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The Bourne Supremacy DVD Review:

Two
years later, Jason Bourne (Damon) thought that he had escaped
his former life but his nightmares told him otherwise. His memory
had still not completely returned but his subconscious revealed
more about his past every time slept. Making a life with Marie
(Potente) was all he ever wanted but that was about to change
when an assassin tracks them down in India. He swore if the
CIA ever came after him, he would take the fight to them and
he does just that, heading straight to the source, CIA taskforce
leader Pamela Lanby (Allen), the woman in change of bringing
him in.
The Bourne Identity
set a new standard in the spy thriller but can Jason Bourne’s
next adventure achieve the same high standards? The answer is
an unquestionable yes.
Matt Damon returns
as the troubled CIA assassin struggling with memory loss and
the realisation of what he has done. The second novel in author
Robert Ludlum’s Bourne Trilogy, The Bourne Supremacy takes
up the story two years after the events of the first. Here we
find Jason still suffering with amnesia but his subconscious
is revealing memories while he sleeps, memories that he would
rather forget. This is what makes the character so intriguing.
You know as much about his past as he does and you the viewer
follow him on his journey as he finds out what he has done as
more revelations are revealed.
Matt Damon is what
makes these movies so watchable. He has crafted a character
that is both vulnerable and deadly; as his emotions and mental
torment are subdued by the black-ops training he received as
part of the CIA’s Treadstone project. This is a character
of very few words but Damon can convey much more in just a look
or a glance. This is what draws you into the character’s
emotional sense of being because you feel what he is going through
as the revelations about his past come back to haunt him. This
is truly an action hero for the new millennium, one that is
real, feels pain and not an indestructible superhero.
Supporting Damon’s
excellent portrayal is a fantastic supporting cast. Joan Allen
proves again what a great character actress she is as CIA agent
Pamela Lanby. This is a strong female role for the actress and
she brings her own authority to the part. Karl Urban continues
to make a name for himself in Hollywood with another fine performance
as the emotionless assassin Kirill. He might not have much dialogue
in the piece but it is his actions that make the character such
a good nemesis for Bourne.
Most of the surviving
cast members from the first also return. Brian Cox gets the
chance to expand his role as CIA Special-Ops director Ward Abbott
and brings a lot more backstory to the character and the Treadstone
programme. Julia Stiles returns as Nicky and the character plays
a pivotal part in advancing the storyline. Franka Potente also
comes back to play Marie and there is also a cameo that is intrinsic
to the plot.
What pushes the Bourne
movies above other Hollywood high action thrillers is its believable
action intermixed with a riveting plot. Nothing is over the
top here. Fights are quick and deadly, car chases are fast and
hazardous but both of them have real consequences. When a character
is injured they are actually injured, they don’t recover
within two minutes and continue fight as nothing has happened.
They react as you would in the real world, adding to the believability
of the piece.
The Bourne Supremacy
is a first rate action thriller. You do have to have seen the
first movie to gain full enjoyment of the film but director
Paul Greengrass and his cast and crew have done a great job
continuing the adventures of Jason Bourne. With its brilliant
blend of pulsating action and an ever-twisting plot, this is
riveting stuff from start to finish, making it the best espionage
franchise currently on the silver screen.
Star Rating = * *
* * *
PICTURE & SOUND
Presented in Widescreen
2.35:1 Anamorphic with Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack, the transfer
is extremely good. Jason Bourne’s dark and dingy world
is vividly realised with a very sharp picture, even though director
Paul Greengrass chose to make the image very grey. The sound
quality is superb, especially during the energetic action sequences.
BONUS FEATURES
Feature commentary
with director Paul Greengrass
An interesting and
informative commentary track from an up and coming director
reveals that he is a talent to be watched. Covering all the
technical and story driven decisions made for the movie, Greengrass
reveals many secrets about the filming process including the
idea of bringing the audience into the action and making the
film a lot darker than the first. This is a good commentary
track that covers all the bases about what you want to know
about the continuation of the Bourne franchise.
Explosive Deleted
Scenes (7.12 mins)
Entitled ‘Shack’,
‘Naples – buys the car’, ‘Abbott Gretkov
in Berlin’, ‘Bourne in the car, writing in a book’
and ‘Westin Grande Lobby’, these five deleted scenes
don’t really add much to the movie but without a commentary
track or introduction, we don’t know why they were removed.
Matching Identities:
Casting (5.28 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, producer Patrick Crowley
and stars Matt Damon, Brian Cox, Joan Allen, Julia Stiles, Gabriel
Mann and Karl Urban talk about the characters of The Bourne
Supremacy, both old and new.
Keeping it Real (5.00
mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, producer Patrick Crowley,
cameraman Klemens Becker and stars Matt Damon, Franka Potente
and Karl Urban talking about creating a new look for the Bourne
franchise. They reveal how a documentary approach was used and
the new camera techniques that were adapted for the shoot.
Blowing things up
(4.02 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
producer Patrick Crowley, stunt coordinator Dan Bradley, special
effects foreman James Bomalick and star Matt Damon take you
behind the scenes of the house explosion in Berlin.
On the movie with
Jason Bourne (4.52 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, producer Patrick Crowley,
stunt coordinator Dan Bradley, special effects foreman James
Bomalick and stars Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Joan Allen and
Brian Cox talk about shooting in Berlin, Moscow and Goa.
Bourne to be Wild:
Fight Training (4.22 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, fight coordinator Jeff Imada
and Matt Damon take you through the different fight techniques
used to make the house fight look very real and unstructured.
Crash Cam: Racing
through the street of Moscow (6.03 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, producer Patrick Crowley,
stunt coordinator Dan Bradley, special effects foreman James
Bomalick, picture vehicle coordinator Graham Kelly and stars
Matt Damon and Karl Urban take you behind the scenes of the
climatic car chase through the streets of Moscow.
The Go-Mobile revs
up for action (6.50 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
executive producer Frank Marshall, stunt coordinator Dan Bradley,
Go-Stunts’ Scott Rogers, Go-Stunts coordinator Darren
Prescott, stunt driver Kevin Scott, engineer Rick Cresse and
star Matt Damon talk about the invention of the Go-Mobile and
how it will change how car chases are filmed forever.
Anatomy of a scene:
Explosive Bridge Chase scene (4.42 mins)
Director Paul Greengrass,
producer Patrick Crowley, stunt coordinator Dan Bradley and
star Matt Damon take you through how the bridge chase was constructed
and show you how Matt Damon worked on his own stunts.
Scoring with John
Powell (4.48 mins)
Composer John Powell
takes you through the process of writing a score for a movie.
He talk about expanding on the themes he had written for The
Bourne Identity and introducing new music for characters, emotion
and the setting of a scene.
Trailers
Previews for Van Helsing, The Chronicles of Riddick, The Chronicles
of Riddick: Pitch Black SE and The Bourne Identity SE
OVERALL
Universal have put
together a good collection of featurettes to cover most of the
production of The Bourne Supremacy. The commentary track is
also good but it would have been good to her Paul Greengrass’s
reasons for removing the deleted scenes. Overall the DVD package
is good and should please fans of the Bourne franchise.
DVD Star Rating =
* * *
Jamie Kelwick

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