Tom Cruise is one of the biggest movie stars in the world and has been a constant for audiences, having hit films for four decades. Breaking out in the 1980s with films like Risky Business, Top Gun, and Days of Thunder, Cruise transitioned into the 90s by working with some of the best directors like of all time, with Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut, Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia, Brian De Palma’s Mission: Impossible, and Steven Spielberg’s Minority Report cementing him as one of the most dedicated actors alive.

His latest film, Top Gun: Maverick, has become the surprise hit of the summer and has become his highest-grossing film of all time and the first time the actor has made a movie to cross $1 billion at the box office worldwide. The actor is currently working on the seventh and eighth films in his popular Mission: Impossible franchise, one that has been going since 1996. However, one franchise that Cruise tried his best to launch, Jack Reacher, just never quite clicked.

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The Attempted Jack Reacher Franchise

     Paramount Pictures  

Created by author Lee Child in 1997, the Jack Reacher character has been the focus of over 26 novels, with the 27th set for release in 2022. In 2012, Cruise starred in Jack Reacher, which was based on the ninth novel, One Shot. The film received positive reviews and performed somewhat decently at the box office when it was released during the holiday season, grossing $80 million domestic and $218 million worldwide against a $60 million budget.

The film was meant to become a franchise starter, but it took over four years for Paramount Pictures to make a sequel. In 2016, Jack Reacher: Never Go Back opened in theaters and performed far lower than the previous film, with $58.7 million domestically and $162 million worldwide. That was $56 million less than its predecessor while also having a bigger budget, putting a nail in the coffin for the film series. The next year, another attempted Tom Cruise movie franchise would fall flat, with the 2017 film The Mummy.

Tom Cruise is Not Like the Books’ Jack Reacher

One of the biggest contentions with Cruise’s casting among fans of the book series was the star’s physical appearance. In the novels, the character of Jack Reacher is described as 6 ft 5, almost a whole foot taller than Tom Cruise, who stands at 5 ft 7. The series’ author defended the casting choice at the time, citing that it would be difficult to find an actor to fit Reacher’s described height in the book (worth noting that Dwayne Johnson was in the running for the role, and he is the exact height as the book’s character and current Reacher actor Richson is 6 ft 2). The author explained that the height was a way to characterize Jack Reacher as an unstoppable force, but the casting of Cruise was meant to play off the actor’s movie star persona as an impossible man of action audiences have seen do crazy stunts for years.

While fidelity to the source material is respectable, it is not always the most important, after all, Hugh Jackman is much taller than the comic book version of Wolverine, and audiences the world over love his version of the character just as much as the comics. Cruise himself is no stranger to not being the fan choice for a role, as author Anne Rice was famously not happy with Cruise’s casting as Lestat in 1994’s Interview With A Vampire, and only changed her mind after watching the film. However, for a role like Jack Reacher, Cruise felt more like stunt casting to get a famous action star rather than finding the right actor for the role.

Tom Cruise’s Star Power Made it Seem Like a Redundant Franchise

Cruise’s star power, and the way Jack Reacher attempted to cash in on it, might have been one element that hurt it in the long run. While Tom Cruise has had a long and storied career since late 2000, the actor has mainly been defined by action roles and in particular the Mission: Impossible film series. That is very much Tom Cruise’s franchise, and any other major action film Cruise finds himself in the lead role of will draw a comparison. Jack Reacher and Mission: Impossible have many different comparisons, as both installments of Jack Reacher were released the year after a Mission: Impossible film (and were much weaker). Jack Reacher director Christopher McQuarrie eventually moved over to the Mission: Impossible movie series to direct Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation, Mission: Impossible - Fallout, and the upcoming Mission: Impossible 7 - Dead Reckoning Part 1 and 2.

While going for a different type of action film (and perhaps a franchise Cruise was setting up to do after he became too old for the death-defying stunts of Mission: Impossible), audiences looked at Jack Reacher like a smaller scale and cheaper version of a big-budget Tom Cruise action film. The franchises were different, but also not different enough to general audiences that Jack Reacher wouldn’t look like a knock-off franchise.

Source Material Works Better As A Television Series

     Prime Video  

One of the biggest aspects of the failure of the Jack Reacher film series has less to do with Cruise and instead to do with the medium in which they chose to tell it. Jack Reacher is a 27-book series, with no signs of slowing down. The narratives are focused on one character and in many ways are stand-alone stories. These are airport novels, designed to be thrilling and entertaining reads without being necessarily profound. While this format can work for a film, it works particularly well for a television series, and the audiences for these types of stories tend to be older individuals who watch more television at home.

While the James Bond film franchise has successfully run for over six decades and is based on stand-alone adventures in a long-running book series, most major books that become film franchises tend to be stories with clear beginnings and endings, such as Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, Twilight, and The Hunger Games.

The central premise of the Jack Reacher novel series sees him traveling across the United States taking odd jobs and getting involved in different cases. While that could be a good premise for a movie franchise, having a built-in new location for each feature film, is also more ideal for a television series. A person traveling the world getting into adventures is a hallmark of television from The Fugitive to The Incredible Hulk to Kung Fu to, most recently, Supernatural which used that format for over 15 years. With over 27 novels to adapt, that gives the creators of Reacher plenty of seasons of television to craft.

In a weird inverse of Mission: Impossible, which originated as a television series but elevated to now being one of the biggest movie franchises because of Tom Cruise, Jack Reacher is a franchise that has likely become more popular when it became a television series without Tom Cruise.