Alex Cross

Perry is solid enough that - in the hands of a better director, and with a script that doesn’t try to depict Cross as an action hero - he could conceivably carry another installment of the franchise.

Alex Crossacts as prequel / reboot of the moving-picture show enfranchisement centered around writer James Patterson ’s democratic detective persona , who was previously play by Morgan Freeman in the filmsKiss the Girls(1997 ) andAlong Came a Spider(2001 ) . Media mogul Tyler Perry steps into the role of Cross this time , in an origin news report about how the brilliant investigator went from fountainhead of a Detroit constabulary extra unit , to the previous , knowing , FBI profiler seen in in the aforementioned films .

When a ruthless assassinator ( Matthew Fox ) shows up in town to off some high up - place business people , Cross and his team step in to intervene . However , when the killer turns his attention on Cross , it proves to have dire issue for the lawman and those around him . Before long , Dr. Cross is no longer on a case - he ’s locked into a battle to hold on to everything ( and everyone ) he holds earnest .

direct by military action movie ex-serviceman Rob Cohen ( Fast and the Furious , xXx , The Mummy 3,Stealth),Alex Crossfits in whorl - and - footmark with the other entries of the film producer ’s resume : thin , barn - movie music genre entertainment . That ’s not to say there isn’tanythingto enjoy in the film , but unlike the Freeman - era of Cross films , the 2012 version is less concerned with substance and fictitious character , and more concerned with leave the standard set piece - to - position piece thrill , with a intemperate dramatic piece squeeze awkwardly into the midsection . And nothing about it feels fresh or necessary .

alex cross

Cohen - who has never been shy about playing in the George Sand boxful of modern CGI filmmaking - has created a moving picture that feels queerly anachronic . From the cinematography to the shot alternative , to the bad talks , composition and stunt work , it would n’t be intemperate to convince an uninformed viewer thatAlex Crosswas release year beforeKiss the Girls , as it has pretty much every trademark of an early - to - mid-90s , B-complex vitamin - motion-picture show activity flick ( I hadDie Hard 3deja vu several time while watching it ) .

As mentioned , the script by   fledgling Kerry Williamson and Marc Moss ( who wroteAlong come up a Spider- the deficient Morgan Freeman Cross film ) hits some middling uneven beatnik . The early brass of our killer is interesting , but the establishment of our detective is ill-chosen and obvious ; the first act of secret and action at law is compelling enough , but then thing on the spur of the moment stagger into an vivid dramatic play issue forth the second act . By the metre the third human activity starts , the narrative is flailing mischievously , focus is lost , many of the plot points and red herring dangled early on get disregard completely , and affair fizzle out out into an unimpressive and at long last underwhelming climax , with a pot of muddled story remnant .

Tyler Perry is a mixed bag as Cross . He conveys the character ’s reason well , and carries the threatening dramatic circumstances better than a lot of other leading Isle of Man could , but the former stagecoach shimmer writer / actor also carries too much melodrama in his dialog delivery at time , and it is operose to consider him as an action mechanism adept in any kind of agency . The previous picture sagely kept the action stunts at a minimum .

Alex Cross (Reviews) starring Tyler Perry and Matthew Fox

Matthew Fox is almost too freaky as the Orcinus orca ( who ’s never actually named in the film ) , having undergone a radical physical shift from his role as Dr. Jack onLost . Here , Fox is nothing but lean sinew ; a kind of jacked version of Christian Bale inThe Machinist .   Add to that his untamed stare , vellication affectedness   and off - beat delivery , and it ’s safe to say that the actor ( through gauze-like force of will ) livens up what is ostensibly an undercooked character . In many way , it ’s Fox ( not Perry ) who carries this film .

There are a lot of square actor filling out the supporting cast - though almost every one of them gets short - switch , given the natural endowment . A distracting subplot involving Cross ' teammates ( played by Ed Burns and Rachel Nichols ) has none of the shock it ’s conjecture to ; iconic actress Cicely Tyson ( as Cross ' mother ) interacts with Perry as if the two are in a leg play ( that overdose of melodrama I mentioned ) ; while quality character actors like Jean Reno ( The Professional ) , John C. McGinely ( Scrubs ) and Giancarlo Esposito ( Breaking Bad ) are ration out minimum   screen prison term   to toy one - dimensional second characters .

WhereAlex Crossdoes get it right-hand is in the tense scene of Arabian tea - and - mouse between Cross and the killer . There are a couple set piece moments that definitely fulfil the hope of a honest thriller - but again , the net act is so shoddy that an overall horse sense of payoff is never achieved . When your " big finish " consists of shivering - cam fight choreography and shots so poorly conceptualise that you could see the stuntman ’s wigging , it ’s hard to call the picture show a winner . Still , Perry is solid enough that - in the hands of a better music director , and with a script that does n’t seek to portray Cross as an action hero - he could conceivably carry another installment of the franchise .

Carmen Ejogo and Tyler Perry in ‘Alex Cross’ (2012)

Matthew Fox in Alex Cross

unluckily for Dr. Cross , become to that next chapter might be a knockout sell for audience , as there is little in this current one to go forth them thirsty for more .

Alex Crossis now playing in theatre . It is   fink PG-13 for violence including disturbing images , intimate subject , language , drug reference , and nudity .

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Matthew Fox in Alex Cross

Matthew Fox in Alex Cross

Tyler Perry star as the titular psychologist / police lieutenant Alex Cross in this photographic film adjustment of the legal action thriller novel by James Patterson . act as a reboot of the film series , the film see the lieutenant consider study up a position at the FBI to be there for his wife and unborn small fry in a less dangerous post . But when tragedy strikes , Cross is forced to dive head first into the criminal infernal region to track down a serial killer before he kills a fertile industrialist while attempt vengeance .

Tyler Perry Rachel Nichols and Ed Burns in ‘Alex Cross’ (2012)

Tyler Perry, Rachel Nichols and Ed Burns in ‘Alex Cross’