Pierre's contacts tells them they are involved with figure-skater (and Mikhi's girlfriend) Natacha Kirilova, who is appearing at Le Zénith.

During Natacha's performance, Mikhi meets with Gregor, who says a sniper in the arena will shoot Natacha if Mikhi betrays him. Mikhi surprises Gregor by letting Natacha be killed before killing Gregor and taking the case. Amid the ensuing chaos from Natacha's shooting, Sam and Vincent leave the arena just in time to see Seamus kill Mikhi and steal the case. Sam and Vincent split up; Vincent pursues Seamus, but is wounded in a gunfight. Sam finds Deirdre waiting in a getaway car; he convinces her to leave after explaining that he is still an active government agent working undercover to get Seamus, not the case. As she drives away, Seamus is forced to return to the arena as Sam gives chase. Seamus ambushes Sam, but is shot dead by Vincent before Seamus can kill Sam.

Sam and Vincent have coffee in the bistro where they first met. A radio broadcast announces that a peace agreement between Sinn Féin and the British government has been reached, partially as a result of Seamus's death. Sam keeps glancing at the door as patrons enter, but Vincent convinces Sam that Deirdre will not be coming back. They shake hands and part ways; Sam drives off with his CIA contact as Vincent pays the bill and leaves.

Cast

 
Top-billed cast of Ronin: (clockwise from top left) Robert De Niro, Jean Reno, Stellan Skarsgård, Sean Bean, Natascha McElhone and Jonathan Pryce
  • Robert De Niro as Sam, an American mercenary formerly associated with the CIA.[10] According to director John Frankenheimer, De Niro "was always dream casting" for the film.[11]
  • Jean Reno as Vincent, a French gunman who befriends Sam.[12][13] Frankenheimer sought to establish the friendship between Reno's and De Niro's characters, which he considered pivotal to the story, and wanted to strengthen the off-screen bond between the actors.[11]
  • Natascha McElhone as Deirdre, an IRA operative commissioned to steal a briefcase by Seamus O'Rourke.[13][14] An on-set dialect coach helped McElhone speak with a Northern Ireland accent.[11] McElhone said she was thrilled to play the role because she portrayed a character that moved the action forward.[15]
  • Stellan Skarsgård as Gregor, a German computer specialist formerly associated with the KGB.[13] A fan of Skarsgård, Frankenheimer praised the Swedish actor for "bring[ing] so much to the role".[11] Skarsgård suggested Gregor had been abandoned by his wife and son, for which he became "quite suicidal and cold".[15]
  • Sean Bean as Spence, an Englishman who purports to be a firearms specialist formerly associated with the SAS.[8][16] During production, Frankenheimer did not know what the future held for the character and considered having him killed off-screen after the team drives out of the warehouse, or snatched from a Paris street into a van driven by the IRA. Ultimately, he had Spence dismissed from the team.[11] Bean described the character as egotistic and "a little bit out of his depth".[15]
  • Jonathan Pryce as Seamus, a rogue operative in pursuit of the case through Deirdre.[13][14] Like McElhone, the Welshman Pryce was coached to hone his Northern Irish accent.[11]
  • Skipp Sudduth as Larry, another American and the team's designated driver.[16] Sudduth, who had appeared in Frankenheimer's George Wallace (1997),[17] performed most of his character's driving stunts.[11]
  • Michael Lonsdale as Jean-Pierre, Vincent's friend and colleague whose pastime is creating miniatures.[18] Frankenheimer intended to make the character a miniature artist, partially due to his own love of creating miniatures.[11] The film was Lonsdale's third collaboration with Frankenheimer.[17]
  • Jan Triska as the dapper gent, the first Russian to try and kill Gregor for the case

In addition, Féodor Atkine plays Mikhi, the Russian who is buying the case, while East German Olympic and World Champion figure skater Katarina Witt has an extended cameo as Natacha Kirilova, a Russian Olympic and World Champion figure skater.

Production

 
Ronin was the penultimate feature film of director John Frankenheimer (pictured in 1995), followed by Reindeer Games.[19]

In July 1997, Variety reported that Frankenheimer had signed to direct Ronin, making it his fifth picture for United Artists.[20] Frankenheimer told the magazine he chose the project because it had a "very good script" and was "the kind of movie I'd love to go see ... What I like is, it's a character-driven action picture, and I have done those before, with Black Sunday and French Connection II. It's not one of these CGI pictures, it's a film about people. It's not bigger than life, which I don't relate to that much."[20] He also saw it as an opportunity to apply his broad knowledge and understanding of France, especially Paris, in which he resided for many years.[11] He added, "I would not have been able to do the film nearly as well anywhere else".[15] His films The Train (1964), Grand Prix (1966), Impossible Object (1973), and French Connection II (1975) were shot in France.[9]

Many of Ronin's principal crew members had worked with Frankenheimer on television films; editor Tony Gibbs on George Wallace, set designer Michael Z. Hanan on George Wallace and The Burning Season (1994), and costume designer May Routh on Andersonville (1996).[21] Frankenheimer chose French cinematographer Robert Fraisse to help him achieve the look and style he wanted for the film. Fraisse impressed Frankenheimer with his work on the police thriller Citizen X (1995), which persuaded the director Fraisse could handle the more-than-2,000 setups he planned for Ronin.[9] Frank Mancuso Jr. served as the film's producer.[20]

According to Frankenheimer, French authorities helped him circumvent a strict Paris ordinance that prohibited film productions from firing guns in the city. This was enacted because many civilians had been complaining about the gunfire noise produced by film shoots. Additional factors influenced the decision; officials' desire for an American action film like Ronin, few of which had been filmed there since the law was passed, to be filmed in Paris and the desire to boost France's reputation as a filming location.[11]

Screenplay

Writer John David Zeik, a newcomer to film,[22] conceived the idea for Ronin after reading James Clavell's novel Shōgun at the age of 15.[21] It gave him background information on rōnin (masterless samurai), which he incorporated into a screenplay years later. On choosing France as the story's key location, Zeik said: "Many years later in Nice, the location of one of the key set pieces of the story, I stared into the sun and saw the silhouettes of five heavily armed Gendarmes crossing the Promenade des Anglais. That image made me realize that I wanted to set the film in France."[21]

Accounts differ as to the screenplay's authorship. According to Zeik's attorney, Playwright David Mamet was brought in shortly before production to expand De Niro's role and add a female love interest. Although Mamet rewrote several scenes, his contributions were minor according to Zeik's account. Frankenheimer said Mamet's contributions were more significant: "The credits should read: 'Story by J.D. Zeik, screenplay by David Mamet'. We didn't shoot a line of Zeik's script."[22] Frankenheimer later retracted this in a September 1998 open letter published in Variety, writing that "J.D. Zeik is unequivocally entitled to the first position screenwriting credit as well as the sole story credit he was awarded by the WGA ... [He] deserves recognition for his significant contribution to this film, and I am proud to have worked with him".[23] When he learned he would have to share credit with Zeik, Mamet insisted on being credited with the pseudonym Richard Weisz because he had earlier decided to attach his name only to projects for which he was the sole writer.[22]

Filming and cinematography

 
Facade of a Montmartre bistro in 2011. Because the building was empty, the crew constructed an interior set seen from the stairs.[9][24]

Ronin was produced on a budget of $55 million.[5] Principal photography lasted 78 days,[9] beginning on November 3, 1997, in an abandoned workshop at Aubervilliers.[25] Scenes at Porte des Lilas and the historic Arles Amphitheatre were filmed that November; the crew then filmed at the Hotel Majestic in Cannes, La Turbie, and Villefranche.[25] Production was suspended for Christmas on December 19 and resumed on January 5, 1998, at Épinay, where the crew built two interior sets on sound stages; one for the bistro in Montmartre and another for the rural farmhouse,[25] both of which also have exterior location shots.[11] The climactic scene with a panicked crowd at Le Zénith required about 2,000 extras, who were supervised by French casting director Margot Capelier.[11] Filming concluded at La Défense on March 3, 1998.[25]

Because there were no second unit director and camera operator to film the action scenes, Frankenheimer and cinematographer Robert Fraisse supervised them for an additional 30 days after the main unit finished filming.[9][26] The first major car-chase scene was shot in La Turbie and Nice; the rest were filmed in areas of Paris including La Défense and the Pont du Garigliano.[25][27] Scenes set in a road tunnel were filmed at night because it was impossible to block tunnel traffic during the day.[28] The freeway chase, in which the actors dodge oncoming vehicles, was filmed in four hours on a closed road.[28]

Frankenheimer's affinity for deep depth of field led him to shoot the film entirely with wide-angle lenses ranging in focal length from 18 to 35 mm using the Super 35 format, both of which allow more of the scene to be included in each shot.[11][24] The director also avoided bright primary colors to preserve a first-generation-of-film quality.[11] He advised the actors and extras not to wear bright colors and had the film processed with Deluxe's Color Contrast Enhancement (CCE), "a silver-retention method of processing film that deepens blacks, reduces color, and heightens the visible appearance of film grain".[11][29] Fraisse said he used a variety of cameras, including Panaflexes for dialogue scenes and Arriflex 435s and 35-IIIs for the car chases, to facilitate Frankenheimer's demands.[9] Steadicam, a camera stabilizer used for half of the shoot, was operated by the director's longtime collaborator David Crone.[9] According to Frankenheimer, 2,200 shots were filmed.[11]

Stunts

 
The Mercedes-Benz 450SEL 6.9 was Frankenheimer's favorite Mercedes model due to its appearance and "great, big powerful engine", and he used it as the protagonist's car in Ronin's first major car chase.[11]

Frankenheimer avoided using special effects in the car-chase scenes, previsualizing them with storyboards and used the same camera mounts as those used on Grand Prix.[11] The actors were placed inside the cars while being driven at up to 100 mph (160 km/h), by Formula One driver Jean-Pierre Jarier, and high-performance drivers Jean-Claude Lagniez and Michel Neugarten.[9] The actors had enrolled at a high-performance driving school before production began.[11] According to Lagniez, the car-stunt coordinator, it was a priority not to cheat the speed by adjusting the frame rate; he said, "When you do, it affects the lighting. It is different at 20 frames than at 24 frames."[28] However, Fraisse said: "Sometimes, but not very often, we did shoot at 22 frames per second, or 21."[9] Point-of-view shots from cameras mounted below the cars' front fender were used to deliver a heightened sense of speed.[11][30]

For the final chase scene, which used 300 stunt drivers,[11] the production team bought four BMW 535is and five Peugeot 406s;[a] one of each was cut in half and towed by a Mercedes-Benz 500 E while the actors were inside them.[11] Right-hand drive versions of the cars were also purchased; a dummy steering wheel was installed on the left side while the stunt drivers drove the speeding vehicles.[11][28] The final chase had very little music because Frankenheimer thought music and sound effects do not blend well. Sound engineer Mike Le Mare recorded all of the film's cars on a racetrack, mixing them later in post-production.[11]

Frankenheimer refused to film the gunfights in slow motion, believing onscreen violence should be depicted in real time.[11] Mick Gould, the film's technical advisor and a former instructor in the advanced training wings of the Special Air Service, trained the cast in weapons-handling and guerilla military tactics.[21][32] The physical stunts were coordinated by Joe Dunne.[2]

Alternative endings

Frankenheimer filmed two additional versions of the film's ending. In the first, Deirdre (McElhone) waits on the stairs next to the bistro and considers joining Sam (De Niro) and Vincent (Reno). Deciding against it, she walks up the stairs. As she gets into her car, IRA men drag her into a van and call her a traitor; it is implied that she is later killed. Sam and Vincent, unaware of Deidre's abduction, finish their conversation and depart. Although Frankenheimer said the test audience "hated" the ending because they did not want to see Deirdre die, he thought it "really worked".[11] In the second ending, Deirdre walks to her car after Sam and Vincent leave the bistro; this ending was also rejected because it verged on being "too Hollywood", hinting at a sequel. Frankenheimer yielded to the test audience's response with a compromise ending; he said, "with the tremendous investment MGM/UA had in this movie, you have to kind of listen to the audience".[11]

Music

Jerry Goldsmith was originally commissioned to compose the score for Ronin but left the project.[33][34] MGM executive vice-president for music Michael Sandoval assembled an A-list to replace Goldsmith.[33] From Sandoval's three choices, Frankenheimer hired Czech composer Elia Cmíral,[11][33] who said he "was far away from being even a 'B' composer at that time".[34] Cmíral attended a private screening of the film's final version and considered its main theme, which at Frankenheimer's behest would incorporate qualities of "sadness, loneliness, and heroism".[33] To achieve this, Cmíral performed with the duduk, an ancient, double-reed woodwind flute that originated in Armenia.[35] Cmíral sent a demonstration to Frankenheimer, who "loved" it, and was signed as the film's composer.[33] Cmíral's piece "Ronin Theme" was used for the opening scenes.[33][36]

Cmíral's score for Ronin, his first for a major film studio,[35] was recorded in seven weeks at CTS Studio in London.[33][36] It was orchestrated and conducted by Nick Ingman, edited by Mike Flicker, and recorded and mixed by John Whynot.[33] Varèse Sarabande released the soundtrack album on compact disc in September 1998.[36] For AllMusic, Jason Ankeny rated the album 4.5 out of 5 and called it a "profoundly visceral listening experience, illustrating an expert grasp of pacing and atmosphere".[36]

Release

Box office

Ronin had its world premiere at the 1998 Venice Film Festival on September 12,[37] before a wide release on September 25.[38] Ronin fared moderately well at the box office;[39] it was the second-highest-grossing film in the United States during its opening weekend, grossing $16.7 million behind the action-comedy Rush Hour's $26.7 million, at 2,643 locations.[40] The film dropped to fifth place on its second weekend and to seventh on its third, grossing $7.2 million and $4.7 million, respectively, at 2,487 locations.[41] It dropped further until its sixth weekend, when it grossed $1.1 million (13th place) at 1,341 locations.[41] The film ended its theatrical run with a gross of $41.6 million in the U.S. and Canada, and $70.7 million worldwide.[5][38] Ronin was 1998's 11th-highest-grossing R-rated film.[42]

Critical response

Critical reception to Ronin was favorable;[16] critics praised its ensemble cast, with many singling out Robert De Niro.[2][10][43][44] Todd McCarthy in Variety credited De Niro with sustaining the film[2] but a reviewer from the Chicago Reader disagreed.[45] The film's action scenes, particularly the car chases, were generally praised;[2][16] Janet Maslin in The New York Times called them "nothing short of sensational".[44] These scenes were criticized by The Washington Post for their length[12] and by McCarthy for their excessive jump cuts.[2] Robert Fraisse's cinematography was routinely praised;[2][10] Michael Wilmington in the Chicago Tribune called it superficially attractive and entertaining.[46] Although the plot was criticized by the Chicago Reader as dull and The Washington Post as derivative,[12][45] Wilmington called it a "familiar but taut tale".[46] Some reviewers singled out the espionage scene in which De Niro and Natascha McElhone pose as tourists and photograph their targets at a Cannes hotel as one of the film's best.[2][12]

Critics also evaluated Frankenheimer because the broad acclaim he received with the political thriller The Manchurian Candidate (1962) established him as a director.[10][43][46] Many said he was influenced by the works of fellow filmmaker and close friend Jean-Pierre Melville, particularly Melville's neo-noir film Le Samouraï (1967),[39][47] but McCarthy wrote that Ronin lacks Melville's "world-weary, existential ennui".[2] The film was considered to be a return to form for Frankenheimer,[19][48] whose Emmy Awards for the television films Against the Wall (1994), The Burning Season, Andersonville and George Wallace had resurrected his career, after it lost momentum during the 1970s and 1980s due to the director's alcohol addiction.[6][10] Ronin was Frankenheimer's last well-received feature film;[6] Wilmington called it the director's best theatrical film in decades despite lacking The Manchurian Candidate's "blazing invention",[46] and Stephen Prince called the film his "end-of-career masterpiece".[7] Prince wrote:

With Ronin, Frankenheimer vindicated his cinematic talents and aesthetic preferences. The film is stylistically bonded with the principles of his work as found in the earliest and best period of his career. Its aesthetic of realism places it with Grand Prix, The Train, and The Gypsy Moths, and its minimalist conception of character and narrative detail bonds it to those productions as well. Frankenheimer had not lost his touch as a filmmaker, far from it. Ronin is smart, sharp, and witty, and it shows a greater facility for visual storytelling than most films made today, by younger directors, can muster.[7]

Post-release

Home media

In February 1999, MGM Home Entertainment released Ronin as a two-disc DVD that contained versions in widescreen and pan and scan formats, and Dolby Digital 5.1 sound.[49] The DVD also contains the alternative ending and an audio commentary by John Frankenheimer, who discusses the film's production history.[50] MGM released a special edition DVD of the film in October 2004 and a two-disc collector's edition in May 2006, both of which have additional cast and crew interviews.[49]

It was released on Blu-ray with its theatrical trailer in February 2009.[51] In August 2017, Arrow Video released a special edition Blu-ray with a 4K resolution restoration from the original camera negative that was supervised and approved by cinematographer Robert Fraisse.[52] Arrow's Blu-ray also includes archival bonus features that originally appeared on the MGM special edition DVD,[53] together with Fraisse talking about his early cinematography career and his involvement with Ronin.[54]

Cinematic analysis

 
The 18th-century Japanese revenge of the forty-seven rōnin was the film's central metaphor.[18]

The film's title was derived from the Japanese legend of rōnin, samurai whose leader was killed and left them with no one to serve, and roamed the countryside as mercenaries and bandits to regain a sense of purpose.[55] In Frankenheimer's film, the rōnin are former intelligence operatives who are unemployed at the end of the Cold War; devoid of purpose, they become highly-paid mercenaries. Michael Lonsdale's character elaborates on the analogy in an anecdote about the forty-seven rōnin told with miniatures, comparing the film's characters to the 18th-century rōnin of Japan.[56] In his essay, "Action and Abstraction in Ronin", Stephen Prince wrote that the rōnin metaphor explores themes of "service, honor, and obligation to complex ways by showing that service may entail betrayal and that honor may be measured according to disparate terms".[57] According to Stephen B. Armstrong, "Arguably Frankenheimer uses this story to highlight and contrast the moral and social weakness that characterize the band of rōnin in his film".[55]

The film features a MacGuffin plot device in the form of a briefcase, the contents of which are important but unknown.[13][46] Chicago Sun-Times critic Roger Ebert wrote that its content is identical to that of the equally-mysterious case in Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction (1994),[43] also a MacGuffin.[58] Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune called Ronin an homage to The French Connection (1971), The Parallax View (1974), and Three Days of the Condor (1975); thriller films known for their lack of visual effects.[46] Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also compared the film to The Day of the Jackal (1973)[14] and noted similarities between Ronin's opening scene and that of Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (1992), in which a group of professional killers who have not met before assemble.[46] According to Armstrong, the film's plot observes the conventions of heist films.[55]

Frankenheimer employed a hyperrealistic aesthetic in his films "to make them look realer than real, because reality by itself can be very boring", and saw them as having a tinge of semi-documentary.[11] He credited Gillo Pontecorvo's The Battle of Algiers (1966), a film he considered flawless and more influential than any other he had seen, with inspiring this style.[11] According to Prince, "Frankenheimer's success at working in this realist style, avoiding special effects trickery, places the car chase in Ronin in the same rarefied class as the celebrated chase in Bullitt (1968)".[59] The director credited the Russian film The Cranes Are Flying (1957) with inspiring invisible cuts in Ronin. On the film's DVD audio commentary, Frankenheimer notes a wipe during the opening scenes made by two extras walking across the frame, which becomes a tracking shot of Jean Reno entering the bistro. His intention for the cut was to conceal the fact that the bistro's interior was a set; its exterior was filmed on location.[11]

Legacy

Modern reception

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 70% of 73 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The website's consensus reads: "Ronin earns comparisons to The French Connection with strong action, dynamic road chase scenes, and solid performances."[60] In 2019, Rotten Tomatoes' Alex Vo ranked Ronin No. 101 on his list of the "140 Essential Action Movies To Watch Now".[61] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 67 out of 100, based on 23 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[62]

Ronin's car chases were included on several media outlets' lists of the best depicted on film, including CNN (No. 2),[63] Time (No. 12),[64] Fandango (No. 6),[65] Complex (No. 25),[66] The Daily Telegraph (No. 10),[67] PopMatters (No. 9),[68] IGN (No. 9),[69] Screen Rant (No. 8),[70] Business Insider (No. 3),[71] Consequence of Sound (No. 6),[72] and Collider.[73] Some critics have said the chase scenes in Mission: Impossible – Fallout (2018) were influenced by those in Ronin.[74][75] Screen Rant ranked Ronin No. 1 on its list of the "12 Best Action Movies You've Never Heard Of".[76] In 2014, Time Out polled several film critics, directors, actors, and stunt actors about their top action films;[77] Ronin was 72nd on the list.[78] Paste magazine ranked the film at No. 10 on its list of the "25 Best Movies of 1998".[79] Ronin was included in the film reference book 101 Action Movies You Must See Before You Die.[80]

Video games

Ronin influenced the conception of the action video games Burnout[b] and Alpha Protocol.[83]

Footnotes

  1. ^ In the DVD commentary, Frankenheimer says four BMWs and five Peugeots were purchased for the chase scene,[11] namely the BMW 535i and Peugeot 406.[31]
  2. ^ Alex Ward, the creator of Burnout, said the inspiration for the racing game was the DVD version's 15th chapter,[81] which is titled "Crashing the Case," and shows a crash between two opposing cars.[82]

References

  1. ^ "Ronin (1998)". British Film Institute. from the original on December 11, 2017. Retrieved December 11, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i McCarthy, Todd (September 14, 1998). "Review: 'Ronin'". Variety. from the original on March 31, 2017. Retrieved July 29, 2015.
  3. ^ a b "Ronin (15)". British Board of Film Classification. from the original on September 27, 2017. Retrieved September 27, 2017.
  4. ^ "Ronin (1998)". American Film Institute. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  5. ^ a b c d "Ronin (1998)". The Numbers. from the original on September 28, 2017. Retrieved September 28, 2017.
  6. ^ a b c "John Frankenheimer: Biography". Turner Classic Movies. Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). from the original on June 14, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c Pomerance & Palmer 2011, p. 87.
  8. ^ a b Keeling, Robert (April 16, 2018). "Looking back at Ronin". Den of Geek!. United Kingdom: Dennis Publishing. from the original on May 8, 2018. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Magid, Ron (October 1998). "Samurai Tactics". American Cinematographer. p. 1. ISSN 0002-7928. from the original on September 28, 2017. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
    • Magid, Ron (October 1998). "Samurai Tactics". American Cinematographer. p. 2. ISSN 0002-7928. from the original on November 13, 2006. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
    • Magid, Ron (October 1998). "Samurai Tactics". American Cinematographer. p. 3. ISSN 0002-7928. from the original on November 13, 2006. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
    • Magid, Ron (October 1998). "Samurai Tactics". American Cinematographer. p. 4. ISSN 0002-7928. from the original on November 13, 2006. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c d e Travers, Peter (September 25, 1998). "Ronin". Rolling Stone. from the original on September 30, 2017. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af John Frankenheimer (director). Ronin (audio commentary). MGM Home Entertainment.
  12. ^ a b c d O'Sullivan, Michael (September 25, 1998). "Run-of-the-Mill 'Ronin'". The Washington Post. from the original on April 10, 2016. Retrieved September 29, 2017.
  13. ^ a b c d e Pomerance & Palmer 2011, p. 79.
  14. ^ a b c McDonagh, Maitland. "Ronin". TV Guide. from the original on December 22, 2017. Retrieved December 19, 2017.
  15. ^ a b c d John Frankenheimer et al. (2004). Ronin: Filming in the Fast Lane (featurette). MGM Home Entertainment.
  16. ^ a b c d Armstrong 2008, p. 157.
  17. ^ a b "Ronin: The Casting". Cinema Review. from the original on September 24, 2002. Retrieved May 8, 2018.
  18. ^ a b Pomerance & Palmer 2011, p. 82.
  19. ^ a b Bowie, Stephen (November 2006). "Great Directors: John Frankenheimer". Senses of Cinema. ISSN 1443-4059. from the original on June 2, 2013. Retrieved May 15, 2013.
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Bibliography

External links

ronin, film, confused, with, ronin, ronin, 1998, american, action, thriller, film, directed, john, frankenheimer, written, john, david, zeik, david, mamet, under, pseudonym, richard, weisz, stars, ensemble, cast, consisting, robert, niro, jean, reno, natascha,. Not to be confused with 47 Ronin Ronin is a 1998 American action thriller film directed by John Frankenheimer and written by John David Zeik and David Mamet under the pseudonym Richard Weisz It stars an ensemble cast consisting of Robert De Niro Jean Reno Natascha McElhone Stellan Skarsgard Sean Bean and Jonathan Pryce The film is about a team of former special operatives hired to steal a mysterious heavily guarded briefcase while navigating a maze of shifting loyalties The film was praised for its realistic car chases in Nice and Paris RoninTheatrical release posterDirected byJohn FrankenheimerScreenplay byJ D Zeik David Mamet as Richard Weisz Story byJ D ZeikProduced byFrank Mancuso Jr StarringRobert De Niro Jean Reno Natascha McElhone Stellan Skarsgard Sean Bean Jonathan PryceCinematographyRobert FraisseEdited byTony GibbsMusic byElia CmiralProductioncompaniesUnited Artists FGM Entertainment 1 Distributed byMGM Distribution Co 2 Release datesSeptember 12 1998 1998 09 12 Venice Film Festival September 25 1998 1998 09 25 United States Running time121 minutes 3 CountryUnited States 4 LanguageEnglish 3 Budget 55 million 5 Box office 70 7 million 5 Frankenheimer signed to direct Zeik s screenplay which Mamet rewrote to expand De Niro s role and develop plot details in 1997 The film was photographed by Robert Fraisse in his native France from November 3 1997 to March 3 1998 Professional racing car drivers coordinated and performed the vehicle stunts and Elia Cmiral scored the film his first for a major studio Ronin premiered at the 1998 Venice Film Festival before its general release on September 25 Critics were generally positive about the film s action casting and technical aspects while the plot attracted criticism The film performed moderately well at the box office grossing 70 7 million on a budget of 55 million Ronin Frankenheimer s last well received feature film 6 was considered to be a return to form for the director Film critic and historian Stephen Prince called the film Frankenheimer s end of career masterpiece 7 The car chases which were favorably compared with those in Bullitt and The French Connection 8 9 were included on several media outlets lists as among the best depicted on film Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Screenplay 3 2 Filming and cinematography 3 3 Stunts 3 4 Alternative endings 3 5 Music 4 Release 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical response 5 Post release 5 1 Home media 5 2 Cinematic analysis 6 Legacy 6 1 Modern reception 6 2 Video games 7 Footnotes 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 External linksPlot EditAt a bistro in Montmartre IRA operative Deirdre meets with two Americans Sam and Larry and a Frenchman Vincent She takes them to a warehouse where the Englishman Spence and the German Gregor are waiting Conversations between the men show that they are all ex government agents or ex military turned mercenary Deirdre briefs them on their mission to attack a heavily armed convoy and steal a large metallic briefcase which functions as the film s MacGuffin Its contents are never revealed The team s first task before the main mission is to acquire weapons this turns into a setup Although the team survives and they get the weapons Spence is exposed as a fraud by Sam He is dismissed by Deirdre and the others continue the mission As the team prepares Deirdre meets with her handler Seamus O Rourke who tells her that the Russian mafia is bidding for the case and that the team must intervene before they get it During a stakeout Sam and Deirdre act on their mutual attraction Deirdre s team successfully ambushes the convoy at La Turbie and pursues the survivors to Nice During the gunfight Gregor steals the case and disappears He negotiates selling it to the Russians but his contact attempts to betray him Gregor kills the contact then has Mikhi the Russian Mafioso in charge of the deal agree to another meeting The team tracks Gregor through one of Sam s old CIA contacts and corners him in the Arles Amphitheatre during his meeting with two of Mikhi s men Sam chases Gregor Gregor flees but is caught by Seamus Deirdre and Vincent confront the two Russian thugs causing a shootout Sam arrives to help killing one but catches a ricochet from the other when Vincent knocks away the thug s gun in order to kill him Seamus kills Larry and escapes with a reluctant Deirdre and the captured Gregor Vincent takes Sam to a villa owned by his friend Jean Pierre After removing the bullet and letting Sam recuperate Vincent asks Jean Pierre to help them find Gregor and the Irish operatives In Paris Gregor is persuaded through violent interrogation to give the case back to Seamus and Deirdre After retrieving it from a post office they are pursued by Sam and Vincent in a high speed chase Vincent shoots out their tire sending their car off an unfinished overpass Gregor escapes with the case while road workers rescue Deirdre and Seamus from the burning vehicle Unsure where to go next Sam and Vincent decide to track down the Russians one of Jean Pierre s contacts tells them they are involved with figure skater and Mikhi s girlfriend Natacha Kirilova who is appearing at Le Zenith During Natacha s performance Mikhi meets with Gregor who says a sniper in the arena will shoot Natacha if Mikhi betrays him Mikhi surprises Gregor by letting Natacha be killed before killing Gregor and taking the case Amid the ensuing chaos from Natacha s shooting Sam and Vincent leave the arena just in time to see Seamus kill Mikhi and steal the case Sam and Vincent split up Vincent pursues Seamus but is wounded in a gunfight Sam finds Deirdre waiting in a getaway car he convinces her to leave after explaining that he is still an active government agent working undercover to get Seamus not the case As she drives away Seamus is forced to return to the arena as Sam gives chase Seamus ambushes Sam but is shot dead by Vincent before Seamus can kill Sam Sam and Vincent have coffee in the bistro where they first met A radio broadcast announces that a peace agreement between Sinn Fein and the British government has been reached partially as a result of Seamus s death Sam keeps glancing at the door as patrons enter but Vincent convinces Sam that Deirdre will not be coming back They shake hands and part ways Sam drives off with his CIA contact as Vincent pays the bill and leaves Cast Edit Top billed cast of Ronin clockwise from top left Robert De Niro Jean Reno Stellan Skarsgard Sean Bean Natascha McElhone and Jonathan Pryce Robert De Niro as Sam an American mercenary formerly associated with the CIA 10 According to director John Frankenheimer De Niro was always dream casting for the film 11 Jean Reno as Vincent a French gunman who befriends Sam 12 13 Frankenheimer sought to establish the friendship between Reno s and De Niro s characters which he considered pivotal to the story and wanted to strengthen the off screen bond between the actors 11 Natascha McElhone as Deirdre an IRA operative commissioned to steal a briefcase by Seamus O Rourke 13 14 An on set dialect coach helped McElhone speak with a Northern Ireland accent 11 McElhone said she was thrilled to play the role because she portrayed a character that moved the action forward 15 Stellan Skarsgard as Gregor a German computer specialist formerly associated with the KGB 13 A fan of Skarsgard Frankenheimer praised the Swedish actor for bring ing so much to the role 11 Skarsgard suggested Gregor had been abandoned by his wife and son for which he became quite suicidal and cold 15 Sean Bean as Spence an Englishman who purports to be a firearms specialist formerly associated with the SAS 8 16 During production Frankenheimer did not know what the future held for the character and considered having him killed off screen after the team drives out of the warehouse or snatched from a Paris street into a van driven by the IRA Ultimately he had Spence dismissed from the team 11 Bean described the character as egotistic and a little bit out of his depth 15 Jonathan Pryce as Seamus a rogue operative in pursuit of the case through Deirdre 13 14 Like McElhone the Welshman Pryce was coached to hone his Northern Irish accent 11 Skipp Sudduth as Larry another American and the team s designated driver 16 Sudduth who had appeared in Frankenheimer s George Wallace 1997 17 performed most of his character s driving stunts 11 Michael Lonsdale as Jean Pierre Vincent s friend and colleague whose pastime is creating miniatures 18 Frankenheimer intended to make the character a miniature artist partially due to his own love of creating miniatures 11 The film was Lonsdale s third collaboration with Frankenheimer 17 Jan Triska as the dapper gent the first Russian to try and kill Gregor for the case In addition Feodor Atkine plays Mikhi the Russian who is buying the case while East German Olympic and World Champion figure skater Katarina Witt has an extended cameo as Natacha Kirilova a Russian Olympic and World Champion figure skater Production Edit Ronin was the penultimate feature film of director John Frankenheimer pictured in 1995 followed by Reindeer Games 19 In July 1997 Variety reported that Frankenheimer had signed to direct Ronin making it his fifth picture for United Artists 20 Frankenheimer told the magazine he chose the project because it had a very good script and was the kind of movie I d love to go see What I like is it s a character driven action picture and I have done those before with Black Sunday and French Connection II It s not one of these CGI pictures it s a film about people It s not bigger than life which I don t relate to that much 20 He also saw it as an opportunity to apply his broad knowledge and understanding of France especially Paris in which he resided for many years 11 He added I would not have been able to do the film nearly as well anywhere else 15 His films The Train 1964 Grand Prix 1966 Impossible Object 1973 and French Connection II 1975 were shot in France 9 Many of Ronin s principal crew members had worked with Frankenheimer on television films editor Tony Gibbs on George Wallace set designer Michael Z Hanan on George Wallace and The Burning Season 1994 and costume designer May Routh on Andersonville 1996 21 Frankenheimer chose French cinematographer Robert Fraisse to help him achieve the look and style he wanted for the film Fraisse impressed Frankenheimer with his work on the police thriller Citizen X 1995 which persuaded the director Fraisse could handle the more than 2 000 setups he planned for Ronin 9 Frank Mancuso Jr served as the film s producer 20 According to Frankenheimer French authorities helped him circumvent a strict Paris ordinance that prohibited film productions from firing guns in the city This was enacted because many civilians had been complaining about the gunfire noise produced by film shoots Additional factors influenced the decision officials desire for an American action film like Ronin few of which had been filmed there since the law was passed to be filmed in Paris and the desire to boost France s reputation as a filming location 11 Screenplay Edit Writer John David Zeik a newcomer to film 22 conceived the idea for Ronin after reading James Clavell s novel Shōgun at the age of 15 21 It gave him background information on rōnin masterless samurai which he incorporated into a screenplay years later On choosing France as the story s key location Zeik said Many years later in Nice the location of one of the key set pieces of the story I stared into the sun and saw the silhouettes of five heavily armed Gendarmes crossing the Promenade des Anglais That image made me realize that I wanted to set the film in France 21 Accounts differ as to the screenplay s authorship According to Zeik s attorney Playwright David Mamet was brought in shortly before production to expand De Niro s role and add a female love interest Although Mamet rewrote several scenes his contributions were minor according to Zeik s account Frankenheimer said Mamet s contributions were more significant The credits should read Story by J D Zeik screenplay by David Mamet We didn t shoot a line of Zeik s script 22 Frankenheimer later retracted this in a September 1998 open letter published in Variety writing that J D Zeik is unequivocally entitled to the first position screenwriting credit as well as the sole story credit he was awarded by the WGA He deserves recognition for his significant contribution to this film and I am proud to have worked with him 23 When he learned he would have to share credit with Zeik Mamet insisted on being credited with the pseudonym Richard Weisz because he had earlier decided to attach his name only to projects for which he was the sole writer 22 Filming and cinematography Edit Facade of a Montmartre bistro in 2011 Because the building was empty the crew constructed an interior set seen from the stairs 9 24 Ronin was produced on a budget of 55 million 5 Principal photography lasted 78 days 9 beginning on November 3 1997 in an abandoned workshop at Aubervilliers 25 Scenes at Porte des Lilas and the historic Arles Amphitheatre were filmed that November the crew then filmed at the Hotel Majestic in Cannes La Turbie and Villefranche 25 Production was suspended for Christmas on December 19 and resumed on January 5 1998 at Epinay where the crew built two interior sets on sound stages one for the bistro in Montmartre and another for the rural farmhouse 25 both of which also have exterior location shots 11 The climactic scene with a panicked crowd at Le Zenith required about 2 000 extras who were supervised by French casting director Margot Capelier 11 Filming concluded at La Defense on March 3 1998 25 Because there were no second unit director and camera operator to film the action scenes Frankenheimer and cinematographer Robert Fraisse supervised them for an additional 30 days after the main unit finished filming 9 26 The first major car chase scene was shot in La Turbie and Nice the rest were filmed in areas of Paris including La Defense and the Pont du Garigliano 25 27 Scenes set in a road tunnel were filmed at night because it was impossible to block tunnel traffic during the day 28 The freeway chase in which the actors dodge oncoming vehicles was filmed in four hours on a closed road 28 Frankenheimer s affinity for deep depth of field led him to shoot the film entirely with wide angle lenses ranging in focal length from 18 to 35 mm using the Super 35 format both of which allow more of the scene to be included in each shot 11 24 The director also avoided bright primary colors to preserve a first generation of film quality 11 He advised the actors and extras not to wear bright colors and had the film processed with Deluxe s Color Contrast Enhancement CCE a silver retention method of processing film that deepens blacks reduces color and heightens the visible appearance of film grain 11 29 Fraisse said he used a variety of cameras including Panaflexes for dialogue scenes and Arriflex 435s and 35 IIIs for the car chases to facilitate Frankenheimer s demands 9 Steadicam a camera stabilizer used for half of the shoot was operated by the director s longtime collaborator David Crone 9 According to Frankenheimer 2 200 shots were filmed 11 Stunts Edit The Mercedes Benz 450SEL 6 9 was Frankenheimer s favorite Mercedes model due to its appearance and great big powerful engine and he used it as the protagonist s car in Ronin s first major car chase 11 Frankenheimer avoided using special effects in the car chase scenes previsualizing them with storyboards and used the same camera mounts as those used on Grand Prix 11 The actors were placed inside the cars while being driven at up to 100 mph 160 km h by Formula One driver Jean Pierre Jarier and high performance drivers Jean Claude Lagniez and Michel Neugarten 9 The actors had enrolled at a high performance driving school before production began 11 According to Lagniez the car stunt coordinator it was a priority not to cheat the speed by adjusting the frame rate he said When you do it affects the lighting It is different at 20 frames than at 24 frames 28 However Fraisse said Sometimes but not very often we did shoot at 22 frames per second or 21 9 Point of view shots from cameras mounted below the cars front fender were used to deliver a heightened sense of speed 11 30 For the final chase scene which used 300 stunt drivers 11 the production team bought four BMW 535is and five Peugeot 406s a one of each was cut in half and towed by a Mercedes Benz 500 E while the actors were inside them 11 Right hand drive versions of the cars were also purchased a dummy steering wheel was installed on the left side while the stunt drivers drove the speeding vehicles 11 28 The final chase had very little music because Frankenheimer thought music and sound effects do not blend well Sound engineer Mike Le Mare recorded all of the film s cars on a racetrack mixing them later in post production 11 Frankenheimer refused to film the gunfights in slow motion believing onscreen violence should be depicted in real time 11 Mick Gould the film s technical advisor and a former instructor in the advanced training wings of the Special Air Service trained the cast in weapons handling and guerilla military tactics 21 32 The physical stunts were coordinated by Joe Dunne 2 Alternative endings Edit Frankenheimer filmed two additional versions of the film s ending In the first Deirdre McElhone waits on the stairs next to the bistro and considers joining Sam De Niro and Vincent Reno Deciding against it she walks up the stairs As she gets into her car IRA men drag her into a van and call her a traitor it is implied that she is later killed Sam and Vincent unaware of Deidre s abduction finish their conversation and depart Although Frankenheimer said the test audience hated the ending because they did not want to see Deirdre die he thought it really worked 11 In the second ending Deirdre walks to her car after Sam and Vincent leave the bistro this ending was also rejected because it verged on being too Hollywood hinting at a sequel Frankenheimer yielded to the test audience s response with a compromise ending he said with the tremendous investment MGM UA had in this movie you have to kind of listen to the audience 11 Music Edit Jerry Goldsmith was originally commissioned to compose the score for Ronin but left the project 33 34 MGM executive vice president for music Michael Sandoval assembled an A list to replace Goldsmith 33 From Sandoval s three choices Frankenheimer hired Czech composer Elia Cmiral 11 33 who said he was far away from being even a B composer at that time 34 Cmiral attended a private screening of the film s final version and considered its main theme which at Frankenheimer s behest would incorporate qualities of sadness loneliness and heroism 33 To achieve this Cmiral performed with the duduk an ancient double reed woodwind flute that originated in Armenia 35 Cmiral sent a demonstration to Frankenheimer who loved it and was signed as the film s composer 33 Cmiral s piece Ronin Theme was used for the opening scenes 33 36 Cmiral s score for Ronin his first for a major film studio 35 was recorded in seven weeks at CTS Studio in London 33 36 It was orchestrated and conducted by Nick Ingman edited by Mike Flicker and recorded and mixed by John Whynot 33 Varese Sarabande released the soundtrack album on compact disc in September 1998 36 For AllMusic Jason Ankeny rated the album 4 5 out of 5 and called it a profoundly visceral listening experience illustrating an expert grasp of pacing and atmosphere 36 Release EditBox office Edit Ronin had its world premiere at the 1998 Venice Film Festival on September 12 37 before a wide release on September 25 38 Ronin fared moderately well at the box office 39 it was the second highest grossing film in the United States during its opening weekend grossing 16 7 million behind the action comedy Rush Hour s 26 7 million at 2 643 locations 40 The film dropped to fifth place on its second weekend and to seventh on its third grossing 7 2 million and 4 7 million respectively at 2 487 locations 41 It dropped further until its sixth weekend when it grossed 1 1 million 13th place at 1 341 locations 41 The film ended its theatrical run with a gross of 41 6 million in the U S and Canada and 70 7 million worldwide 5 38 Ronin was 1998 s 11th highest grossing R rated film 42 Critical response Edit Critical reception to Ronin was favorable 16 critics praised its ensemble cast with many singling out Robert De Niro 2 10 43 44 Todd McCarthy in Variety credited De Niro with sustaining the film 2 but a reviewer from the Chicago Reader disagreed 45 The film s action scenes particularly the car chases were generally praised 2 16 Janet Maslin in The New York Times called them nothing short of sensational 44 These scenes were criticized by The Washington Post for their length 12 and by McCarthy for their excessive jump cuts 2 Robert Fraisse s cinematography was routinely praised 2 10 Michael Wilmington in the Chicago Tribune called it superficially attractive and entertaining 46 Although the plot was criticized by the Chicago Reader as dull and The Washington Post as derivative 12 45 Wilmington called it a familiar but taut tale 46 Some reviewers singled out the espionage scene in which De Niro and Natascha McElhone pose as tourists and photograph their targets at a Cannes hotel as one of the film s best 2 12 Critics also evaluated Frankenheimer because the broad acclaim he received with the political thriller The Manchurian Candidate 1962 established him as a director 10 43 46 Many said he was influenced by the works of fellow filmmaker and close friend Jean Pierre Melville particularly Melville s neo noir film Le Samourai 1967 39 47 but McCarthy wrote that Ronin lacks Melville s world weary existential ennui 2 The film was considered to be a return to form for Frankenheimer 19 48 whose Emmy Awards for the television films Against the Wall 1994 The Burning Season Andersonville and George Wallace had resurrected his career after it lost momentum during the 1970s and 1980s due to the director s alcohol addiction 6 10 Ronin was Frankenheimer s last well received feature film 6 Wilmington called it the director s best theatrical film in decades despite lacking The Manchurian Candidate s blazing invention 46 and Stephen Prince called the film his end of career masterpiece 7 Prince wrote With Ronin Frankenheimer vindicated his cinematic talents and aesthetic preferences The film is stylistically bonded with the principles of his work as found in the earliest and best period of his career Its aesthetic of realism places it with Grand Prix The Train and The Gypsy Moths and its minimalist conception of character and narrative detail bonds it to those productions as well Frankenheimer had not lost his touch as a filmmaker far from it Ronin is smart sharp and witty and it shows a greater facility for visual storytelling than most films made today by younger directors can muster 7 Post release EditHome media Edit In February 1999 MGM Home Entertainment released Ronin as a two disc DVD that contained versions in widescreen and pan and scan formats and Dolby Digital 5 1 sound 49 The DVD also contains the alternative ending and an audio commentary by John Frankenheimer who discusses the film s production history 50 MGM released a special edition DVD of the film in October 2004 and a two disc collector s edition in May 2006 both of which have additional cast and crew interviews 49 It was released on Blu ray with its theatrical trailer in February 2009 51 In August 2017 Arrow Video released a special edition Blu ray with a 4K resolution restoration from the original camera negative that was supervised and approved by cinematographer Robert Fraisse 52 Arrow s Blu ray also includes archival bonus features that originally appeared on the MGM special edition DVD 53 together with Fraisse talking about his early cinematography career and his involvement with Ronin 54 Cinematic analysis Edit The 18th century Japanese revenge of the forty seven rōnin was the film s central metaphor 18 The film s title was derived from the Japanese legend of rōnin samurai whose leader was killed and left them with no one to serve and roamed the countryside as mercenaries and bandits to regain a sense of purpose 55 In Frankenheimer s film the rōnin are former intelligence operatives who are unemployed at the end of the Cold War devoid of purpose they become highly paid mercenaries Michael Lonsdale s character elaborates on the analogy in an anecdote about the forty seven rōnin told with miniatures comparing the film s characters to the 18th century rōnin of Japan 56 In his essay Action and Abstraction in Ronin Stephen Prince wrote that the rōnin metaphor explores themes of service honor and obligation to complex ways by showing that service may entail betrayal and that honor may be measured according to disparate terms 57 According to Stephen B Armstrong Arguably Frankenheimer uses this story to highlight and contrast the moral and social weakness that characterize the band of rōnin in his film 55 The film features a MacGuffin plot device in the form of a briefcase the contents of which are important but unknown 13 46 Chicago Sun Times critic Roger Ebert wrote that its content is identical to that of the equally mysterious case in Quentin Tarantino s Pulp Fiction 1994 43 also a MacGuffin 58 Michael Wilmington of the Chicago Tribune called Ronin an homage to The French Connection 1971 The Parallax View 1974 and Three Days of the Condor 1975 thriller films known for their lack of visual effects 46 Maitland McDonagh of TV Guide also compared the film to The Day of the Jackal 1973 14 and noted similarities between Ronin s opening scene and that of Tarantino s Reservoir Dogs 1992 in which a group of professional killers who have not met before assemble 46 According to Armstrong the film s plot observes the conventions of heist films 55 Frankenheimer employed a hyperrealistic aesthetic in his films to make them look realer than real because reality by itself can be very boring and saw them as having a tinge of semi documentary 11 He credited Gillo Pontecorvo s The Battle of Algiers 1966 a film he considered flawless and more influential than any other he had seen with inspiring this style 11 According to Prince Frankenheimer s success at working in this realist style avoiding special effects trickery places the car chase in Ronin in the same rarefied class as the celebrated chase in Bullitt 1968 59 The director credited the Russian film The Cranes Are Flying 1957 with inspiring invisible cuts in Ronin On the film s DVD audio commentary Frankenheimer notes a wipe during the opening scenes made by two extras walking across the frame which becomes a tracking shot of Jean Reno entering the bistro His intention for the cut was to conceal the fact that the bistro s interior was a set its exterior was filmed on location 11 Legacy EditModern reception Edit On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 70 of 73 critics reviews are positive with an average rating of 6 4 10 The website s consensus reads Ronin earns comparisons to The French Connection with strong action dynamic road chase scenes and solid performances 60 In 2019 Rotten Tomatoes Alex Vo ranked Ronin No 101 on his list of the 140 Essential Action Movies To Watch Now 61 Metacritic which uses a weighted average assigned the film a score of 67 out of 100 based on 23 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 62 Ronin s car chases were included on several media outlets lists of the best depicted on film including CNN No 2 63 Time No 12 64 Fandango No 6 65 Complex No 25 66 The Daily Telegraph No 10 67 PopMatters No 9 68 IGN No 9 69 Screen Rant No 8 70 Business Insider No 3 71 Consequence of Sound No 6 72 and Collider 73 Some critics have said the chase scenes in Mission Impossible Fallout 2018 were influenced by those in Ronin 74 75 Screen Rant ranked Ronin No 1 on its list of the 12 Best Action Movies You ve Never Heard Of 76 In 2014 Time Out polled several film critics directors actors and stunt actors about their top action films 77 Ronin was 72nd on the list 78 Paste magazine ranked the film at No 10 on its list of the 25 Best Movies of 1998 79 Ronin was included in the film reference book 101 Action Movies You Must See Before You Die 80 Video games Edit Ronin influenced the conception of the action video games Burnout b and Alpha Protocol 83 Footnotes Edit In the DVD commentary Frankenheimer says four BMWs and five Peugeots were purchased for the chase scene 11 namely the BMW 535i and Peugeot 406 31 Alex Ward the creator of Burnout said the inspiration for the racing game was the DVD version s 15th chapter 81 which is titled Crashing the Case and shows a crash between two opposing cars 82 References Edit Ronin 1998 British Film Institute Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved December 11 2017 a b c d e f g h i McCarthy Todd September 14 1998 Review Ronin Variety Archived from the original on March 31 2017 Retrieved July 29 2015 a b Ronin 15 British Board of Film Classification Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 Ronin 1998 American Film Institute Retrieved February 1 2019 a b c d Ronin 1998 The Numbers Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b c John Frankenheimer Biography Turner Classic Movies Turner Broadcasting System Time Warner Archived from the original on June 14 2018 Retrieved March 27 2018 a b c Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 87 a b Keeling Robert April 16 2018 Looking back at Ronin Den of Geek United Kingdom Dennis Publishing Archived from the original on May 8 2018 Retrieved May 8 2018 a b c d e f g h i j Magid Ron October 1998 Samurai Tactics American Cinematographer p 1 ISSN 0002 7928 Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved May 15 2013 Magid Ron October 1998 Samurai Tactics American Cinematographer p 2 ISSN 0002 7928 Archived from the original on November 13 2006 Retrieved May 15 2013 Magid Ron October 1998 Samurai Tactics American Cinematographer p 3 ISSN 0002 7928 Archived from the original on November 13 2006 Retrieved May 15 2013 Magid Ron October 1998 Samurai Tactics American Cinematographer p 4 ISSN 0002 7928 Archived from the original on November 13 2006 Retrieved May 15 2013 a b c d e Travers Peter September 25 1998 Ronin Rolling Stone Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Retrieved September 29 2017 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af John Frankenheimer director Ronin audio commentary MGM Home Entertainment a b c d O Sullivan Michael September 25 1998 Run of the Mill Ronin The Washington Post Archived from the original on April 10 2016 Retrieved September 29 2017 a b c d e Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 79 a b c McDonagh Maitland Ronin TV Guide Archived from the original on December 22 2017 Retrieved December 19 2017 a b c d John Frankenheimer et al 2004 Ronin Filming in the Fast Lane featurette MGM Home Entertainment a b c d Armstrong 2008 p 157 a b Ronin The Casting Cinema Review Archived from the original on September 24 2002 Retrieved May 8 2018 a b Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 82 a b Bowie Stephen November 2006 Great Directors John Frankenheimer Senses of Cinema ISSN 1443 4059 Archived from the original on June 2 2013 Retrieved May 15 2013 a b c Fleming Michael July 2 1997 Ronin in from cold Variety Archived from the original on December 19 2018 Retrieved December 19 2018 a b c d Ronin About the Production Cinema Review Archived from the original on September 24 2002 Retrieved October 28 2017 a b c Harrison Eric August 5 1998 Mamet Versus Writers Guild the Action Thriller Sequel Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on September 11 2013 Retrieved May 15 2013 Frankenheimer John September 23 1998 Open letter on J D Zeik Variety p 21 Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Retrieved December 20 2018 a b Robert Fraisse director of photography 2004 Through the Lens featurette MGM Home Entertainment a b c d e Ronin About The Photography Cinema Review Archived from the original on September 24 2002 Retrieved October 2 2017 Robert Fraisse director of photography 2017 Close Up An Interview with Robert Fraisse featurette Arrow Video Crosse 2006 p 42 a b c d Jean Claude Lagniez car stunt coordinator 2004 The Driving of Ronin featurette MGM Home Entertainment Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 85 Lane Anthony 2002 Nobody s Perfect Writings from The New Yorker 1st ed New York Vintage Books pp 249 253 ISBN 978 0 375 71434 4 Kennouche Sofiane April 1 2015 The greatest drivers cars to ever feature in movies Evo United Kingdom Dennis Publishing Archived from the original on May 9 2018 Retrieved May 9 2018 About Mick Gould April 30 2014 Retrieved December 6 2021 a b c d e f g h Goldwasser Dan November 15 1998 A Look at Ronin with Elia Cmiral Soundtrack Net Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 a b Plume Kenneth July 7 2000 Interview with Composer Elia Cmiral IGN Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 a b Elia Cmiral composer 2004 Composing the Ronin Score featurette MGM Home Entertainment a b c d Ronin Original Motion Picture Soundtrack AllMusic Archived from the original on September 27 2017 Retrieved September 27 2017 Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 285 a b Ronin 1998 Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b Armstrong 2008 p 160 Weekly Box Office September 25 October 1 1998 Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b Ronin 1998 Weekend Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 1998 Yearly Box Office by MPAA Rating All R Rated Releases Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on July 7 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b c Ebert Roger Ronin RogerEbert com Archived from the original on November 10 2013 Retrieved November 9 2013 a b Maslin Janet September 25 1998 Film Review Real Tough Guys Real Derring Do The New York Times Archived from the original on May 9 2018 Retrieved May 9 2018 a b Alspector Lisa October 26 1985 Ronin Chicago Reader Archived from the original on August 14 2016 Retrieved September 29 2017 a b c d e f g Wilmington Michael September 25 1998 Spy Vs Spy Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on October 22 2018 Retrieved October 22 2018 Stratton David 1999 Ronin Review SBS Archived from the original on January 17 2018 Retrieved January 17 2018 Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 78 a b Ronin 1998 Releases AllMovie Archived from the original on June 19 2013 Retrieved September 28 2017 Hunt Bill Ronin DVD review The Digital Bits Internet Brands Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 Krauss David March 5 2009 Ronin Blu ray review High Def Digest Internet Brands Archived from the original on September 28 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 Kauffman Jeffrey Ronin Blu ray Blu ray com Internet Brand Archived from the original on October 22 2017 Retrieved May 9 2018 Hunt Bill August 14 2017 Ronin Arrow Blu ray Review The Digital Bits Internet Brands Archived from the original on October 9 2017 Retrieved May 9 2018 Spurlin Thomas August 29 2017 Ronin Arrow Video Special Edition Blu ray DVD Talk Internet Brands Archived from the original on September 18 2017 Retrieved September 28 2017 a b c Armstrong 2008 p 159 Armstrong 2008 p 158 Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 83 Top 10 Movie MacGuffin IGN May 21 2008 Archived from the original on December 16 2017 Retrieved February 24 2021 Pomerance amp Palmer 2011 p 84 Ronin Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved February 7 2023 Vo Alex June 2019 140 Essential Action Movies To Watch Now Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Archived from the original on June 9 2019 Retrieved July 27 2019 Ronin Metacritic Fandom Inc Retrieved February 7 2023 Howie Craig March 27 2009 Top 10 movie car chase scenes CNN Archived from the original on December 21 2015 Retrieved January 5 2018 Cruz Gilbert May 1 2011 The 15 Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time Time Archived from the original on September 7 2015 Retrieved September 29 2017 The All Time Top 10 Movie Car Chases Fandango 2012 Archived from the original on March 5 2019 Retrieved March 5 2019 Z Alex March 4 2012 The 50 Craziest Car Chase Scenes In Movie History Complex Retrieved March 5 2019 Billson Anne August 1 2014 The 13 best car chases in film The Daily Telegraph Archived from the original on December 3 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Gibron Bill April 2 2015 The 10 Best Car Chase Films PopMatters p 1 Archived from the original on January 5 2018 Retrieved January 5 2018 Vejvoda Jim September 30 2016 Best Car Chases in Movies IGN p 2 Archived from the original on April 20 2017 Retrieved February 24 2021 Browne Ben March 3 2017 15 Best Chase Movies Of All Time Screen Rant Archived from the original on June 17 2017 Retrieved December 24 2017 Guerrasio Jason April 4 2017 Ranked The 28 best car chases in movie history Business Insider Archived from the original on December 11 2017 Retrieved January 5 2018 Suzanne Mayer Dominick Goble Blake October 25 2018 The 50 Greatest Car Chases in Film History Consequence of Sound Archived from the original on March 5 2019 Retrieved March 5 2019 12 Best Car Chases from Bullitt to Mad Max Fury Road Collider February 21 2019 Archived from the original on March 5 2019 Retrieved March 5 2019 Nashawaty Chris July 12 2018 Mission Impossible Fallout is insanely great EW review Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on December 16 2018 Retrieved December 16 2018 Lambie Ryan July 24 2018 Mission Impossible Fallout review the best action thriller of the year so far Den of Geek United Kingdom Dennis Publishing Archived from the original on December 16 2018 Retrieved December 16 2018 DiGiulio Matt January 20 2016 12 Best Action Movies You ve Never Heard Of Screen Rant Archived from the original on January 16 2017 Retrieved September 29 2017 The 100 best action movies Time Out Archived from the original on November 6 2014 Retrieved November 7 2014 The 100 best action movies 80 71 Time Out Archived from the original on November 7 2014 Retrieved November 7 2014 The 25 Best Movies of 1998 Paste September 22 2018 Archived from the original on September 23 2018 Retrieved September 23 2018 Schneider Steven Jay ed 2010 101 Action Movies You Must See Before You Die London Cassell pp 328 331 ISBN 978 1 84403 688 2 Retrieved February 8 2023 via Internet Archive Book Reader Davison John April 26 2017 Burnout Series Creator Talks Remaking Crash Mode for Danger Zone Rolling Stone Archived from the original on January 22 2018 Retrieved January 22 2018 Ronin DVD MGM Home Entertainment May 7 2013 Aihoshi Richard November 14 2008 Alpha Protocol Interview Part 2 IGN p 3 Archived from the original on January 22 2018 Retrieved January 22 2018 Bibliography Edit Armstrong Stephen B 2008 Pictures About Extremes The Films of John Frankenheimer United States McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 3145 8 Crosse Jesse 2006 The Greatest Movie Car Chases of All Time United States Motorbooks ISBN 978 0 7603 2410 3 Pomerance Murray Palmer R Barton eds 2011 A Little Solitaire John Frankenheimer and American Film United States Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 5059 6 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Ronin film Ronin at IMDb Ronin at the Internet Movie Firearms Database Ronin at the Internet Movie Cars Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ronin film amp oldid 1149856306, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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