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10 Essential Cinematic AntiheroesThe film opens, somewhat uncomfortably given recent events, with a sniper attack on a random group of people in Pittsburgh. (The discomfort levels skyrocket when there is a shot of him lining up a small child in his crosshairs.) After an unstable former military sniper is brought in and charged with the crimes, he makes one request: bring in Jack Reacher. Reacher is a former military policeman who now lives as a drifter, almost entirely off the grid – his sole possessions are his ATM card, a travel-sized toothbrush, and the clothes on his back. By the time Reacher makes it to Pittsburgh, the sniper has already been brutalized by fellow inmates and lies in a coma. Although Reacher can't question the sniper, he is convinced of his guilt (Reacher brought him in for killing some military contractors overseas years earlier), but sticks around anyway, compelled by his true north-moral compass.
"Jack Reacher"'s plot is fairly inconsequential, with an overtly complicated conspiracy that involves a "Chinatown"-style land grab and a villain known as The Zec (played, amazingly, by Werner Herzog), who, as a Siberian prisoner, was forced to chew off all but two of his fingers, to stop the onset of frostbite. Ick. The movie does have a wonderful sense of mood and a fairly luxurious pace, which for once doesn't hinder the forward momentum of its pulpy dime-store-novel plot but instead gives it some much-needed room to establish atmosphere and character. Along the way there are some truly incredible action movie beats, including a car chase that is filmed in long, unbroken cuts that make it seem like Tom Cruise is actually piloting his vintage muscle car through the rain-slicked streets of Pittsburgh (because he was), but "Jack Reacher" is much more of a thriller than a brawny action piece.
Cruise embodies Jack Reacher fully – the way he walks, the way he talks (he nails both the smart-ass line delivery and the taciturn moments when Reacher would rather chew glass than speak), the way he looks at a crime scene or piece of evidence and soaks it all in. (At one point, investigator Emerson is shocked to learn that Reacher never writes anything down. He doesn't have to.) Reacher, in the books, is a physically imposing force; Cruise isn't blessed with that. So he's got to establish Reacher's don't-fuck-with-me-ness in a different way. And he does it, marvelously. By the time the movie reaches its climax (with some help from Robert Duvall as a cantankerous gun-range owner – yes!), Cruise has fully conveyed his inner Reacher-ness, brilliantly and dangerously. The character may have a moral code that is unwavering, but that doesn't mean he's unwilling to get his hands dirty.
6 Comments
Mpzz | January 4, 2013 8:36 PM
No matter how good it looks, I can't bring myself to go to a movie with a Scientologist in it.
TJR | December 19, 2012 7:03 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6Qf-DNBn5A
Alan | December 19, 2012 4:06 AM
Be prepared for THE Jai Courtney, he's going to change all our lives. Actually, I recently read an interview with him and sounded like a pretty cool guy: anyone that went from cleaning shit for a living to playing Bruce Willis' son has got to be doing something right.
eamon | December 18, 2012 5:28 PM
Will Definitely check this out, great review.
regi | December 17, 2012 2:33 PM
i'll take your word for all this, having not seen the movie. i generally like cruise as an actor, he's often better than his material ("interview with a vampire"). but, the dialogue in the trailer for this so bloody awful ("every suspect is a trained killer") that i can't bring myself to actually go to a theater to see this. when it pops up on FX, i'll definitely check it out, tho'.
Tyler | December 17, 2012 1:53 PM
It's unfortunate that the ads keep making it look like a clone of Taken, because this is actually getting decent reviews (so far)