Ben Affleck says Tom Clancy made realism ‘top priority’

Tom Clancy, seen in this 1999 file photo, who penned the popular Jack Ryan series, including "The Hunt for Red October," "Patriot Games" and "Clear and Present Danger," among many others, has died, Tuesday, October 1, 2013 in a hospital in Baltimore, Md. (Photo credit: Rodger Mallison/Fort Worth Star-Telegram)

Tom Clancy, seen in this 1999 file photo, who penned the popular Jack Ryan series, including “The Hunt for Red October,” “Patriot Games” and “Clear and Present Danger,” among many others, has died, Tuesday, October 1, 2013 in a hospital in Baltimore, Md. (Photo credit: Rodger Mallison/Fort Worth Star-Telegram)

By John Horn
Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — As the Oscar-winning filmmaker behind “Argo,” Ben Affleck certainly knows the difference between a good spy story and a bad one.

Part of his education came from novelist Tom Clancy, who died Tuesday in a Baltimore hospital. The bestselling author of espionage tales was 66.

As a young actor, Affleck was cast in the 2002 film adaptation of “The Sum of All Fears,” in which Affleck played Clancy’s famous CIA operative Jack Ryan.

“I think Tom was really the first major writer in the genre to make realism the top priority,” Affleck said Tuesday.

“When you read one of his books, you had the distinct feeling that he was depicting military or espionage situations exactly as they really are. He hews to his research religiously, and the result is an indisputable sense of authenticity.

“Other spy books feel invented, while his feel like genuine accounts of events that took place but that no one knows about. I think the movie adaptations have risen and fallen in direct proportion to how well they kept his sense of authenticity and nuts-and-bolts realism.”

Affleck added that Clancy was not as macho as his writing might have suggested.

“I spent time at his home with his family, and, despite his image as a tough guy, he was incredibly sweet and loving,” the actor and director said.

“He cared a lot about the care Johns Hopkins gave children. Despite the fact that he spent so much time writing about the military and clandestine services, he thought the real heroes of the world were doctors — particularly ones who cared for children. I will miss him.”

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