You Have One Day Left To Stream Ronin On HBO Max And You Absolutely Should

Ronin Movie Stream 2
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It is the most old-guy autojournalist thing to try and convince you that John Frankeheimer’s Ronin is the greatest car chase movie of all time and one of the best heist action movies ever. Superlatives, in this case, are less important. If you know the movie and read this website you probably love the movie. If that’s the case, you can stream the movie on HBO Max for one more day, which is information you should probably have.

I have just rewatched Ronin and I’m happy to report that the movie does indeed hold up to multiple viewings. The car chases are still exceptional, having been directed by car geek John Frankenheimer. The dialogue, punched up by David Mamet, also kicks ass.

The film holds up way better than The French Connection, which is well-shot and well-acted but feels slow and almost cartoonishly gritty in the way a lot of 1970s stuff feels (to be fair, that is sort of how New York was in the 1970s). It obviously works better than Bullit, which is a great car chase movie cocooned inside a pretty boring action movie.

If you haven’t seen it, Ronin is extremely simple in both dialogue and storyline, with a classic heist MacGuffin (what is in that briefcase?) and a fairly comprehensible storyline. The casting is also fantastic, with Johnathan Pryce and Stellan Skarsgård fighting to see who is the real worst bad guy.

The “good guys” also include an action crew where none of the actors look like they belong in an action movie, with maybe the exception Natascha McElhone, who kicks a ton of ass. The flick does a good job of making both Jean Reno and Robert DeNiro look way over the hill and make Sean Bean look like a twerp.

Assuming you need more convincing, here’s a clip of a car chase:

And that’s just one car chase and not even the best one!

The car casting is also appropriate, with the Audi S8 standing out as the main hero car, mixed in with the E34 BMW 5-Series, and a ton of Citroëns and Peugeots (the movie is set in France).  Shout out both to the Citroën ZX cop car that gets nailed in the tunnel and the Peugeot 406 3.0 V6 that shows that not every badass car needs 900 horsepower and rear-wheel-drive.

Ronin Peugeot
Photo: IMCDB

Rewatching the film surfaces all the intricate details, from the wheelman asking for custom-made nitrous injectors for the Audi to the number of cigarettes the Europeans consume. Plus, the lines. So many good lines. If you can rewatch this film without yelling out “WHAT COLOR IS THE BOATHOUSE AT HEREFORD?” I don’t want to know you.

I mention all of this because tomorrow (or maybe tonight?) is the last day you can watch the film on HBO Max/Max, which is one of the more popular streaming platforms and it’s not on Netflix in the United States.

Of course, because streaming is streaming, the movie is apparently on Hulu for at least a little while.

As Robert DeNiro’s character says so clearly at the end of the film: “Don’t you see, I never left”

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63 thoughts on “You Have One Day Left To Stream Ronin On HBO Max And You Absolutely Should

  1. Having been named after that movie, I think I’m legally obligated to like it. However, I do have to gripe about not mentioning the Mercedes, which played a decent part in the film (having been the car from which where the grenade/rocket/whatever was launched). Plus it looks cool.

  2. This is one of my top 3 movies. I watch it once year. I actually met John Frankenheimer in the early 90’s. True car guy – which you get a real sense of when you listen to his commentary on the DVD/Blue-ray. He had very specific reasons (and love) for each vehicle he chose for the film. He also had a genuine appreciation for the car stunt team.

  3. Let’s be honest, the rest of the movie is kind of a snooze… I just always fast forward to the chase scene. But then again I’m a very impatient person.

  4. While many people see Ronin as an advertisement for the incredible supersedan Audi S8, note that the tuned S8 could never quite catch the Citroen XM.

  5. I’m in luck! Wife said she had things to do in the other room, and to watch whatever I wanted, so I’m going with the Autopian weekly (hint hint) movie recommendation for solid car chase movies. Just getting the dvd started, loving it already. Just fine work by all involved. What makes or breaks a great car chase scene is the camera work and the editing, and Ronin has it in spades.

    1. Don’t rely on streaming for movies you love–even if you find it, you’ll miss the behind-the-scenes extras from those car chases that you want.

      Oh, and my favorite moment is when McElhone drives onto the freeway in the opposing direction and Skarsgard, sitting front passenger, freshly beaten and being held hostage with a gun to his head, widens his eyes, reaches back over his shoulder, grabs his seatbelt, and fastens it.

  6. “Ronin is extremely simple in both dialogue and storyline”

    To steal a line from Ocean’s Eleven, never use seven words when four will do.

    Although the dialogue is light in Ronin there are so many memorable quotes from that movie.

  7. Are you me exactly a week ago? Because I saw it on there suggested for me and my first thought was “Holy crap, I haven’t seen Ronin in forever” immediately followed by “I’m going to watch that badass shit right now”
    And I did, and it holds UP. The cast is just top shelf.

  8. Got in on DVD, down in my basement with the 100’s of other movies I own. I do remember watching it once, with the director’s commentary turned on. Fantastic the little details that went into a mundane scene, or a character actor not known much outside of France.

    Also, 3 Bond villians – Sean Bean, Jonathan Pryce, and Michael Lonsdale.

    1. Me too, saw it in a theater and bought the dvd as soon as it came out. No doubt it truly is one of the great car chase movies. I’d put the first Jason Bourne movie up there too.

  9. I must re watch this. I have it on DVD somewhere, bought on eBay, but I am sure I last watched it in a cinema in France not long after it came out. I have a nagging memory that there was a continuity error with the S8. Different steering wheels in different shots. But that might just be my bad memory

  10. I love this movie for all the things the mentioned above. I love the cars, the dialogue, and I absolutely LOVE the fact that it never lets the viewer behind the curtain by keeping major plot points secret even after the credits roll.

    I also love this movie because it is my go-to answer when people ask the question “Name one movie that Sean Bean doesn’t die in?”

          1. I almost mentioned Sharpe, which as you note his character was practically invincible in) as another example of him not dying, but then thought better of mixing TV shows and movies, as he doesn’t die nearly as often in the TV shows he has been in (GoT, notwithstanding).

  11. I can’t believe they made 47 of these! I’ve only seen this one, and the 47th. So, I’m not sure how it went from this, to Keenu Reaves being a samurai in late Edo period Japan. Those Hollywood writer though, always finding ways to make their stories about the Edo period! A bunch of Shogunate-lovers. Like lol, sorry about the Boshin War guys! Anyways always love a nice E34, good movie!

  12. Is it too late for a poll? “Seen it & love it,” “Seen it & meh,” “Haven’t seen it & won’t,” “Haven’t seen it & going home to watch it now?” I wonder how that’d shake out.

      1. Matt’s thesis is “If you know the movie and read this website you probably love the movie,” but I’d venture to guess that the Venn diagram of “Know the movie,” “Read the website,” and “Love the movie” is basically an eclipse.

      1. I love watching it tearing up the city streets,and that v6 is great. I need to find one of these one day,but the v6 one would be near impossible to find,here in Scandinavia at least.

    1. On behalf of David Tracy, shame on Hardigree for not acknowledging Stellan Skarsgard’s Jeep Cherokee XJ in the “parked outside the playground” scene. Tsk, tsk.

    1. True story, I learned about the existence of that car from this movie. When it first appears, at first I rolled my eyes at the Hollywood bullshit of making a W123 look like a fast car on film – my girlfriend at the time drove a 300D and I knew better. Then I paid closer attention and noticed that’s not what it was at all, and then the camera flashed to the 6.9 badge on the back. My Murcan freedom-units-only brain started running calculations – “Wait a minute, if a Pontiac 400 is 6.6 liters, and this says 6.9… Jesus Christ, a big block Mercedes? I must know more about this car.”

  13. “Look at us all. What could have been conducted in polite, collegial fashion is now fucked into a cocked hat.”

    What it’s like working at The Autopian.

  14. I will not stand for this edge lord smearing of Bullitt. The car chase is probably the least interesting thing about the whole movie.

    it’s a neo-noir and Bullitt is arguably the first time a police officer was portrayed as an anti-establishment figure in popular cinema.

    1. Bingo. McQueen didn’t even want the role initially, only agreed when they let him play it his way.

      The mundane details make the film in my eyes; he parks the Mustang on the street, down from his modest apartment. He even makes a point of locking the doors. It’s got a dent in the front quarter panel b/c McQueen felt a detective might not have the money to get it fixed right away.

      1. Wakes up with a hangover, buys TV dinners, middle class girlfriend with job in a male dominated profession, subtle racism, shifty local politics. There’s so many layers to the film and that’s before we’ve even got to the direction or the soundtrack.

        1. Years ago, I went in that corner market. I was walking and saw a couldn’t-place-it apartment front. Thinking about SF movies I knew, I noticed the store across the street, went in and asked the guy at the counter. He just pointed at a framed photo on the wall that showed the crew filming McQueen stacking up the dinners.

          I bought a beer as I didn’t feel like Salisbury steak.

          1. My first trip to California in 2010, I rented a Mustang and stayed in SF for a week. Drove round all the locations it was filmed, including getting a shot of my rental outside the apartment (Taylor Street).

  15. What color is the boathouse?!

    In fairness, both Bullitt and the French Connection are a different type of movie – they’re procedurals vs. the pure thriller that’s Ronin.

    Car chase aside (on a bunch of levels, hupcap included), what’s great about Bullitt is the focus on authenticity. The hospital scenes, the police department, etc. are pretty accurate to real life. Same with the French Connection – the slow burn of real detective work is well captured. And rocker panels, jeeze, rocker panels.

    1. That scene in “The French Connection” where Gene Hackman (and Roy Scheider as well, I think, it’s been a while) are staking out the bad guys from across the street, watching them enjoy a fantastic meal through the glass window in front, while they are standing on the sidewalk across the street out in crappy weather, drinking crappy coffee from styrofoam cups. That’s one of my favorite “good guys versus bad guys” visual juxtapositions I’ve ever seen.

      1. Great scene and observation…I’d forgotten about it. And them doing surveillance, sitting in cramped apartments playing cards and listening to endless hours of nothing, until they get the one thing for which they’ve been waiting…

        Hackman’s fantastic in his obsessive, manic way, but I’ve always enjoyed Scheider’s low-key but steadfast counterpoint.

    1. This movie is exactly when I fell in love with the S8. Up until that point I didn’t really care much for Audis, as I grew up in a BMW/Mercedes Benz household with a few air cooled VWs thrown in for good measure. I was predestined to love the 6.9 in Ronin, but the lust for the S8 and even the 406 was palpable upon leaving the theater.

    2. It was my first introduction to German Sedans, that and the M5 were just boss. I was a sophmore in high school when this came out as well. Very impressionabl age. I now own a quick German Sedan, modern, inline 6, and work on it myself. 4 doors and all, a Dadmobile that scoots, as god intended.

      1. “A dadmobile that scoots.” Bingo.

        If you had told me at age 16 that someday I would not only own a four-door sedan, that I would not only love that sedan, but that it would also be the fastest car I have ever owned by far, I would not have believed you. Yet right out in the driveway is the G37X that ticks all these boxes. 16 year old me might have scoffed until you put him behind the wheel.

        1. I used to joke when I was a skateboard and snowboard punk/bum that “some day I would sell out, go SLC Punk, and be an asshole with a corporate gig and a BMW” while smugly exhaling cigarette smoke on a break from my shit restaurant job.
          And it effing happened.

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