Jason Bourne Rides Again
By Skip Sheffield
“Jason Bourne” begins blurry in soft focus with a man who
looks a lot like Matt Damon muttering “I remember…”
Matt Damon worked into the best physical shape of his life for
his fourth time as amnesiac CIA black ops assassin David Webber, aka Jason
Bourne. Damon first played the role in 2002 in “The Bourne Identity.”
Writer-director Paul Greengrass returns to direct this $120 million production.
Greengrass previously directed Damon in “The Bourne Supremacy” (2004) and “The
Bourne Ultimatum” (2007).
The plot key to this wide-ranging adventure is that Bourne
is recovering his erased memory in fits and flashes, with bits of brutal action
in between. The first is between Bourne and a huge tattooed Russian man in a
bare knuckles boxing match. Damon has developed some convincing fight moves,
and he gets to use them all as Bourne is pursued by a ruthless assassin known
only as “The Asset” (Vincent Cassel).
Making an appearance from previous Bourne chapters is his
pretty colleague Nicky Parsons, played by Julia Stiles. Their reunion sets the
stage for a thriller motorcycle chase through the streets and stairways of
Rome.
CIA Director Robert Dewey (Tommy Lee Jones) wants Bourne
brought back in. A new CIA junior operative Heather Lee (Alicia Vikander) feels
she is best-suited to lure Bourne out of hiding. Damon and winsome Vikander
spend some screen time together. While there is no time for romance, their
chemistry is good. Another new character is tech wizard (and CIA collaborator)
Aaron Kalloor (Riz Ahmed), who provides an important plot twist.
The movie builds to a smashing (literally) conclusion in the
streets of Las Vegas. The Asset commandeers an armored police SWAT van with
Bourne in hot pursuit in a stolen Dodge Charger. The mayhem must have been
enhanced by computer-generated images. A large part of the $120 million budget
probably went to destroyed vehicles.
The conclusion leaves an open door to yet another Bourne
thriller. Damon better hurry, before he grows too old.