Chattanooga Times Free Press

In ‘Jason Bourne,’ a digital dragnet tightens

- BY JAKE COYLE

Jason Bourne, as played by Matt Damon across four movies, is forever disappeari­ng off the grid only to reluctantl­y resurface years later and again menace the CIA. He’s the spy who came in from the cold only to return to the cold, come in again, and, yet again, head back to the cold.

In the chilly and bleak “Jason Bourne,” the amnesia-ridden assassin has been resurrecte­d again, along with director Paul Greengrass, with whom Damon returns to the franchise after a nineyear break. Bourne is still brooding. Greengrass’ handheld camera is still frenetic. And the saga’s lethal precision is still sharp.

The spy game, already far from a martini-sipping affair in previous installmen­ts, is resolutely grim in “Jason Bourne.” The superspy, now a hulking mass of bullet-scarred muscle, is spending his days torturing himself in bare-knuckle brawls, haunted by his past. In shattering set pieces and terse emotion-less dialogue, any remaining sunlight has been drained away. The amount of people brazenly killed by Vincent Casell, the “asset” in Bourne’s pursuit, may well outnumber the words spoken by Bourne in the entire film.

Though first conceived in 1980 by Robert Ludlum, Bourne is perhaps the ultimate post9/11 hero. Especially in the hands of Greengrass (who also employed his gritty realism in the Sept. 11 drama “Flight 93”), Bourne is a wrecking ball of accountabi­lity for America’s clandestin­e past. He’s part fantasy (his preternatu­ral control of out-of-control events is reassuring) and part reality (American disillusio­nment made visceral).

In “Jason Bourne,” the digital dragnet is tightening around Bourne. The film is self-consciousl­y set in a post-Snowden world; the CIA is hacked by Nicky Parsons (Julia Stiles, whose smarts have given all of these films a kick), who’s threatenin­g to reveal the covert Treadstone operation.

The film, penned by Greengrass and Christophe­r Rouse (editor of this and previous “Bourne” films), introduces a tech magnate (Riz Ahmed) whose celebrated social-networking platform is secretly feeding informatio­n to CIA director Robert Dewey

(Tommy Lee Jones, whose wonderful sad face at this point has everything good and bad about America written all over it).

In a way, Bourne is himself a leak. He’s a rogue weapon who can’t remember his own encryption code. Here, the mystery he’s trying to solve revolves around his father’s role in his initial recruitmen­t.

But aside from updating to today’s surveillan­ce state, “Jason Bourne” largely sticks to the franchise’s familiar moves, and they often don’t have the same kinetic finesse they used to. Here again are scenes of digging through old CIA documents, breathless stretches of crowded escapes and public rendezvous where Bourne fools lurking agents.

The film is essentiall­y sandwiched between two mammoth, extended set pieces: First, a fiery riot in Athens where Bourne comes out of hiding to meet Parsons; and later, a showdown in Las Vegas that brings him back to U.S. soil. Both outstay their welcome (a vehicle plowing through traffic in Vegas has unfortunat­e shades of the tragedy in Nice) and the franchise’s propulsion gives way to a pummeling blunt force.

The exception is Alicia Vikander, who enters the franchise as the CIA’s cyber-ops head and has her own motives of tossing aside the agency’s old guard. Whenever she’s on-screen, her steely but agile presence brightens the film’s dour gaze.

Yet even when “Jason Bourne” doesn’t click with the same rhythm as its predecesso­rs, it has a weight that outclasses nearly every other big action movie around. National identity is investigat­ed and violence has repercussi­ons: both astonishin­g things in a summer blockbuste­r.

But if Bourne re-emerges again, hopefully Greengrass and company can at least give him someone to talk to.

 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Matt Damon appears in a scene from “Jason Bourne.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Matt Damon appears in a scene from “Jason Bourne.”
 ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES ?? Tommy Lee Jones, left, and Matt Damon star in “Jason Bourne.”
UNIVERSAL PICTURES Tommy Lee Jones, left, and Matt Damon star in “Jason Bourne.”

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