"Reacher" Fly Boy (TV Episode 2024) Poster

(TV Series)

(2024)

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7/10
Didn't stick the landing.
MiloSuperSpesh19 January 2024
Where to begin ?

This finale should've been taken back to the drawing board, The pacing is rushed, we learn what happened to swan, what kind of men langston and AM really are and reacher is basically hercules.

Production - another rough cgi, obvious stunt work set piece, poorly mixed audio ( i use headphones).

Acting - usual standard, some shine others just phone it in.

Music - well chosen.

The episode starts right where ep7 left off with reacher going in to the lions den and ready to fight.

The bad guys become utter chumps and drop like flies, and it just gets worse from there.

With out spoiling specifics, the main fight is over by the half way point of the episode and the rest of it is used to wrap up the 'victims families' and reachers good byes.

Some violence, a teeny bit of gore, a lot of suspension of disbelief required and alot of mixed messages.

A good sum up of the season, moments of brilliance and good action let down by dumb writing and forced cliches.
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7/10
Free TV show
Chef7420 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I won't complain too much because the show is free on prime and there aren't any other good shows to watch. This season was a bit cheesy and predictable including the final episode. I was hoping a 1.5 hour episode where bad guys showed a bit more resistance. Instead the show too 25 minutes and the rest was filled with boring diner scene.

Neagley could have easily taken down the helicopter before it could take off; she took down 2 guards within 2 seconds, right? But no, Reacher has to jump inside the helicopter. And he knows the bottom door will open while nobody is watching. The AM guy, or whatever the initials, went down too easy as well. He was such a cunning villain, but he tried to talk his way put of the situation. Didn't work for me. Shooting down the helicopter was a nice touch, I wish they could show it from inside the helicopter.

Overall lazy script for a free TV show. But I enjoyed it.
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7/10
Chatty villians explaining themselves. Had hoped for a knife fight
peter-4697820 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Hmmm so the final scene with the English-accent terrorist just has him standing there trying to explain his worldview and garner some form of understanding from Reacher and The Team.

This is the guy who without hesitation would slice people's throats with superhuman speed and even killed that female state trooper (so him asking to be arrested didn't make sense) but now he just stands there and tries to explain himself rather than kill his way out.

I had hoped he would whip out his knife and there would be some climatic knife fight at the end, maybe he would even escape somehow and become an ongoing nemesis, but nope. The team gunned him down standing there side by side like it was the ending of The Wild Bunch.

There was a pattern of talkative villains, notably the one with the brass knuckles who stopped attacking Reacher to lengthily inform him that he could choose how to die.. and wow the main villain did this all for the money? He wanted to get his money and spend the rest of his life somewhere on a beach with hot, tanned women? You don't say. Glad he explained that.

Finally after being shot, having bullets removed with knives, beaten and stabbed they just go to a diner to sip coffee?

That said this was overall an entertaining show, I will definitely watch season 3. Let's hope it is a little more realistic. Writers and producers, you can make this show more understated, it doesn't have to be so over the top that it becomes unrealistic. The main characters were more like Terminators than real people.
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WTF
Emanuele67610 March 2024
I can barely accept that the series has turned into a series about a group of ruthless killers who kill dozens of people out of revenge and in a sadistic manner, I can barely accept that there is the head of security of a company who decides to sell futuristic weapons to terrorists, corrupt a senator, cause the death of dozens of people, all this for ONLY $65 million, but I absolutely cannot accept that Homeland, for some reason that is not understood, not only wants to hide, but even succeeds in hiding a group of killers involved, directly or indirectly, in political corruption for the purpose of selling state-of-the-art weapons to a terrorist group that has led to the deaths of dozens and dozens of local criminals, a policeman a police chief, the entire security sector of a company, a truck driver, a criminal in a hospital, a fake doctor in a hospital, an arms dealer, a pilot and a technician shot down by a missile, a politician's escort, a politician's aide and the senator himself, who by the way are alive and it is not clear why they should not talk, and I am probably forgetting someone. .. It becomes science fiction ...
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10/10
Ritchson is Reacher
JICNZ21 January 2024
The second season of this excellent show is even better than the first. Alan Ritchson totally embodies both the look and spirit of Jack Reacher. In fact, I'd go as far as to say he's better than the original Reacher in the books. He brings a sense of grace and humour to a brutal man, which explains the intense loyalty people feel towards him. In the books, Reacher is much colder, less attractive.

The supporting cast in this series is magnificent. Domenick Lombardozzi particularly killed as the New York detective Russo. Maria Sten owns the part of Neagley.

The filming is superb, with excellent sets, a wonderful soundtrack and perfect costuming.

This is a faultless series. I was gripped from start to finish. It's brutal, funny, heart-rending, exciting. What more can you want from a TV show?
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9/10
ok
Lythas_854 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
First season was alright because it was all him, Finley and blondie feminist cop.. neagley barely appeared.. now it was reacher and always 3 people tagging along, killing random foes on the streets and getting away without any jail time..

like other reviewers have said, Reacher is never really in trouble. When he turns himself in to Robert Patrick, we already knew he was going to be ok.

I dont remember if the story was that boring.. it has been a while since I read the book.. i remember the scene where they are kinda ambushed on the streed and Reacher kinda does a Neo, barely avoiding getting show and stuff.. I think it was in that book that it is explained that Reacher was never afraid or something.. he was at a theather or whatever and when there was an action scene or something, while all the other kids were avoiding looking at it, he was jumping.. i dont remember exaclty but it was said he does not flinch.. he has immediately reflexes always...

The terminal list did a much better job at it.
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10/10
Season 3 now! Same crew!! Let's go
kwvfbdx19 January 2024
I can hardly contain my excitement for the upcoming Season 3! I'm really hoping that the same team is on board to work their magic again. Honestly, Season 2 was an absolute masterpiece - the amount of action was just right, the storyline was skillfully crafted, and the performances were truly outstanding. And let's not forget about that final episode - the epic conclusion had me on the edge of my seat and left me craving for more. I'm eagerly looking forward to discovering what surprises and twists the next season has in store for us! I can hardly contain my excitement for the upcoming Season 3! I'm really hoping that the same team is on board to work their magic again.
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10/10
True TV masterpiece
lawsy-9639419 January 2024
I don't have or will ever watching anything as good as that episode. From start to finish it was gripping, edge of seat, high adrenaline masterpiece. It's a shame the emmys wasn't next month as Alan would be getting one, he has transferred the book character onto the silver screen better than anyone can imagine. I cannot wait for season 3 and see where the story takes us and the growth of Reacher as a character and human being. I will be re watching both series immediately. I hope everyone agrees with my review and gives the love and praise the show and Alan gets for his performance.

I was just visiting Family.
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10/10
Series Two
billysock-1291619 January 2024
Absolutely Brilliant. If you don't watch this series you will end up with a plastic doll to watch.

Lee Child has written 28 novels, this being number two of a 'Real Reacher' character rather than the movie editions, which the main character just was too small, as we all know.

This series, like the last was very close to the book Bad Luck And Trouble, but I reckon the cinematic version excelled on the book.

There were a lot of people shot which perhaps was excessive, but Reacher's character was portrayed well and was part of the storyline.

It would be nice for Series 3,4 or even 5, to have a revamp of one of those movie attempts.
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10/10
The comment in the goofs is inaccurate
txarmyvet22 January 2024
Shooting a full size or compact handgun in a common defensive caliber (9mm, . 40, . 45 etc.) accurately at 100 meters is not difficulty if the shooter knows how to shoot properly.

If they have a proper grip, stance/position, sight picture and trigger pull they will hit the target. Unless of course they are poorly trained or handicapped in some way.

The reason most people believe they can't shoot accurately at 100 meters and beyond is because of other people or have told them they can't, or they have read some BS article, or watched some BS videos on the internet that have also told them they can't. It's a sad fact that these days most people in general are that stupid and brain washed that they believe what they are told without questioning if the sources are reliable and if the information is even accurate.
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6/10
More Child and Less Santora
Tron7921 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I was revved up to watch the finale. As the episode unfolded, I kept asking myself if Lee Child wrote this part. The villain was an executive. It seemed out of character for him to try to punch Reacher and interrogate him. He's not Kingpin from Daredevil. They did show him holding his hand after punching Reacher. I thought Reacher's excuse for why they shouldn't shoot him didn't hold water. I thought they would have just shot him anyway. Something just didn't seem right to me with the way the scene was written. Then Reacher jumps onto the helicopter and becomes Superman holding onto the gurney with Karla strapped in while he's being punched for who knows how long. Yes, he has huge muscles, but the scene completely pulled me out of the story. I can believe Reacher is a highly trained extremely strong brutal fighter. I can believe he can take down several bad guys with his fight moves and strength. I just couldn't get past the story choices by Nick Santora in the finale.

I read an interview with the Nick Santora, and I found that Lee Child had a different ending. In the book, Reacher stows away on the helicopter and there's no gurney scene. That sounds much more believable to me. I don't think the book included the warehouse interrogation scene either. Nick Santora said he thought those action sequences when the hero leaps onto a helicopter are the scenes people go home talking about. I found myself talking about it, but not in a good way. I really wish Santora would have stuck to what Lee Child wrote.

I still enjoyed the conclusion of the episode with the diner scene and distributing the cash. I loved seeing Reacher get excited about his unlimited use (for one year) bus ticket.
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10/10
A wonderful final for this season
andresbrito-imdb20 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Though I love the character, and I know his phyosophy, Reacher susprised me indeed with his last decision to share the money. It drove me to tears. I think this last episode (in spite of some cinematographic license to suspend the credibility) is a superb way to end this season. I enjoyed each minute, and I hope Reacher is back very soon for mo fun. I specially like Neagley, the way they work together and their relationship based in respect, trust and friendship. This chapter has some catharchic quality with good defeting evil. Reacher is a great series and both seasons are pure spectacle. Thank you!
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6/10
All that build up for the A.M character
uayqvbwxg11 March 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I get that reacher has to be completely in-realistic and that it is fiction, but please don't build up a character all the season long and only for him to shot a million times by the end. You can't have 40 red herrings, like come on man. It's nice escapism. But that being said the series does a good job keeping you on your toes as to who the bad guys are. You think it the one dude, then you think it's the other two. Hey but what do you know maybe season 3 will be good. Don't mean to say season 2 wasn't bad it wasn't as good as 1. I really hope they do Reacher and the gang some justice and bring back Roscoe.
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3/10
Just awful...not "Reacher" at all. Just Hollywood.
jneiberger-123 January 2024
The first season of Reacher was essentially perfect. The writing and acting absolutely nailed Reacher. It was a superb TV adaptation of the book Killing Floor. The second season has been so much worse, mostly the writing.

Season Two of Reacher is what happens when the writers decide to make it more stereotypically "Hollywood". This isn't Reacher. It's a dumb action flick with all the tropes, like unnecessary violence, thousands upon thousands of bullets flying everywhere and no one getting hit, people doing absurd stunts that make no sense, plus plenty of other physics-defying nonsense.

If you like Reacher, and especially if you like the books, I think you're going to be disappointed in this season and especially this absurd ending.

I haven't checked to see if the same writers were used for this season or not. If not, they absolutely need to fire this group and rehire the original group. If this was done by the original group, well, time to fire them, too, and find someone willing to stick closer to the source material.
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8/10
"To absent friends."
LegendaryFang5611 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
(1,362-word review) I'm relieved that Dixon and O'Donnell are officially okay - they're survivors; they're free from being unavailable for possible returns due to either or both dying in this finale. As I mentioned in my review of the seventh episode, I had/have unexpectedly come to care about those two characters. I'm particularly relieved because that means they can be ushered back in at some point. Part of me feels like neither of them will return in the third season (maybe not even Neagley, either; the way her last scene went with Reacher at the end felt final concerning the prospect of seeing her again), but you never know. I'd welcome and greatly appreciate Dixon, O'Donnell, and her coming back into the equation cool-montage style. At least one or two of them - either in the next season or potentially (hopefully, the show receives another renewal, and we get it) fourth season.

I may have read something from someone elsewhere on the internet that specified or implied that Neagley isn't in Persuader, the seventh installment in the novel series - the novel that the third season will be adapting. But I'm pretty sure she wasn't in Bad Luck and Trouble, either, and that was the adapted material here. Her exchange of goodbyes with Reacher felt like a proper, "I won't be brought back for your next adventure" inference. Conversely, there will likely be a time skip mentioned at the start, as was the case in this season's first episode regarding the events in Margrave, which is a way to still bring her back while also saying a decent amount of time has passed since she's been involved with him/whatever he's got going on.

The action sequences, specifically the one after Senator Lavoy's three-man-operator team breached New Age's R&D facility building and Reacher freed himself, came across as well-filmed - enough to stand out to someone like myself, who's barely knowledgeable (if at all) about any aspect of filmmaking; that particular thought never crossed my mind before until now. I, for the most part, mindlessly absorb what's in front of me without seeing the finer details regarding how a scene is shot, and so on. That sort of thing escapes me because I have no professionally-obtained, educational background or comprehension of anything remotely similar - or anything at all in a general sense - let alone any varying levels of understanding that anyone could theoretically obtain themselves in a self-taught manner.

Nevertheless, something about that specific section seemed well-filmed: the camera angles and such. There was a strong feeling of flowing smoothness to how it (and possibly additional sections of other action sequences) was filmed. The director, Julian Holmes, took his job seriously and went all in on proficiency. Based on his IMDb page, his résumé is pretty decent.

And the scene, from the lead-up to the explosive climax, of Neagley using the missile with the Little Wing chip to shoot down the helicopter was great - and cool; we can't forget that part. Moments like that (where a character or multiple characters are cool-headed while doing effortlessly cool things), no matter the film or TV show, will always be entertaining to watch.

There were a couple other specific moments that were excellent, too, serving as efficient additions to the effectiveness of this finale, both concerning the "cool factor" and emotionally: the delightfully spectacular, execution-by-firing-squad death of A. M. (though his character was underdeveloped and underutilized, despite the peculiar character trait of saying the same line about comic books to kids, and the incorrect expectation that the build up of his character would have a non-anticlimactic payoff - perhaps his role in the novel had more depth and focus) and the dispersion of the $65 million to the families of those who are dead, related entities (the animal shelter), and to the other team members (Neagley - providing the round-the-clock nursing care for her father that she brought up in the second episode about how she's been striving to get enough money to get that for him herself; O'Donnell - paying for his kids' educations; Dixon - giving her the fully-funded means to get started on her watchdog group that she also mentioned in the second episode).

In particular, the campfire scene with Reacher & Crew was touching and successfully impactful from an emotional standpoint. It was a perfect scene to be our last with all those characters together - for now, hopefully. My key takeaway was the cementation of their bond and history. That intended element has been fleeting from the beginning, instead of presenting a concrete basis for evoking a genuine feeling of understanding its reality; it had been logically understood for 99% of every scene with them, including every flashback. But it became believable when they had their post-season-long-battle, retrospective get-together, with a finality undertone, at the campfire.

Smack-dab in the middle of all that, however, was the entire sequence in the helicopter. It was pure Reacher, in the sense of stretching the confines of logic and reality, which isn't necessarily a negative thing. I'm positive many people got particularly irked by it - to the point of hating this finale as a whole, and I'm not a subscriber of that mindset. I found it to be entertaining/fun. It's already obvious that this show isn't one of those shows that will provide that questionably necessary (for a decent amount of people) fix of 99.9% realism from any piece of fictional media. There's no reason to continue treating it negatively. An illusion is nowhere to be found - what you're getting has been straightforwardly authentic from the very beginning of this show.

In fact, it goes back to the source material itself. All of the individual stories within the novel series prioritize entertainment and fun above all. I'm pretty sure there's an instance in one novel where Reacher gets shot, but his rib cage "caught" the bullet because he's practically inhumanly gigantic and muscular. A similar stretch of logic was mentioned in the first season - the premiere. Finlay read aloud the details behind Reacher's Purple Heart Medal: he saved multiple soldiers after a bombing occurred at a barracks by carrying them out TWO at a time, suffering severe smoke inhalation in the process - but returned to active duty 32 HOURS later DESPITE "having shrapnel remains of a jawbone removed from his abdomen."

There's no secret present. Crazy, unrealistic things will consistently happen in this show because it's accurate to the source material. More importantly, it's all in good fun, not to mention it can be extremely entertaining. If that's too much to handle, how can anything be enjoyed? A film, TV show, or certain episodes of a TV show? You're going to encounter plenty of that in close to everything. If that's something to complain about (and regarding this show/finale, specifically), you're being unreasonable. Simple as that.

Besides that, Robert Patrick's acting before his poetic demise, his portrayal of fear and extreme desperation to prolong his life, was great. His overall acting/performance as this typical, always-pissed-off-at-something/exasperated stock antagonist character, topped with the constantly periodic placements of one-liner swear words amid his lines of dialogue, was even better. It was somewhat camp, but that was part of the charm. That can have undertones of pure entertainment - connotations of unadulterated fun.

There's a compatible ingredient to TV shows and films, in addition to various facets within them, of an overlooked, underrated, and underappreciated nature, and that's "coming across as fun." Writers should be tapping into that more often, akin to how commonplace and overarching such an element seemed to be in older, teen drama-esque shows - think Pretty Little Liars - and particular films, too, though I'm less familiar with films like that.

This was a good, enjoyable finale, with palpable feelings: heartwarming, touching, and bittersweet. The season started at a decent place, followed by a steady, upward trek until the midway point; then, it dipped slightly in quality. But this finale shot up right up there to that place at the start, possibly reaching even higher, and ended everything on a high note - a bright spot in a mostly cloudy solution.
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8/10
Reacher returns in a bigger, punchier sophomore season - Season 2 Review
phoenix-prjct20 March 2024
Reacher's sophomore season cements it as an action-packed jewel in Amazon's streaming crown with pitch-perfect casting of Alan Ritchson as the titular character. Even more punchy (literally) and set on a grander stage, season 2 digs deeper into Reacher and his past, layering our stoic hero with dashes of emotion as he hunts a cabal of vicious murderers. Backed by an inconsistent cast of inconsistently developed characters, viewers are in for a fun if light ride that more than warrants a few more seasons for us to sink our teeth into, and, as far as I know, that's exactly what we're going to get.
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9/10
Those with the bad reviews: have none of you READ THE BOOKS? 🤣
mgd868816 April 2024
Are you all really quibbling about whether it's realistic, or whether a human can really do that, or, whatever the heck else you want to complain about? 🤣. The character was in his mid to late 30's when he was introduced in the first book and is unstoppable as of the latest book, in which he's got to be 50's if not 60. For heaven's sake - if you read the books, you already have to suspend disbelief as he moves from town to town, outmatching everyone and righting wrongs. Get a grip people. It is FICTION and in fiction, we can do whatever we want, even have what seems to be superhuman strength or unbelievable luck. At least they have stuck with Alan Ritchson. His physical makeup at least does a better job of matching the guy that Lee Child first created. I understood when Child allowed Tom Cruise to play him, becaus, well, TOM CRUISE. But he was never really Jack Reacher. This Alan Ritchson guy fits him to a T.
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6/10
Much weaker S2..
daniel-6583620 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Given how S1 set such a high bar for good television, S2 is hella disappointing. It has turned into your generic, fast-paced action series. The focus has shifted away from quality dialogue and scene delivery to just punching and shooting and blowing up stuff.

At no point in the show was our protaganist and gang really tested. The hard part was only figuring out what the bad guy's scheme was. After that, it became just a one-sided beatdown that had very little screen value.

Alot of bad writing is present in this series. The car chase gunfight was absolutely ridiculous, Reacher and crew get stabbed, shot and still walk about like nothing happened. A. M. Was set up so well as a main antagonist, then for some reason had an extra's insignificant conclusion/ending. Langston and gang ended up just being average goons who should have pulled the trigger with the billion opportunities they had but instead talked too much.

The more I write, the worse this season sounds. But I will still give a 6* overall because it was still entertaining.

I will say this though. S1 delivered everything (except the finale showdown) in a way most action tv has forgotten. But looks like the showrunners have forgotten what made S1 good in the first place because there is nothing special about S2, just plain generic tv.
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6/10
Mediocre finale
david-hall04-568-10774919 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Have to say I was disappointed with the finale the season built up the story so well and to finish like It did feels underwhelming. It was on course to be better than season 1 but just falls short.

This was probably my least favourite episode of the season, mainly due to them sorting everything out in the first 20 mins or so. There was one great fight scene where reacher is cuffed and that's really it. Nothing to get really excited about. In the end it didn't do the book justice.

Basically they catch kill Langston and arrest the senator in the first 22 mins, go for coffee, wake up in a motel and reacher gets on a bus.
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3/10
Really bad
mamet-9471320 January 2024
This season finale was really bad and ludicrous, stretching believability to its very limit.

Apparently Reacher now has superpowers but all he's missing is a cape. That helicopter scene is totally ridiculous.

The whole build up of the season is wrapped up within the first 20 minutes and there was never any doubt of the outcome. Predictable, predictable, predictable.

Whoever wrote season two and whoever gave the go ahead to make should never be allowed to work on television shows ever again. They took a great first season and made season two laughably campy and ridiculous with sloganeering instead of actual dialogue or character development. At this point I don't even care if there's a third season.
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6/10
Simple Mistakes...
lucius-drake20 January 2024
Warning: Spoilers
I enjoyed season two of Reacher, but nowhere near as much as season one. I think it is a problem of scale. It's too big and a little too rushed for the amount of details.

I noticed a few silly mistakes in the final as well, Neagley's rifle doesn't appear to have any kind of suppression on it (simply a long barrel and a flash hider) but makes Hollywood "silencer noises" when fired.

Then, when the middle-man is shot, his entire torso is covered in bullet wounds when one might assume that four ex-military people would all shoot for centre mass out of training and habit.

Overall, I think it was a good effort, but there are a few things that could have been done better.

Scripts: OK.

Acting: Good.

Actor Chemistry: Good to Great.
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7/10
Season Two Review
southdavid4 March 2024
I enjoyed the first season of "Reacher" quite a bit. It combined an excellent character with a good story. Whilst I don't think the case in this second run was quite as good, it's still a funny and entertaining action series and I definitely want to watch more.

Neagley (Maria Sten) gets in contact with Jack Reacher (Alan Ritchson) to inform him that another former member of their special investigations unit has been killed. Along with two other members of the squad, David O'Donnell (Shaun Sipos) and Karla Dixon (Serinda Swan), they decide to investigate the death and disappearance of yet another member of the squad, Tony Swan (Shannon Kook) who was working in security for a private defence contractor at the time he vanished.

It's perhaps a little early in the Reacher timeline for a backstory heavy season and yet, here we are. There are a lot of flashbacks in this run, to happier times as the Investigations unit and the bonding process that they all went through. It is usefu thoughl to explain the lengths that Reacher and the remaining team are prepared to go to get justice here. Despite all the violence and the deaths, that are regular occurrences in the run, it's again quite funny. There's even a little vein of metahumour that the series mines from time to time, such as a Terminator reference in the first episode, delivered by Robert Patrick no less.

Maybe I liked the team structure a little less than seeing Reacher as a lone operative against seemingly incalculable odds. Though it has to be said that I did like what both Shaun Sipos and Serinda Swan brought to their characters. I suspect it might be because it made the series seem a little more generic, than the first run did.

But again, I enjoyed it overall and I'll certainly be back for the third season, when that arrives.
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1/10
Borders on sheer stupidity and ridiculousness
sage467622 January 2024
There are several scenes that are completely stupid and at times, we were actually laughing. Reacher's ability to climb into a flying helicopter with nothing but his bare hands is from fantasyland. In other scenes, they are being shot at with thousands of bullets form automatic weapons and they never even get nicked. It crosses the border of stupidity and just being a farce. I would recommend you watch a rerun of a good show rather than waste your time in this trash. There are many many many better shows that make some attempts at reality. I need to lengthen the revue but there is niching good to say about it.
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6/10
Do Better Amazon
Randy-Randerson3 February 2024
After an amazing first season, the second season is plagued by bad writing, highlighted by the repetition of catch phrases. The flashbacks showing how Reacher and his team were brought together and disbanded were poorly tied in to the pacing of the show and seemed very awkward. Alan Richardson is still amazing as the main character but was let down by the directing and writers. The villain was brilliantly played by Robert Patrick. A good chunk of the season was spent on the evil broker but bad character development made this character pointless by the end. After such a brilliant first season, I hope Amazon takes the time to do Season 3 right and Reacher goes on more many more season as long as Alan Richardson can.
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7/10
Kinda solid but also dumb
ladyliliroche18 May 2024
Warning: Spoilers
There are some scenes that doesn't make sense and I don't like for this finale.

The fact that Langston didn't just kill the hostage immediately when he got Reacher just made it like the plot protected them.

Also the fight inside the helicopter was pretty badly stage... a lot of standing around and those 2 being strapped the whole time made it kinda hilarious. Also that Reacher made a tom cruise scene just made it toooo over the top.

Also, why destroying the helicopter with those 2 people inside...? It just leave a bad taste in my mouth. I can understand the reason for the scientist but for the helicopter guy... he didn't even partake in the fight...

Definitely could be better. I like the group. Neagley is amazing and them losing those friends was also emotional for me...
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