Dubuque's script hits on multiple levels, working not only as an action movie and a mystery, but also as a deeply human and multilayered tale of four people whose lives come together via their troubled pasts and hopes to become better human beings. It's also an intriguing look at the world through the eyes of an autistic man and handles Wolff's character with great sensitivity, drawing out of Affleck what may be his best performance yet.
The movie features several intense hand to hand combat fights and shootings, with pools of blood visible at a couple of crime scenes. The lead character engages in a somewhat disturbing ritual in a couple scenes of the movie where he blasts loud music and flashes strobe lights in his bedroom while whacking his shins with a metal pipe, all in the name of "toughening up." Finally, there are about 25 F words and another 15 or so lighter obscenities and seven uses of God's or Jesus' name in vain. Overall, it shouldn't be problematic for most adult viewers.
Add it all up, and "The Accountant" offers plenty of bang for the buck, and could very well tally up some Oscar votes.
Finally, Tom Cruise returns as the title character in "Jack Reacher: Never Go Back", the second installment in yet another series of action films by one of the world's biggest stars. Cruise has lost his box-office mojo a bit in the last few years, outside of the "Mission: Impossible" series, and while hopes are high for his starring role in a "Mummy" reboot next year, it's unclear how this sequel to one of his most mediocre movies got made.
Cruise is fine as Reacher, bringing his steely charisma and charming way with one-liners to the fore as the ex-military man who now drifts around the country helping people vigilante-style. This time around, he's trying to clear the name of a military officer acquaintance named Susan Turner (Cobie Smulders), who is on lockdown on false charages after two military investigators she sent to Afghanistan were killed by US bullets.
The dead officers were trying to find out where leftover weapons in the Afghan war effort are disappearing to. Reacher realizes that assassins are on their way to kill Turner, and with those officers dead and an ever-growing conspiracy becoming ever more apparent, Reacher busts Turner out of her cell and the two go on the run to solve the mystery.
One added element that works to a point is that Reacher also has to look out for a 15 year old girl named Samantha, who believes Jack is the father she never met. He initially follows her to get a sense of her, but then realizes the assassins are also out to kill her. Her flight with Jack and Susan gives the film a needed dose of both humor and heart.
Overall, though, the new "Reacher" is better than its predecessor, but still amounts to nonstop chases and fighting throughout much of the film. There are numerous plot holes in the script, and ultimately this feels average enough to be something an action buff or Cruise fan might enjoy seeing once, but would likely (you guessed it) never go back.
To give it credit, foul language is barely noticeable if present at all in the film, and there's no sex or nudity. The action fits the PG-13 rating, so the movie overall is fine for teens and adults.