The Bourne Supremacy Movie Review
The Bourne Supremacy Review

"The Bourne Supremacy" Overview

Rating: PG-13
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Paul GreengrassProducer : Pat Crowley,Paul Sandberg,Frank Marshall
Screenwiter : Tony Gilroy
Starring : Matt Damon,Franka Potente,Brian Cox,Joan Allen,Julia Stiles
Attention all adventure-starved, action-crazed moviegoers: kennel the cat,
wreck the robot, and step on that spider. This summer’s best action hero is not
Catwoman, Spider-Man, or a CGI robot – it’s just a dude named Jason Bourne!
Matt Damon is back to reprise his role from the widely popular The Bourne
Identity as Bourne – a former CIA operative trying to regain his memory. Again,
he must determine why the world wants him dead. Based on the second novel from
Robert Ludlum’s series, The Bourne Supremacy begins in India where Bourne and
his girlfriend Marie (Franka Potenta) are living a new life off the radar.
Bourne continues to deal with a series of disjointed nightmares that offer
vague pieces of a prior life he does not remember.
Meanwhile, across the globe in Berlin, senior CIA agent Pamela Landy (Joan
Allen) leads a covert operation that fails miserably, leaving two CIA field
agents dead. Jason Bourne is the chief suspect. We learn that the Russian mob
is framing Bourne for the hit they performed and that they’re headed to India
to kill him. Landy quickly assembles her team of intelligence experts,
including Bourne-profiler Nicky (Julia Stiles) and CIA brass Ward Abbott (Brian
Cox). With the CIA hot on his trail and a driven Russian assassin prepared to
take him down at any cost, Bourne has no other choice than to run.
Bourne darts across Europe and Asia with ease, eluding his bounty in India,
Naples, and Berlin. All the while, he finds time to investigate who he is and
why things are happening. Each stop is punctuated by a thrilling chase sequence
that becomes increasingly intricate and equally impressive as the film
progresses. The exhaustive, edge-of-your-seat chase finale on the streets of
Moscow where Bourne first outruns his pursuers on foot and then by driving a
cab rivals any pursuit I’ve seen in recent memory.
Unfortunately, much like its predecessor, Supremacy’s only real failing is its
muddled and confusing plot about CIA cover-ups, espionage, and a Russian
politician. I’m sure there’s a cohesive story somewhere in this mess (which a
rewrite would have clarified), but it’s not completely necessary to figure out.
The plot only exists to give a tangible palette on which to paint the action
scenes. There are however welcome moments that offer small clues to Bourne’s
true identity, thus whetting our appetites for the final installment (The
Bourne Ultimatum) where we will learn the ultimate truth about him.
While Supremacy’s plot is just as jumbled as other action pictures, it is able
to sustain itself and standout from the rest because of Tony Gilroy’s highly
intense and literate script (he also adapted the first film). Damon, Allen and
Cox all give credible and compelling performances. Once again, Damon is
exceptional as Bourne. His performance is not flashy or one-dimensional like
most action heroes; rather, Damon is complex, rational, and cognitive. His
ability to make intelligent, split second decisions keep the action fresh and
unpredictable. In the few quiet scenes, it is a marvel to watch Damon’s mind
work.
British director Paul Greengrass proves to be an excellent choice to succeed
Identity’s Doug Liman. Greengrass uses the same effective hand-held camera
technique from Bloody Sunday to create a more heightened sense of urgency than
in the first Bourne film. Greengrass also dazzles in moments of subtlety. He
seamlessly bridges the two films without showy introductions, or extended
epilogues. Supremacy begins as if we’d just finished watching the final scene
of Identity fade out and Supremacy’s fade in with the first scene in the Indian
village.
Supremacy is the most fun you’ll have in theaters this summer.
DVD extras include deleted scenes and a pile of making-of featurettes,
revealing secrets from the special effects to the stunts to the casting.
(Casting secrets! How can you miss it!?)
Hair Bourne.
Reviewer: David Levine





