The Bourne Legacy (2012) • View trailer
Four stars. Rating: PG-13, for considerable violence and grim action
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 8.10.12
Four stars. Rating: PG-13, for considerable violence and grim action
By Derrick Bang • Originally published in The Davis Enterprise, 8.10.12
Any doubts about the Bourne film
series surviving Matt Damon’s departure can be laid to rest; replacement star
Jeremy Renner capably opens a new chapter in Robert Ludlum’s popular franchise.
Although it’s perhaps not the
chapter fans were expecting.
Ludlum, who died in 2001, wrote
the three books made into the film trilogy that featured Damon between ’02 and
’07. Ludlum’s estate sanctioned Jason Bourne’s literary revival in an ongoing
series of sequels by the prolific Eric Van Lustbader, who thus far has written
seven more, starting with 2004’s The Bourne Legacy.
But although this new film shares
the same title, that’s all it shares. Like most latter-day James Bond films,
which also borrowed Ian Fleming’s book and short story titles — and nothing
else — director/co-scripter Tony Gilroy concocted an entirely new narrative
suggested by Ludlum’s conspiracy-laden premise.
And rather than tagging a new
actor to play Jason Bourne — thus cleverly leaving the door open for Damon’s
return, at some future point — Renner is introduced as Aaron Cross, one of
several “sidebar assets” in the U.S. black ops agency’s clandestine Treadstone
project.
Gilroy scripted all three of
Damon’s Bourne films; he also wrote and directed the sleekly sinister George
Clooney vehicle, Michael Clayton, and had fun riffing on industrial espionage
with Julia Roberts and Clive Owen, in 2009’s Duplicity. So it’s safe to say
that Gilroy knows the territory.
Gilroy wisely takes his time with
the first act of this new film, introducing Cross during an extreme survival
training session in the Alaskan wilderness. Details are sketchy, aside from the
same heightened senses and reflexes that characterized Bourne; Cross also
carefully maintains a daily regimen of pills — one blue, one green — that are
safeguarded in a container worn around his neck.
Back in D.C., high-level spook
Eric Byer (Edward Norton) frets over the public appearance of Dr. Albert Hirsch
(Albert Finney), recognized from the previous film in this series. Similarly,
Pam Landy (Joan Allen), Jason Bourne’s former handler, has threatened to go
public with Treadstone’s seamier details.
Feeling that they have no choice,
Byer and fellow conspirator Mark Turso (Stacy Keach) decide to shut down
Treadstone and its half-dozen human assets, despite their highly effective work
in various world hot spots. And in this realm of unsupervised behavior, “shutting
down” has lethal ramifications for said assets.