
Dr. Alex Cross is on his last police duty to track down an assassin called Picasso, who's been torturing and killing rich businessmen in Detroit. Soon when the mission gets personal, Cross is pushed to the edge of his moral and psychological limits to end this once and for all.... (Full plot summary below)
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Dr. Alex Cross is on his last police duty to track down an assassin called Picasso, who's been torturing and killing rich businessmen in Detroit. Soon when the mission gets personal, Cross is pushed to the edge of his moral and psychological limits to end this once and for all.
Leave your thoughts about Alex Cross.
| Detroit NewsAdam GrahamThere's still a marketplace for a smart, well-crafted cat-and-mouse thriller. But "Alex Cross" isn't it. |
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfWhen it's not being completely idiotic, it's frightfully tasteless, with both Perry and Cohen making sure the entertainment factor is thoroughly sucked out of this ludicrous thriller. |
| Denver PostLisa KennedyFor a franchise with an off-the-charts nuanced thinker as its protagonist, Alex Cross isn't very smart. |
| OregonianMarc MohanThe movie is stunningly perfunctory, soul-crushingly oblivious to its own lack of originality, and, to be blunt, just plain dumb. |
| AV ClubMike D'AngeloPerry shifts into full-on badass mode... well, the best that can be said is that he's sincere. For all that, he's still less embarrassing than Lost's Matthew Fox, likewise cast against type as the film's sadistic villain. |
| We Got This CoveredBen KenberThanks to a game cast, taut action scenes and a surprising dose of raw emotion, Alex Cross finally gets the movie that he deserves. |
| FromTheBalconyBill ClarkA warmed-over relic from the 90's incompetently directed by Rob Cohen, Alex Cross is a mess from top to bottom. |
| Cinemalogue.comTodd JorgensonThe style isn't matched by the substance in a film that strains unsuccessfully to be taken seriously. |
| NYC Movie GuruAvi OfferSlick, fast-paced and mindlessly entertaining despite many contrived and awkward moments. It takes a while to get used to Tyler Perry in a non-Madea role. |
| Hollywood ReporterTodd McCarthyYou almost feel sorry for Tyler Perry, stepping out of his own universe for the first time to try to expand his range and finding himself in something as thoroughly dismal as Alex Cross. |