By Alicia Rancilio
NEW YORK (AP) --Adaptations of books to film and television often take liberties or stray from the original text. Tom Cruise played Jack Reacher twice on film but didn't match the physical description of the character described by author Lee Child.
Child's Reacher is 6 foot, 5 inches tall. Cruise is under 6 feet.
A new Amazon Originals series " Reacher " has found an actor closer to the author's profile of the former U.S. Army officer who travels the country without a plan, but finds trouble wherever he goes.
Alan Ritchson, ("Titans," "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles") who stars as Reacher in the series, is 6 foot, 2 inches tall. In the series, his Reacher towers over just about everyone he meets and draws attention for his size wherever he goes. This Reacher is referred to regularly out loud by adjectives about his height, such as "giant" and "stretch."
Ritchson says he can relate to that and deals with "size-ism often" in his own life, describing his height and girth.
"I took my son to a trampoline park with his friend recently and my son told me his friend said "your dad has gotten fat," laughed Ritchson in a Zoom interview.
Where the TV Reacher strays from the books is with dialogue. "Reacher said nothing" is a common written phrase in the book, but Ritchson's Reacher, while an observer, speaks his mind.
"Lee Child in the books had the luxury of explaining what's going on inside Reacher's head," said Ritchson. "But that's a little tougher to adapt to the screen without literally having a narrator. So I think (showrunner) Nick Santora did an incredible job of demonstrating how his mind works."
One of the actor's favorite parts of portraying Reacher is bringing to life how funny the character can be in the books.
"When you read the books, (the humor) is sometimes hidden between the lines, or you see it in the way that characters in the book sort of react uncomfortably to him, and he's comfortable in that space. I would laugh out loud reading the books. .. I wanted to make sure this show didn't take itself so seriously that we miss that sense of humor," he said.
The debut season of "Reacher," which premiered Friday (2/4), is based on "Killing Floor," the first book in the series.
"He's a minimalist," says Ritchson of the character. "The kind of guy that walks around with nothing but a toothbrush and a passport, but trouble finds him wherever he goes. So he just happens to stumble into circumstances. He arrives off a bus in a small town in Georgia and is immediately arrested for murder when he shows up, and he basically has to solve his own case."
Willa Fitzgerald and Malcom Goodwin play local authorities who team up with Reacher in the investigation. The hope is that future seasons will follow where Reacher goes and who he encounters.
"It feels a little bit like an anthology where Reacher remains the centerpiece and those vibrant, interesting characters that orbit him change and the settings change."
Ritchson says he's well-aware that the role comes with a responsibility to please the fans.
"There are a lot of people that were right for this and wanted to do this," Ritchson said. "There's a chip on my shoulder to prove every day I show up to work that I am the right guy, and they made the right choice."
To prepare, he made a point to read all the Jack Reacher books and soon became a devotee. (There are 26 books in Child's series.)
"As I read each book, I couldn't wait to get to the next one. I think I'm on par with the super fans out there. I really wanted to get every detail right, and I want to honor this character."
Forsman & Bodenfors Shifts Its Singapore Group Creative Director Ivan Guerra to Its NYC Hub
Forsman & Bodenfors (F&B) has expanded its creative leadership in New York by relocating longtime group creative director Ivan Guerra from the Singapore office to the Big Apple to support a quickly growing list of new client wins.
As a group creative director in Singapore, Guerra racked up numerous accolades and participated in a myriad of new business wins that fueled the agency’s growth year over year. He explained why now was the right time to come back to the states, adding more nuance in the process. ”Singapore is the business hub of Asia, New York is the business hub of the world,” he said. “Our office in Singapore was small when I arrived. Since then, we’ve more than tripled in size, and became the [number one] most creative agency in the country, and work with more and bigger clients than ever before. There’s always more to be done, but the agency I’m leaving behind is in fantastic shape and ready to take on the world, as I know they will.”
For Guerra, there’s an opportunity to replicate in New York the success he had in Singapore. During his career, he repositioned and promoted businesses and products across a wide variety of markets and industries including P&G, Coca-Cola and Booking.com. Some of his well-known work includes a campaign that increased Samsung’s sales in the Middle East by almost 200%, one of the most iconic films in the history of Converse, Verizon’s most successful sports partnership program “Data Dunk” with the NBA, and a “Proud Whopper” campaign in 2014 that reignited Burger King and garnered 13 Cannes Lions and a Grand Clio.
Coming back to New York after 15 years in the business, including a stint where he spent time at the likes of top-shelf agencies like R/GA,... Read More