Over the last three weeks I’ve rewatched The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy, and The Bourne Ultimatum. These are movies I’ve seen countless times and are often winter favorites, since, like Michigan, most of the action is in cloudy places. Okay, there’s not much action happening under my cloudy skies, but that’s why I watch movies. For the action. Watching the Bourne movies was a long time annual event, but in recent years other things have taken my attention.
The 4k box set I bought sat untouched on my shelf for two years.
In the meantime I’ve seen many more movies, lived some more life, gathered some new thoughts. So while I was looking forward to seeing them in the superior resolution, I was also wondering if I still find the stories engaging. Any story will hit us differently after some time has passed, sometimes for good and sometimes for ill. The consensus among my Twitter circle is that only the first movie is good and after that they take a sharp decline.
The Bourne Identity
The first is clearly the best. We meet Jason Bourne, a mysterious man with no memory of his past and a special set of skills for self-defense and situational awareness. When he reaches out to Marie for a ride, he does so kindly, moving us to sympathize with him. We don’t just want to see this lost man find himself, we also see that there is a spark of good in him despite his deadly skills. Bourne’s energy is masculine, and Marie is the feminine influence that reveals his true character.
And that car chase!
I love a good car chase. Always have. Always will. I once heard someone watching this movie in another room, and I knew exactly what he was watching just by the sounds in that the scene.
Bourne’s character is constantly reaffirmed.
Sure he was the CIA’s top hitman, but in true Hollywood fashion he was a hitman with a heart of gold. I appreciate how that trait is never taken away from us. And when he finally has enough answers to find some peace, he accepts it. The story is brought full circle, we’ve gotten some thrills, and Bourne gets a happy ending.
The Bourne Supremacy
But if there’s going to be a sequel, that peace has to be shattered. Marie is killed when another hitman comes after Bourne, pushing him back into the cold world for revenge. Even as we thirst for justice we recoil from vengeance, which puts us a little at odds our hero. All the humor and romantic spark of the first film is also absent. The screenwriters try to shift the focus to him continuing his search for answers, which is a good move, if still a distraction. Nevertheless, as long as he’s alive he’ll always be hunted, and as long as he doesn’t know who he is he’ll always be at a disadvantage.
Plus, we get another good car chase, albeit a much messier one.
I don’t mind the shaky cam that gets introduced with the new director. I know it gets much hate, but even now I find the effect less jarring and more immersive, as if I’m watching a documentary. One reason why I keep coming back to these movies is to feel like I’m going somewhere, when in reality I’m tied down at home, and even the shaky camera can’t spoil that for me. Nevertheless, it’s harder to cheer for Bourne this time around and the US is constantly shown as corrupt and incompetent. I miss seeing my country shown in a wholesome light.
The Bourne Ultimatum
With the third installment the focus is firmly on Bourne getting answers. It’s not about dismantling the agency that ruined his life or anything like that. He just wants to know who he is. Except for that part where he jumps between buildings and crashes through a window, the action isn’t quite as good, but the cat-and-mouse games are on point. I’m a simple man and even I was able to follow along with ease. Too easy? Perhaps.
The car chase isn’t that great, by the way.
While Ultimatum is arguably the most engaging of the three, and a significant improvement over the second, it never quite recaptures everything that’s great about the first movie. To its credit, the movie knows when its over. I remember sitting in the theater (I’d taken one of my roommates with me to keep our other roommate from fighting with him) and thinking, “I don’t want a fourth movie. This ending is too perfect.” And while it may not be as fitting and ideal as I thought then, it’s good enough.
It’s a pity they tried to milk this for more.
Do the movies maintain their shine? Not for me, not really. Obviously, the films themselves haven’t changed. I changed. Some things I appreciate more now that Michael Weston has explained the spy game to me in his Burn Notice voiceovers. Some things, like the anti-American bias, stand out clearly and are impossible to miss or ignore. But when the cars are speeding, the bullets or fists are flying, and that techno score is pounding, I’m just as entertained as I ever was.
Now, I just wish those trimmings were hung on a better thematic tree.