Shared Darkness
A Communal Life in Film and DVD, Examined

The Bourne Supremacy

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This entry was posted on 4/14/2006 1:12 AM and is filed under DVD Reviews.




The spy thriller The Bourne Identity drew a large part of its pop and verve from the attached-at-the-hip nature of its conceit and action — as Matt Damon’s overwhelmed, government-trained, amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne experienced the action, so too did the film’s audience. Its narrative twists and turns were born (pun embraced, if not intended) of the don’t-sit-still reality of the situation its main character was in. The result was the best spy thriller in years. Those thinking the franchise might be a one-trick pony, however, might be surprised at the fact that The Bourne Supremacy cedes almost none of its predecessor’s energy. The trick? Something called characters.

With The Bourne Supremacy, Damon and director Paul Greengrass (stepping in for Doug Liman) took their franchise on the road to even more international backdrops, but wisely chose non-played-out locales like Berlin, Moscow and Goa, India. While the story is more grounded and less freewheeling this time around, the movie, stirringly, doesn’t discard the narrative of the first film for convenience’s sake. Rather it uses it as a springboard, launching Joan Allen’s upper-level CIA agent into a new investigation of Bourne after he’s erroneously implicated in a botched operation that leaves her team dead. As the loosest of loose ends, someone is still looking to tie Bourne off.

The supplemental material doesn’t overwhelm you to the point of numbness (in a world where, increasingly, mediocre theatrical fare still receives two-disc DVD releases, this one is still only one disc), but rather seems about right. Extras include seven minutes of mostly interstitial deleted scenes, but one crackling showdown with Allen and Brian Cox that more explicitly sets up the latter’s desperate end game actions. Most notable among the extras, though, are a slew of production featurettes that serve as a dipped toe into almost every aspect of the filmmaking. One section looks at the movie’s bridge chase sequence, one looks at the casting and one looks at the hand-to-hand combat training, while two examine the movie’s car chase — both from the stunt coordinators’ perspective and that of their groovy new toy, the “Go Mobile.” All include generous interviews with Damon and the rest of the cast, Greengrass (who resembles a slightly better groomed Peter Jackson), producer Frank Marshall and more. It’s here that Damon astutely praises the latitude in Greengrass’ direction and his lack of reliance on staged movements as allowing for a greater emotional investment (and thus return, for the audience). It’s also where Marshall and others jokingly score Damon’s stunt jump from a Berlin bridge. Their high marks, save Marshall’s impression of East German judge, could well be for The Bourne Supremacy as a whole. A- (Movie) A- (Disc)

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