The film Jack Reacher puts an ex-military, highly trained,
decorated, homicide investigator into what would, on the surface, be an open
and shut case. A military sniper has randomly shot five people dead. The man’s
finger print has been found at the scene and he has previous history. It’s this
past which is Jack Reacher’s, played by the almost legendary status Tom Cruise,
connection and he turns up out of the blue to assist the now beaten and comatose
suspect.
The character who enables Jack Reacher with some authority
and drags him into the plot is defence lawyer Helen Rodin played by the elegant
Rosamund Pike (Surrogates). Pike’s natural intensity suites the storyline well
and she seems more than capable of facing up to the intimidating Cruise. In
fact their good on screen chemistry keeps an energy running through the film
which keeps you guessing at how far their relationship will develop.
The film has two distinct halves. Key information is revealed
at the midpoint which changes the perspective and the course of the plot. The
first half perceivably moves slowly at times and the viewer is probably right
to question why we need to know certain facts about the victims but holding on
to the trust in the writer come director, Christopher McQuarrie, is worth it. All
comes to a crashing conclusion which enables Cruise to switch on his action
gene.
Perhaps the weakness in the film is the villain known as The
Zec, played by Werner Herzog (Rescue Dawn), who comes across as a bad stereotype,
with no fingers, and at one point steps from the shadows to explain some
gruesome act. He proclaims he is everything bad and is more comic book than
thriller novel. It’s a shame because his henchman Charlie, played excellently by
rising star Jai Courtney (A Good Day to Die Hard), suffers by association.
Jack Reacher is a Tom Cruise production. It is about the
actor and his mega superstardom, and people try and point this out as a
negative but the fact is the film is very entertaining and Tom Cruise, who also
does many of his own stunt scenes, is once again highly effective.
73/100
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