The Washington Times

Review: Cruise oozes low-key charisma as `Reacher’

The idea of watching a movie in which a sniper methodically crafts his own bullets, practices weekly at a gun range, then waits quietly in an empty parking garage before shooting five people dead may not sound like the most appealing form of entertainment during these tragic days.

Nevertheless, it’s important to assess “Jack Reacher” on its own terms, for what it is and what it isn’t. Besides being caught in some unfortunate timing, it’s also clever, well-crafted and darkly humorous, and it features one of those effortless bad-ass performances from Tom Cruise that remind us that he is indeed a movie star, first and foremost.

OK, so maybe Cruise doesn’t exactly resemble the Reacher of British novelist Lee Child’s books: a 6-foot-5, 250-pound, blond behemoth. If you haven’t read them, you probably won’t care. Even if you have read them, Christopher McQuarrie’s film _ the first he’s directed and written since 2000’s “The Way of the Gun” _ moves so fluidly and with such confidence, it’ll suck you in from the start.

McQuarrie, the Oscar-winning writer of “The Usual Suspects,” exhibits some Hitchcockian aspirations in “Jack Reacher” with its sense of foreboding from the very beginning, its twists and double crosses and the quintessential icy blonde at the center in British beauty Rosamund Pike. Hinting at a romance between the two main characters is among the film’s few mistakes.

As Pee-wee Herman says in “Pee-wee’s Big Adventure” to the woman who has a crush on him: “You don’t want to get mixed up with a guy like me. I’m a loner, Dottie. A rebel.” Taken from the Child novel “One Shot,” Jack Reacher is all that: a former military investigator who’s become a bit of a mythic figure since he’s gone off the grid. No address, no credit card trail. This is a guy who uses pay phones _ that’s how stealthy he is.

When the deadly shooting occurs at the film’s start, along the Riverwalk outside PNC Park where the Pittsburgh Pirates play, authorities believe they’ve quickly found their man: a sniper who’s ex-Army himself named Barr. He reveals nothing during his interrogation but manages to scribble the words “Get Jack Reacher” on a notepad before winding up in a coma.

Reacher is hard to reach, if you’ll pardon the pun, but he knows to show up anyway when he hears about the crime just `cause he’s one of those stay-one-step-ahead kind of guys. He agrees to team up with Barr’s defense attorney, Helen Rodin (Pike), in hopes of burying the guy. But the deeper he digs, the more he realizes this case isn’t as simple as he, the lead detective (David Oyelowo) or the district attorney (Richard Jenkins) _ who happens to be Helen’s semi-estranged dad _ had hoped.

Besides being a mind teaser, “Jack Reacher” offers the muscular thrills of a `70s action flick, including fight scenes that mercifully aren’t over-edited messes and a thrilling, prolonged car chase through the streets of downtown Pittsburgh, with the grinding and screeching providing its own rhythmic soundtrack. Cruise dials down the megawatt charisma and instead relies on a no-nonsense world-weariness which has its own appeal. He also has a dryly funny give-and-take with Robert Duvall, his “Days of Thunder” co-star, as the gun range owner who becomes Reacher’s ally.

Disappointingly, though, Werner Herzog is a bit of a stereotypical villain as a mastermind named The Zec; he’s never really fleshed out enough to seem truly frightening, but at least he sounds right for the part. Even when delivering voiceover about subject matter he’s excited about in his own films, like the documentary “Cave of Forgotten Dreams,” it’s as if he’s threatening us with world domination.

Jack Reacher,” a Paramount Pictures release, is rated PG-13 for violence, language and some drug material. Running time: 130 minutes. Three stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definition for PG-13: Parents strongly cautioned. Some material may be inappropriate for children under 13.

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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