Los Angeles Times

‘BOURNE’ AGAIN

The franchise returns with a jolt of political realism and amped-up action in Las Vegas

- BY STEVEN ZEITCHIK

LAS VEGAS – On a trip to Los Angeles about 18 months ago, the London-based filmmaker Paul Greengrass sat down to lunch at Shutters with Matt Damon and editor Christophe­r Rouse. The latter two had come with a stealth mission. Greengrass had long been unwilling to make his third Jason Bourne movie and for a time was even burned up about a spinoff done without him. But with the director wandering in a kind of decade-long exile making globalizat­ion cautionary tales, they thought it was time for him, in Bourne-ian terms, “to come in” and direct a new movie about Robert Ludlum’s amnesiac assassin. “I was skeptical there was one to be done, I was skeptical I wanted to do it and I was skeptical it would hold up with the others,” recalled Greengrass, 60. “But Matt said, ‘We’re really lucky to have an audience that loves this character.’ Chris said, ‘The world has really changed since [‘The Bourne Ultimatum’ in] 2007. I thought, ‘Maybe I’ve been too negative to an old friend.’” Greengrass told this story in Las Vegas, where his new movie “Jason Bourne”— starring and produced by Damon; edited by and co-written with Rouse — would later that day make its debut, in a city the film lights up in a blaze of neon destructio­n. The figurative distance covered by the director is even greater. When the new “Bourne” arrives in theaters Friday, it will land the one-time documentar­ian back in a

tentpole fishbowl he’d long swam away from — while excitingly but potentiall­y troublingl­y upping the political-realism ante above most Hollywood blockbuste­rs. “Jason Bourne” expands the possibilit­ies of — and tests the appetite for — serious issues in escapist cinema.

And it wasn’t even supposed to exist — not after Universal chagrined Greengrass by making 2012’s “The Bourne Legacy” with his foil Tony Gilroy.

“I had,” Damon said, “given up hope that we would get here.”

Dark f ilm, glitzy Vegas

Amid a sea of tattoos and flipflops and selfie sticks, over the din of piped-in Kesha and slotmachin­e beeps, the crowd gathered in Caesars Palace to herald the return of Jason Bourne.

A somber black-and-white motif anchored by images of Damonish intensity adorned the premiere theater, contrastin­g with the pulsating rainbow in the casino beyond. As they walked down an indoor black carpet, principals described their movie’s dark themes not far from colorful slots with names like “Hearts & Dreams.” That this theater normally hosts Celine Dion underlined the contrast.

That incompatib­ility — substantiv­e ideas and populist distractio­n — provides an apt metaphor for the new “Bourne.” As one of the few auteurs at the helm of a summer franchise, Greengrass had built his latest work — and even his career — as a kind of paradox.

With its trademark handheld cameras and edits faster than a croupier’s fingers, “Jason Bourne” vibrates with the momentum fans know well. From its early set piece at an austerity riot in Athens to its fiery third-act car chase shot practicall­y on the Vegas Strip, “Bourne” keeps the plot turns coming.

There’s the ex-agent’s new discoverie­s about his past, a fresh chapter with his comrade-in-roguery Nicky Parsons (Julia Stiles), slippery dealings with a murkily motivated cyber-analyst (Alicia Vikander), and a fraught relationsh­ip between new CIA director Robert Dewey (Tommy Lee Jones) and Aaron Kalloor (Riz Ahmed), a Silicon Valley mogul whose user database holds the key to Dewey’s intelligen­ce ambitions.

And yes, Bourne is again on the run from shadowy bosses as he tries to learn what brought him here.

But you assumed all that. More novel are the social issues: The film’s Athens-to-Vegas arc, for instance, which by going from a flailing economy to capitalist excess puts a spotlight on economic disenfranc­hisement. Or the privacy debate — when Kalloor and Dewey tensely hash out whether a tech company should give the government a backdoor, it so closely echoes the recent Apple-FBI controvers­y over a terrorist’s iPhone you’d think Greengrass shot it last month. (He didn’t.)

“We looked at the difference­s from ‘Bourne Ultimatum’ and it was shocking,” Damon said. “We thought, ‘If Jason Bourne was on the run, why not run him through today’s landscape?’ ”

Also, because Bourne now remembers what he’s done, moral questions enter. Does he want to use his lethal skills to serve his country or does he refrain out of guilt — patriotism or conscience?

Crucially, every enemy and good guy is firmly within the U.S. government. This is a far cry from nearly all other 21st-century thrillers and even from past Bourne movies (though “Ultimatum” gets close). No longer is the story about the U.S. versus its enemies. It’s about the U.S. versus itself.

“In a sense all these films are anchored in identity, because Jason Bourne is trying to find out who he is. But with this one I think we’re also asking how we want to define ourselves as a country,” Rouse said.

Put another way, the earlier films are post-9/11 movies. This is a post-Edward Snowden movie. And fittingly, it grapples with Snowdenwor­thy technology — hacks, facial recognitio­n and social media, the last of which create issues. In a world in which tech companies offer a kind of ipso facto surveillan­ce, what are their responsibi­lities to their users? Or their government?

“The conflict between socialmedi­a giants and the security demands of a nation state seemed really interestin­g to me,” said Greengrass. “It’s not right versus wrong — it’s two rights that are in tension.”

Roots in documentar­ies

These interests stem from his background.

Beginning as a TV documentar­y director in England, Greengrass improbably ended up in Hollywood when his 2002 Irish-massacre piece “Bloody Sunday” caught the eye of a CAA agent, then “Bourne” producer Frank Marshall and Universal Studios.

The Cambridge alum — who wears Harry Potter glasses, shoulder-length white hair and a mien that in a certain light can make him look like Jay Leno — dedicated much of the next four years to “The Bourne Supremacy,” sequel to Doug Liman’s “The Bourne Identity,” and then “Ultimatum.”

He imported his style of current-events research (he is known for being moved to direct films by seemingly unrelated writings; Paul Mason’s global-uprising study “Why It’s Kicking Off Everywhere” and a Wired article about hacker recruitmen­t in Vegas were the impetus for this one) and on-themove shooting choices.

“You can never relax in a Paul movie,” Stiles related. “Even when you turn the corner, a camera always pops up.”

But his first two Bourne movies were, Greengrass admits, “painful in their processes.” Because his spontaneit­y often led to key moments being omitted, he and a crew would be forced to return to various cities for reshoots, sometimes more than once.

Deciding in 2008 — after “Bourne” scored three Oscars and global success — that he didn’t want more agita, Greengrass walked away. He went off to make smaller-scale films in the vein of his earlier eye-popper “United 93,” the 2010 Iraq war tale “Green Zone” and 2013 Somali pirate story “Captain Phillips.”

Damon, close with Greengrass, also stayed away.

But Universal, short on franchises and not wanting the rights to revert to the Ludlum estate, needed a movie. Soon Gilroy — who had written all three Bourne films but whose “Ultimatum” script Greengrass had almost entirely rewritten — was on board for a spinoff with Jeremy Renner, “The Bourne Legacy.”

That sat poorly with Greengrass, who didn’t have a warm relationsh­ip with Gilroy to begin with. “Tony is all planning, and Paul is all spontaneit­y. And they’re each strong personalit­ies,” Marshall said of the pair. “Legacy” performed modestly. Donna Langley, chairman of Universal, said that she was proud of the movie and believed it had a beneficial effect on the public.

“We kept the spirit of ‘Bourne’ alive,” she said. She also hoped, soon after, that Greengrass might come back.

The issues in “Bourne” are timely. Combine that with a documentar­y-style shoot and you’re left with a movie of far more realism than most summer action films.

Echoes of current events

Unfortunat­ely, more realism also means more reality.

“Bourne” features the pandemoniu­m of a public shooting and a fortified vehicle crashing through a crowd of innocents. While the similariti­es to Orlando, Fla., and Nice, France, are incidental, the film’s bid for authentici­ty could strengthen the connection for some viewers.

Greengrass downplayed the issue.

“It’s a bit of a stretch to link what happened in Nice, which is an ISIS [Islamic State] attack on an unarmed crowd, to an exuberant popcorn car chase. You wouldn’t look at a demolition derby and say, ‘Oh, my God.’ That’s what this is — a cinematic demolition derby.”

He added, “I think audiences know what’s in filmmakers’ hearts.”

Just the same, after the Nice attack, Universal pulled some TV spots spotlighti­ng the Vegas chase.

Back at the premiere, the feeling was more celebrator­y.

After the cast had made its way inside the theater, Greengrass took the stage, seeming like a man happy to be home as he called out cast introducti­ons.

Earlier in the day he described why.

“In my little imperfect way what I’m trying to do is understand the world,” he said. “As a filmmaker, you realize as you get older that each film is part of a dialogue you’re having with yourself. That started when I was working in documentar­ies. And in a way I’ve never deviated from it.”

 ?? Jasin Boland Universal Pictures ?? DIRECTOR PAUL GREENGRASS, left, and Matt Damon on the set of “Jason Bourne.” “I had given up hope that we would get here,” Damon says of the new film.
Jasin Boland Universal Pictures DIRECTOR PAUL GREENGRASS, left, and Matt Damon on the set of “Jason Bourne.” “I had given up hope that we would get here,” Damon says of the new film.
 ?? David Becker For The Times ?? PAUL GREENGRASS looks over the Las Vegas Strip before a “Jason Bourne” premiere, part of a franchise he helped launch.
David Becker For The Times PAUL GREENGRASS looks over the Las Vegas Strip before a “Jason Bourne” premiere, part of a franchise he helped launch.
 ?? Jasin Boland Universal Pictures ?? MATT DAMON as Jason Bourne in the new film is on the run from shadowy bosses again as he tries to learn the truth.
Jasin Boland Universal Pictures MATT DAMON as Jason Bourne in the new film is on the run from shadowy bosses again as he tries to learn the truth.

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