Originally published 8/1/04

The Bourne Supremacy
Director
: Paul Greengrass
Writer: Tony Gilroy, based on the novel by Robert Ludlum
Producers: Frank Marshall, Patrick Crowley, Paul Sandberg
Stars: Matt Damon, Brian Cox, Joan Allen, Franka Potente, Julia Stiles, Karl Urban

One of the many things that works about The Bourne Supremacy is that not all of the bad guys act like bad guys, and not all of the red herring bad guys act like bad guys for the sake of cheap trickery, either. There is a conspiracy afoot, and on one side is a shifty Russian oil tycoon (Martin Csokas) and his permanently scowling enforcer (Karl Urban). But they’re working with somebody, and for once it is not immediately apparent whom, since the rest of the characters are behaving believably like professionals would considering the fairly extraordinary circumstances in which they find themselves.

It was a distinctive aspect of its predecessor, The Bourne Identity that even secondary roles were filled with talented, memorable actors, and it serves this movie well now too. The quality referred to in the previous paragraph is one of the side effects of this wise decision, and the end result is a fine sequel in a summer that has also blessed us with Shrek 2 and Spiderman 2.

Of course, none of it would work without the right actor at the center. Jason Bourne, a CIA-trained killing machine who discovered a conscience when he lost his memory, is a fairly preposterous character any way you slice it. Matt Damon’s blessing on the franchise is his ability to embrace the role, and lend it seriousness and pathos even as he’s socking it to people. He plays the emotions – the confusion, the perpetual need to improvise in the moment. The physical abilities he wears as unobtrusively as his clothing; unlike James Bond, Jason Bourne would never be caught showing off.

Even after two years, his brain is scrambled enough that when CIA agent Pamela Landy (Joan Allen) accuses him of murdering two people in Berlin, it gives him pause as he considers that she might be right. Or even more confusingly, she might be both wrong and right at the same time.

As we open he’s still having fragmentary nightmares of his old life, and wants only to piece them together so he can face his past sins and overcome them. It goes without saying this puts a crimp in his beachfront romance with Marie (Franka Potente), who has been bouncing around the globe with him since he saved her life, showing faith that he’s more than the perfect assassin he was trained to be.

But then, a bomb goes off in Germany, killing an undercover agent, and a man who’s outfit and car are “all wrong” starts shadowing Bourne in India. His Spidey-senses tingling, he goes on the run again, convinced that the CIA is still trying to rub him out for leaving the fold.

He doesn’t know that the black bag “Treadstone” program he worked for was shut down by its boss, Abbott (Brian Cox), and that he’s one of the only two operatives left alive. When he kidnaps and interrogates the other (Tomas Arana) in Munich, their conversation is cordial and casual, two ex-office-mates talking shop. At least until they have to fight to the death.

The action lives up to the standard set by its predecessor – not only does director Paul Greengrass (Bloody Sunday) provide a car chase through streets and tunnels in Moscow that drew applause in the showing I attended, but Bourne’s fisticuffs have lost none of their trademark snap.

If only they were a little easier to discern – the chief complaint to level against the movie is an overabundance of handheld camera work, which lends intensity and immediacy to scenes of conspiring and conversation, but makes it hard to tell who’s doing what to whom in the melees. Whatever it is, it sounds painful.

The whole movie is loud, gritty, and relentless. Bourne is forever swiftly walking (or limping, as the events of the plot take their toll) from one lethal dragnet to another, always scheming to turn the tables on his pursuers. He realizes that he is the only person who really has a chance of understanding what’s going on, but that the answers are in those fragments of memory that resist teasing out.

Everyone in the movie is frayed, irritated, on edge. Landy has ambitions for promotion, and knows that Bourne is the key to something big, even if she’s not sure what it is. Julia Stiles offers another extended cameo as Nicky, the young logistical coordinator from Treadstone, who finds herself out in the field against her will and in very genuine fear for her life.

It’s these moments, as scripted by Tony Gilroy (another veteran of the first movie) and performed by these high-quality actors, that show the filmmakers putting value in what other thrillers gloss over on their way to more explosions. These are desperate, flawed people doing the best they can in a bewildering scenario, and their humanity leaks out in ways that draw us deeper in. As Bourne even manages to, we find a kind of affection for them – except, of course, for that sleazy tycoon and his henchmen. Whatever’s coming to them, they deserve.

There’s a third book – The Bourne Ultimatum – in the series, and there’s no reason not to expect it will be adapted as well. Bourne is growing and changing with each chapter, Damon shows us in delicate ways. Will the day come that the chasing ends, his skills finally weaken and he runs out of stashes of money and fake passports? The audience likes him, and though we wonder if he would even know what to do with a “normal life”, we hope yes. But we also hope for our own sake it does not happen quietly.

From the Archive – MOVIE REVIEW – The Bourne Supremacy
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