Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Bourne to run

The Bourne Ultimatum delivers smart thrills

Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) searches for his identity in The Bourne Ultimatum. (Jasin Boland/Universal Studios)
Jason Bourne (Matt Damon) searches for his identity in The Bourne Ultimatum. (Jasin Boland/Universal Studios)

There’s no gentle courtship in The Bourne Ultimatum, no easing into the relationship. After a fleeting title or two, the film detonates onto the screen smack in the middle of a hand-to-hand, gun-to-gun fight scene in Moscow. At the centre of the jittery action is former CIA operative and fugitive Jason Bourne (Matt Damon), devoid of body fat and sporting a minimalist brush cut, presumably so he can move at maximum speed; even his nose is blunted, as if a tip would just slow him down. We get the sense that in the gap between this and the last instalment, 2004’s The Bourne Supremacy, Bourne has never stopped fighting and running. You half expect him to look directly into the lens, mid-fisticuffs, and ask: Where the hell have you been, anyway?

We’ve been waiting, man, and missing the killer intelligence and seat-popping thrill of the best action franchise out there. Director Paul Greengrass (Bloody Sunday, United 93), who took over number two from Doug Liman’s premier The Bourne Identity (2002), has a knack for making movies that blow your hair back. But the duck-and-weave cutting and over the shoulder handheld shots aren’t just rock video strutting. Greengrass does highly disciplined chaos. His visual herky-jerky is all about paranoia and anxiety, a manifestation of a system gone hairy. Like Bourne, Greengrass would like to slow down, but he just can’t afford to.

A Jason Bourne less addled by conscience originated in Robert Ludlum’s 1980s paperback thrillers. The cinematic Bourne is a more contemporary, post 9/11 creation. Reared in a secret CIA black-ops program long since abandoned, Bourne is a techno-gothic nightmare: a machine that’s becoming a man. Suffering flashes of guilt over a life as an errand boy for the government, he’s spent two films trying to recover his memory, sifting through reams of passports and identities to find his own.

The CIA doesn’t like a lot of soul-searching from its staff, so Bourne’s most dangerous adversaries are the people who made him. In Ultimatum, his higher-ups — the serpentine Noah Vosen (David Strathairn) and more sympathetic Pam Landy (Joan Allen) — cat-and-mouse their monster from video surveillance rooms, backed by the privacy-violating permission of the Patriot Act. But superspy Bourne continually outsmarts them, undoing their so-called intelligence from exotic locales like Turin, Paris, London and a spectacular, rarely seen Tangiers.

Damon has proven himself a formidable actor of late, doing an underrated manic turn in The Departed, and muting his golden-boy quality for something admirably internal in The Good Shepherd, a CIA film more ambivalent about its subject than the Bournes (maybe Damon should move on from CIA movies and try something new — like the FBI). There’s not much dialogue in the film, and when Bourne does talk, it’s in the scratchy, post-flu voice of a man who doesn’t have much opportunity to chat. Mostly, he communicates with his body; there is nothing sinewy or romantically Bond-ian in Damon’s performance. He’s a blunt object with the single goal shared by many philosophy graduate students: to locate the self. In flashbacks, Bourne remembers his spy training as a series of torture and humiliation sessions where he was hooded and subjected to waterboarding, images that have come to embody a certain brand of “justified” inhumanity. Did he really choose this life, then, or was it forced upon him?

From left: Noah Vosen (David Strathairn), Pamela Landy (Joan Allen) and Tom Cronin (Tom Gallup) try to track down Jason Bourne from a New York CIA office. (Jasin Boland/Universal Studios)
From left: Noah Vosen (David Strathairn), Pamela Landy (Joan Allen) and Tom Cronin (Tom Gallup) try to track down Jason Bourne from a New York CIA office. (Jasin Boland/Universal Studios)

From his hub at CIA headquarters, Bourne’s nemesis, twitchy, angular Vosen — a convincing, against-type performance from Strathairn — doesn’t think it matters. “Do whatever it takes to save American lives,” he says, issuing a kill-first warrant for Bourne. The response to the CIA’s familiar America-at-all-costs position comes several scenes later when Bourne is cornered, staring into the eyes of an upgraded version of himself. The killer who has him at gunpoint is one of the next generation of trained assassins called “assets.”  “Look what they ask us to give,” says Bourne.

Of course, this depiction of the CIA as corrupt and maybe even unnecessary — a warped exercise in sacrifice without accountability — is decidedly liberal, and perhaps even naive. But whether you buy the film’s politics, it benefits from that core of moral certainty, just as the conservative Rambo-movies did from their own. But unlike First Blood, The Bourne Ultimatum is also, on more than one occasion — but particularly on one occasion — intentionally and bitterly funny.

At the top of the CIA’s rotten food chain is Dr. Albert Hirsch, who made Bourne a tabula rasa, and then rewired him for the Agency. Albert Finney plays the bad doctor as a study in medical and patriotic hubris, rolling his r’s and chins with equal grotesqueness. He is Bourne’s ultimate goal, the metaphorical biological daddy who holds all the answers to his son’s traumas. 

Trying to get to him, Bourne runs through several top-notch action set-pieces; one car chase generated girly squeals of delight in the theatre of jaded critics where I saw the film. The pursuit always takes place in crowds, which is where ideology gets bloody these days. The most remarkable sequence takes place during rush hour in London’s Waterloo Station. A journalist for the Guardian newspaper (scene-stealer Paddy Considine) who knows too much is being hunted after the CIA picks up a top-secret code word he utters on his cellphone. Bypassing a massive web of surveillance — closed-circuit TVs, moles, phone taps — Bourne gets the reporter on an off-grid cellphone, and attempts to talk him through the quagmire and save his life. It’s not an easy job when every other person in the thronging crowd is a CIA marksman waiting to attack. The hyperventilating journalist, who makes several dumb, very real mistakes, can’t believe this is happening, and that the government is behind it. In other words, he is one of us, which is what Bourne wants to be, too — blissfully ignorant and fully human, no longer strangled by information, and living dead.

The Bourne Ultimatum opens across Canada August 3.

Katrina Onstad writes for CBCnews.ca Arts. 

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.

More from this Author

Katrina Onstad

Blume's day
Essays reflect on teen author Judy Blume
Bourne to run
The Bourne Ultimatum delivers smart thrills
Tusk, tusk
B.C. filmmakers make a point in Arctic Tale
Raking in the d'oh
The Simpsons expand to the big screen
A different view
An audio-visual tour of gay and lesbian cinema
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Karl Rove says he will 'deeply miss' working at White House
Karl Rove, the controversial chief political adviser of U.S. President George W. Bush, said he will leave his job at the end of August.
August 13, 2007 | 12:46 PM EDT
Taliban releases 2 female South Korean hostages
The Taliban released two female South Korean hostages in Afghanistan Monday, handing them over to the International Red Cross, according to published reports.
August 13, 2007 | 9:55 AM EDT
5 family members killed in South Korean ferris wheel accident
Five people were killed after the ferris wheel car they were riding in overturned at a South Korean amusement park, police said Monday.
August 13, 2007 | 1:47 PM EDT
more »

Canada »

Missing Quebec girl's mother makes tearful plea for help
The mother of missing nine-year-old Cédrika Provencher has come forward for the first time, making a tearful plea for help Monday morning at a news conference in Trois-Rivières, Que.
August 13, 2007 | 1:33 PM EDT
Crown wraps up case in Pickton murder trial
After almost seven months of presenting evidence, the Crown has concluded its case against Robert Pickton, on trial in the deaths of six women from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside.
August 13, 2007 | 2:29 PM EDT
PM prepares to shake up cabinet
Cabinet ministers will be in Ottawa Monday meeting with Stephen Harper as the prime minister is set to make some big changes this week.
August 13, 2007 | 12:18 PM EDT
more »

Health »

Protein that removes plaque holds promise for Alzheimer's patients
Using a protein as a sponge to absorb the toxic plaque that builds up in the brains of Alzheimer's patients can halt symptoms and improve brain function, a U.S. study suggests.
August 13, 2007 | 1:23 PM EDT
Bali sees first confirmed death from bird flu
A woman died of bird flu Sunday on Bali in the first recorded human fatality of the disease on the popular Indonesian resort island, an official said Monday.
August 13, 2007 | 10:50 AM EDT
Exempt smoking cessation products from GST, Ontario urges
After removing the provincial sales tax from nicotine replacement therapy products, Ontario is calling on the federal government to follow its lead.
August 13, 2007 | 12:00 PM EDT
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Anton Kuerti wins Banff's National Arts Award
Anton Kuerti, one of Canada's most acclaimed concert pianists, will be honoured Saturday with the National Arts Award from the Banff Centre.
August 13, 2007 | 1:29 PM EDT
Tillman, Combs back Biggie biopic
George Tillman Jr., creator of Soul Food and Barbershop and a Notorious B.I.G fan, will direct a biopic of the hip-hop artist, also known as Biggie.
August 13, 2007 | 3:38 PM EDT
Halifax mayor offers free venue to big-name acts
Halifax Mayor Peter Kelly is trying to attract big music acts to the city next year by offering a free venue on the Halifax Common.
August 13, 2007 | 3:10 PM EDT
more »

Technology & Science »

Canadian astronaut to install new gyroscope on space station
Dave Williams and fellow astronaut Rick Mastracchio replaced a faulty attitude control device during a spacewalk Monday, and were also to install a new gyroscope.
August 13, 2007 | 3:02 PM EDT
Novell wins legal dispute over rights to Unix operating system
A U.S. federal court decision on Friday over software widely used on corporate servers ruled that Novell, and not SCO Group, was the rightful owner of copyrights covering the Unix operating system.
August 13, 2007 | 12:25 PM EDT
Microsoft draws up online advertising battle plans
Microsoft closes its $6 billion US buyout of digital marketing company aQuantive, taking the first step in its quest to leapfrog Yahoo and challenge Google in the online advertising business
August 13, 2007 | 2:55 PM EDT
more »

Money »

CIBC to take $290M hit in U.S. subprime mess
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce says it has about $1.7 billion US at risk in bets on the troubled U.S. mortgage market and will take a $290-million hit against earnings.
August 13, 2007 | 9:59 AM EDT
Toronto stocks rebound after credit scare
The Toronto stock market was up over 100 points Monday near mid-session as investors snapped up stocks that had been beaten down by concerns over a global credit crunch.
August 13, 2007 | 2:32 PM EDT
After big merger, Domtar squeezes out 2-cent profit
Montreal-based Domtar Corp., created in a merger of Domtar Inc. and the Weyerhaeuser fine paper business, managed a modest turnaround in the latest quarter with a profit of two cents a share.
August 13, 2007 | 2:13 PM EDT
more »

Consumer Life »

Head of Chinese toy company kills self following recall, export ban
The head of a Chinese toy manufacturing company whose products were the target of a massive recall in the U.S. because they contained lead-tainted paint has committed suicide
August 13, 2007 | 7:53 AM EDT
Luxury hotel supplier recalls Chinese-made toothpaste
Gilchrist & Soames ? which supplies hotels in many countries, including Canada ? is recalling its Chinese-made toothpaste after discovering some tubes contain a potentially toxic chemical.
August 13, 2007 | 2:00 PM EDT
Edmonton buyers demand safer homes after blaze: developer
A devastating July fire in south Edmonton may not spark changes to building codes, but some in the industry say homebuyers will start to demand safer homes anyway.
August 13, 2007 | 1:56 PM EDT
more »

Sports »

Scores: CFL MLB MLS

Weir to play in Presidents Cup
Ontario's Mike Weir got the nod over fellow Canadian Stephen Ames to play in the upcoming Presidents Cup in Montreal, despite a poor performance at the PGA Championship.
August 13, 2007 | 12:33 PM EDT
Stairs, Blue Jays seek series win
The hot bat of Matt Stairs could prove the difference Monday night in Kansas City, where the Toronto Blue Jays will attempt their first series victory since early July.
August 13, 2007 | 2:58 PM EDT
Schnyder advances at Rogers Cup
Switzerland's Patty Schnyder, the No. 10 seed, cruised to victory on the opening day of the Rogers Cup in Toronto Monday afternoon.
August 13, 2007 | 4:14 PM EDT
more »