Monday, April 8, 2013

Alex Cross (2012)


Introduction:

A homicide detective is pushed to the brink of his moral and physical limits as he tangles with a ferociously skilled serial killer who specializes in torture and pain.

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.

Director: Rob Cohen
Writers: Marc Moss (screenplay), Kerry Williamson (screenplay), 1 more credit »
Stars: Tyler Perry, Matthew Fox, Rachel Nichols

Trailer:


Screen hot:




Download:


How to Download???
1. Click on the download link
2. Wait for few seconds and then click on
https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaVdP2cSf6QypLIvEzUV6nQ_HmVCqNZBFwCTE0ikzvrBy1XVWHq2M4ii6quo0PoWjP1OBhSl8sR8mBqxXQ1I6XnZ15Sd2J7Mv8eAmAhietudLb1BxJ7cnYDfveL_b7sD0B_b0CTkaCtv0/s1600/45345b.png

2 comments:

  1. The trailers for this movie looked okay. Watched it thinking it would be a regular action flick nothing special maybe with some half decent acting in it. After watching this movie I was again reminded of just how awful Tyler Perry is at acting and making movies. This movie had a horrible script and story line. No character development and the most predictable plot ever. The acting in this movie was atrocious, I was actually somewhat excited to see Matthew Fox in something after lost and playing a completely different type of role. His character had no depth at all. Some pretty poor character development I must say. I would not recommend wasting any money let alone time on this movie. By that I mean that this movie is not even worth an illegal download. Better off watching something else, I am not sure how this wasn't a straight to DVD movie I would have been angry if I actually paid to watch this in the theatre.

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is hands down one of the worst movies I have ever seen in my life, and I've seen a boatload of lousy movies. Both the dialog and plotting are hackneyed beyond description--not one original idea or twist, and not a single exchange that feels genuine. It's the kind of childishly obvious genre rehash in which you can tell who's going to be killed just by the relative one-dimensionality of their characters. Matthew Fox, who clearly dropped his body fat to zero for this film, will one day look back and regret all those months he went without a decent meal, because a) the movie is terrible, and b) his portrayal of a psychotic killer is ultimately a study in cliché. Ed Burns furrows his brow convincingly enough, but his easygoing charm has nowhere to go here. Likewise John McGinley, whose neurotic fatalism seems plucked from an entirely different and more lighthearted police procedural being filmed down the street. And then there's Tyler Perry, who expends so much energy in a futile attempt to project faux masculinity and criminological gravitas that he apparently has nothing left for tangential stuff like changing his facial expression once in a while. Perry can thank his lucky stars he's already a Hollywood fixture, because If this were his first movie, he'd never get another offer--truly, he's that bad.

    ReplyDelete