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Tom Cruise, left, is Jack Reacher and Robert Duvall is Cash in "Jack Reacher." (Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions Photo / December 20, 2012) |
"All the time," Reacher replies. "You should try it."
Whoa, what a put-down! This dude would kill in the seventh grade.
Speaking of killing, "Jack Reacher"— adapted from "One Shot," one of the Lee Child novels starring the ex-Army hotshot investigator — is what brings Reacher to Pittsburgh: A sniper has taken down five strangers walking along the riverfront on a sunny day, and although the shooter’s aim is deadly and his demeanor deathly calm, the evidence he leaves behind is a homicide investigator’s dream. Practically before the opening credits are over, James Mark Barr (Joseph Sikora) has been arrested and charged with the crime.
But instead of signing the confession pushed in front of him in the interrogation room, Barr scrawls "Get Jack Reacher" on the page. And somehow, Reacher, who has been off the grid for two years (he travels by bus, pays in cash, doesn’t carry a change of clothes), answers the call.
I can’t pretend to know what drew Cruise — who, after all, is Ethan Hunt in the thriving "Mission: Impossible franchise — to play this charmless, unironic macho hero. Reacher does get to punch swarms of punks and rev a muscle car over the Steel City hills, and he gets Rosamund Pike to look at him like she’s going to swoon. Maybe that’s enough.
Rosamund Pike is Helen Rodin, the defense attorney picked to represent Barr. Her dad (Richard Jenkins) happens to be the city’s District Attorney, working with Detective Emerson (David Oyelowo, from "The Paperboy") to send Barr to jail for the rest of his life.
But Reacher thinks it’s too perfect a case. When he starts being followed and threatened, seduced in a bar booth and clunked on the head in a bathtub, he’s even more certain. He’s nobody’s fool, this Reacher.
Written and directed by Christopher McQuarrie, who won an Oscar for his wickedly smart "The Usual Suspects” screenplay (and who scripted the Nazi Cruise thriller, "Valkyrie"), "Jack Reacher pushes its formula plot toward a big nighttime shootout in an excavation site. The violence is plenty, and pointless. Robert Duvall shows up as an ornery rifleman who gives Reacher cover as he moves in to deal with the bad guys, and ace documentarian Werner Herzog, in a rare turn as a Hollywood villain, is a one-eyed coot who chewed his fingers off rather than lose them to frostbite.
At least that’s what he says, trying to impress anyone who will listen with his alarming evilness. And his alarming accent. (PG-13, 130 minutes)
— Steven Rea, Philadelphia Inquirer
This is 40
Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann reprise their bickering couple from "Knocked Up" for director Judd Apatow’s comic exploration of middle-age, parenthood and marriage. (R, 134 minutes)
OPENING DEC. 25
Django Unchained, Les Miserables, Parental Guidance.
2ND WEEK
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Director Peter Jackson ("The Lord of the Rings") returns to Middle Earth with this first installment in a $500 million trilogy of films based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s novel. Martin Freeman is the young Bilbo Baggins who accompanies the wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) and a gang of dwarves on a series of adventures. Shot in 3D and 48 fps, which essentially doubles the resolution of normal 35mm film. In 2-D and 3-D. (PG-13, 170 minutes)
LEFT TUESDAY
Playing for Keeps, Wreck-It Ralph.
LEAVING TODAY
Skyfall, Life of Pi, Rise of the Guardians.
LEAVING MONDAY
Lincoln, Flight, Red Dawn.