Jack Reacher fans: In case you haven't heard, Amazon Prime will be releasing a TV show based on the Jack Reacher novels. Each season will cover one of Lee Child's novels. Thankfully, the actor playing Reacher will not be Tom Cruise. It will be Alan Ritchson, who fits, physically, Reacher's description much better than Cruise. I'm excited. BTW: I wrote this review way back in 2012, so some of it is old news...
Lee Child's "One Shot" is the ninth novel in the Jack Reacher series, and it's also the book that the upcoming movie is based on. Why the producers chose to start off the inevitable movie series with book 9 is kind of beyond me, although I suppose it doesn't really matter.
Each Reacher novel is pretty much a stand-alone story. Reacher himself is a bit of a mysterious loner who doesn't like to reveal much of himself anyway. In past novels, Child has liberally doled out pieces of Reacher's history---raised in Paris, France by diplomat parents; had an older brother Joe; was a military police investigator and a brilliant one at that; inexplicably honorably discharged from the Army; unlimited funds from a mysterious bank account; remains 'off the grid' by never staying in one city for long, doesn't have a cellphone, doesn't use credit cards---but never enough to get a clear idea of how Reacher has become the man he is now.
Reacher's only weakness, his tragic flaw, is apparently a desire to help people in distress. He hates injustice and he especially hates people who think that they are above the law or think they can get away with anything.
In "One Shot", Reacher arrives in town after seeing a news story about a sniper killing five people during a busy business day in the center of downtown. Police immediately capture the suspect, a former Marine sniper named James Barr. Evidence against him is overwhelming. During the interrogation, Barr's only words are "You got the wrong guy" and "Get Jack Reacher". Reacher and Barr crossed paths years before when Reacher investigated Barr's sniper 'assassination' of four American GIs in Kuwait. It turned out that those GIs were doing highly illegal and traitorous things anyway, but it was such an embarrassment for the military that the higher-ups in the Pentagon let Barr go. Reacher promised Barr that if he ever did it again he would kill him himself. Reacher always keeps his promises. The question is: why would Barr ask for Reacher, the last man he would most likely ever ask for?
When Reacher starts investigating, he soon realizes that Barr is being set up by someone with a lot of power within the city. So much power that Reacher isn't in the city for 24 hours before someone tries to have him killed. Of course, this just naturally pisses Reacher off even more. Child just gets better and better with each Reacher novel, and "One Shot" is the best one I've read so far. I say that about every subsequent novel, of course. If the movie producers can capture even a half of the excitement and suspense of the book, then they will probably have a winner at the box office.
My only serious qualms about the film is the casting of Tom Cruise as Reacher. I have nothing against Cruise as an actor. On the contrary, I like him very much as an actor, having enjoyed most of his action films (the last two "Mission: Impossible" movies were, in my opinion, great), but he simply doesn't fit the character of Reacher physically.
In the books Reacher is over six feet tall and huge. Indeed, his height and weight actually play a significant role in this book in helping to solve the case. No matter how good an actor Cruise is, he'll never pull off being six feet and huge, so it will be interesting to see how the producers adapt to this. I already know that the movie will not be anywhere near as good as the book---that's a given---but I'll go see it anyway.