“You Know His Name” claim the posters for the latest Jason Bourne adventure, Jason Bourne. If you have seen any of the previous Bourne films (check out our retrospective on all the films), not only do you know his name, but you know this movie as well. Taking the “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” approach to extreme lengths, star Matt Damon and director Paul Greengrass return to the hit spy franchise after sitting out the mediocre The Bourne Legacy. It has been nine years since the two gave us the truly remarkable The Bourne Ultimatum, and even though the two of them have said that they felt they needed to come
After he is pulled out of hiding, Jason Bourne (played by the reliable, yet little spoken, Matt Damon) is given new information about his past that makes him go on the hunt against the CIA. The CIA is worried he will blow the cover off of some of their secret operations, so CIA director Robert Dewey (played by the rapidly aging Tommy Lee Jones) issues orders for him to be taken out. Cyber genius and CIA agent Heather Lee (played by the lovely Alicia Vikander) helps track Bourne down, but questions whether the agency is doing the right thing. The filmmakers are clearly hoping audiences suffer from amnesia like Bourne does because they have made this exact movie multiple times before. Sure, the locations and some of the names might be different, but you can only show Bourne being hunted in a large group while a sniper watches from above so many times before it starts to feel old. Not only that, but the filmmakers might have felt like they needed Bourne to feel relevant in 2016, so they added a secondary storyline that is being used in almost every spy movie released in the last five years. I will not spoil it here, but it’s very frustrating and unfolds in a predictable fashion.
The plot is not the only thing that gets repeated here, but the action scene set-ups are all similar to the ones in previous installments. There is Bourne using large crowds to escape (Supremacy and Ultimatum), a car chase in the downtown of a major city (Supremacy and Ultimatum), hand-to-hand fighting where Bourne uses a random object as a weapon (Identity, Supremacy, and Ultimatum), and Bourne using a random set of stairs to escape during a car chase (Identity). It’s all been done before, and while it is still entertaining in moments, it ultimately feels uninspired by the time the credits roll.
My feelings on the title matches my feelings for this movie; the title Jason Bourne gets me excited knowing that there’s another Jason Bourne adventure out there, but the title also feels uninspired and like they’re running out of ideas. There are some truly exciting moments that seemingly only a Bourne movie could pull off, and that’s great, but it would be better if we could put him in a different situation. I love that Damon and Greengrass came back, and the action scenes prove there is still something in the tank, but if they come back again, maybe they should spend more time in the writer’s room than on-set staging an action sequence.
Scott Davis
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