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The Bourne Ultimatum

Rated - 4 stars

The Bourne Ultimatum

There is no ultimatum in The Bourne Ultimatum. Nevertheless, this may be the ultimate Bourne. It certainly feels like the end of the road, even if Universal will be desperate to persuade Matt Damon otherwise.

Kicking off where The Bourne Supremacy left off, with the rogue spy limping out of Moscow, the movie initially seems intent on replaying part two. Bourne's ex-CIA paymasters aren't prepared to let sleeping dogs lie, especially when this one appears to be connected to a Guardian reporter (Paddy Considine) who knows too much for his own good. Of course anyone familiar with Jason Bourne will realise that he's hardly the type to shoot his mouth off. (Not least because he can't recall the secrets hardwired into his noggin.)

Nevertheless, deputy director Noah Vosen (David Strathairn) is impatient to close off this potential breach, and instructs the agency's 'assets' (assassins) accordingly.

If the plot is straightforward, the movie's trajectory is anything but, zigzagging from Moscow to Turin, to Paris, to London, to Madrid, to Tangiers, and finally to New York. Wherever he goes, Bourne is only a whisker away from disaster; the film is one close shave after another. They should have called it 'Bourne To Run'.

Fortunately these variations on a single theme have been designed with a good deal of ingenuity. If Bourne's first near-thing is located in busy Waterloo station under the watchful eyes of dozens of surveillance cameras and CIA operatives, his second squeaker occurs in an empty office in the dead of night. Then he's off on a breathless rooftop chase through Tangier - this time Vosen et al are completely in the dark - which will climax with a claustrophobic fist fight in cramped bathroom.

The Bourne Ultimatum

By all accounts this was a long and difficult shoot, but you would hardly guess it from the agile and versatile action and prevailing air of expertise. Resourceful and pragmatic, Bourne seems ready to command of his own fate. It's only if you step back that you might wonder at the way the CIA is presented as astonishingly efficient one minute, and bafflingly incompetent the next.

Julia Stiles' Nicky Parsons turns up out of the blue in what can only be counted pure coincidence, but the moviemakers can't think of anything for her to do except place her in jeopardy. Joan Allen fares better as Pamela Landy - at any rate she gets more lines than Matt Damon - but the movie's crowd pleasing climax is hardly less far-fetched than any James Bond finale.

The Bourne Ultimatum

That's an observation, not a complaint. Former World in Action director Paul Greengrass (Bloody Sunday; United 93) has hit on a technique that feels so completely realistic, it's worth noting what it allows him to get away with. And what it doesn't: he choreographs a car crash so you-are-there you want to check yourself into an emergency room after, but it's jarring when both drivers show up minutes later barely scratched.

It's not just a matter of taking the shock absorbers off the Steadicam. The movie gives us such a blizzard of images we hardly know if we're coming or going: about 4,000 edits, apparently, up from about 3,500 in The Bourne Supremacy.

Perhaps the most slippery sleight of hand in the whole affair is the underlying implication that Bourne is essentially blowback: a covert killing tool who traded in his conscience for efficiency. It's just idle speculation, but I bet that even now, the CIA would be proud to have a dozen just like him.

Tom Charity
tom.charity@lovefilm.com

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Critics' Reviews

Rating of 4 
	  stars out of 5 Ben Walters, Time Out

Confused, mistrustful and trying to keep a lid on the knee-jerk violence to which he is predisposed, Jason Bourne is a... read more on www.timeout.com

Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 5 starsThe BEST movie realesed this summer

A customer from Cardiff, Wales , 17/08/2007

If you loved the last two, your gonna love this one. This is an intelligent, soild action movie with characters and a story which is genuinely captavating. This has the best fight scenes out of the three movies, but the car chase isn't as good as the last one. However, this is the best film in the series and the supporting cast are top class, its nice to see a film which has proper actors, with a visionary director who doesn't need to rely on CGI to tell the story. By far the best film of the summer, if not the year.

  87 out of 92 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 2 starsThe Bourne Disappointment

SAI81 from Tonbridge [Highly rated reviewer] , 19/08/2007

It's not been a good summer. It began with the crushing disappointment that was Spider-Man 3 and it ends with the crushing disappointment that is The Bourne Ultimatum.

For the record I really loved the first two Bourne films but just give the edge to Paul Greengrass' superb sequel over the Doug Liman directed original and with Greengrass at the helm again and much of the talent from the previous films returning I'm really at a loss as to how it went wrong this time out.

There are several big problems. Firstly there's the story. Part of the fun of the Bourne movies has been that we've discovered the story with Jason Bourne, been thrust inside his amnesia but as it has unfolded that story has always been easy to follow. That's not the case here, the story is so murky that I found myself lost several times . Worse though is that I didn't especially care where things were going as right from the off this film feels overfamilliar. Greengrass hits all the same beats as in the last two films but is unable to up the ante in the way he did so well with Supremacy so here it just comes off as 'we're 45 minutes in, better have a car chase'.

Even more disappointing though is that Greengrass squanders what assets the film does have (fantastic stunts, punchy fights) with a camera technique so irritating it took me completely out of the movie. Okay so it's not like Identity and Supremacy were the most sedate movies in the world but Ultimatum's camera moves around so unrelentingly that not only does it detract from your understanding of the movie but if you get seasick you should be warned to avoid this film for the good of your health. This and the almost ludicrously fast pace of the editing renders what would otherwise be a brilliant fight scene in the middle of the movie utterly unintelligible and irritiating.

It gives me no pleasure to say this about The Bourne Ultimatum. I want it to be a better film, the cast deserve a better film and all are on fine form. Damon is a great actor and he's grown into this role in completely convincing fashion. He provides one of the best moments of the whole trilogy after that pivotal fight when his silence says more than any line could have. It's nice to finally see Julia Stiles get something to do in these movies and she acquits herself well, but sadly vanishes from the film in pretty short order. Strathairn and Allen also cintribute strong turns that resist action movie cliche.

Sadly though it's not enough, the technique drowns what might have been a fun action film and the hard to follow story means that this third film never engages like the first two did, what a terrible shame.

  61 out of 80 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 1 starChase me

bail from Cheltenham , 19/11/2007

Its just 2 hours of the baddies constantly chasing the good guy and that is it! Oh, and 10 minutes tacked on the end as a poor excuse for a plot. Rubbish.

  50 out of 55 people found this review helpful

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Rated - 5 starsthe final bourne and the best

jonesmyster jonesmyster from Wrexham [Highly rated reviewer] , 08/12/2007

i must admit the bourne trilogy has been what alot of movies have tried to be and failed big style a modern day james bond but for me these films have been better the final film in the series is the best by far and one of the best films i've seen this year the stunts and fighting scenes was amazing and the story kept you on the edge of your seat no spoilers from me but a must see for action lovers and if matt damon does keep his word that this is the final well shame because one of the best action trilogys i've seen

  37 out of 37 people found this review helpful

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Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 4 stars'The Bourne Ultimatum'

A customer from Reigate , 20/08/2008

Great action film. Moves quickly and great shots of European cities.

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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