The latest chapter of the Bournology, starring Matt Damon, and Ira Sachs’s new film, with Greg Kinnear and Jennifer Ehle.
The obvious thing to
do, should you wish to forget your troubles and just get happy, is to
bind your knuckles and enjoy a bout of illegal fistfighting on the
Greek-Albanian border. That is the chosen hobby of Jason Bourne (Matt
Damon), and, for someone of his interests, there is no better way to
relax. The fight lasts precisely one punch, and it signals the start of
the imaginatively titled “Jason Bourne,” which finds our man trotting
the globe in a bid to discover, once and for all, who he is and what he
was and which of his passports to use. Will the poor guy never stop?
Frankly, since Jason is already on Greek soil, it would be easier if he
went looking for a golden fleece.
The
Bournology, for moviegoers, runs as follows. We have three major works
with Damon as the central figure: “The Bourne Identity” (2002), “The Bourne Supremacy” (2004), and “The Bourne Ultimatum” (2007), known
collectively to scholars as the synoptic Bournes. Then comes “The Bourne Legacy” (2012), starring Jeremy Renner as a Bourne-flavored agent,
which is widely viewed as noncanonical. So, what are we to make of
“Jason Bourne,” crammed as it is with flashbacks to its predecessors? Is
it the fourth gospel, plumbing the mystery of the Bournian logos, or
should we discard it as apocrypha?
Either
way, the new film racks up the air miles. From the Balkans, we zip to
Iceland, where a former colleague of Bourne’s, Nicky Parsons (Julia
Stiles), hacks into a C.I.A. mainframe (“Could be worse than Snowden,”
someone says) and downloads a list of illicit programs onto a memory
stick. The landscape of Bourne has always been littered with widgets,
beginning with the tiny laser device buried in Jason’s hip, in the first
film, that bore the details of his Swiss bank account. Then came the SIM-card
switcheroo, in “The Bourne Supremacy”—a fiddly business that lightened
the load of Bourne’s brutality. At forty-five, Damon remains in
frightening fettle, but twinned with that hunkhood is a touch as deft as
a pickpocket’s. The entire Bourne franchise, indeed, can be seen as an
instruction manual in the art of throwaway cool. Swipe a phone from a
café table, make a call, dump the phone, and walk on: that’s the kind of
knack we have learned from Bourne over the years, and the new film
supplies a few low-tech addenda, such as a Molotov cocktail snatched
from the grasp of a rioter, then tossed for Bourne’s advantage. He makes
fire as he goes along.
The riot
occurs in Athens’s Syntagma Square and the surrounding streets, where a
crowd is raging against the government. This fits the story, because the
wildness of the ruckus, after dark, acts as cover both for Bourne, who
is meeting Nicky, and for a trained assassin (Vincent Cassel), who has
been ordered—by whom I will not say—to take them out. But the melee also
suits the director, Paul Greengrass, who specialized in
drama-documentaries, on such subjects as the shooting of civilians in
Northern Ireland and a racially motivated stabbing in London, before
turning to “The Bourne Supremacy” and “The Bourne Ultimatum.” You can
feel him itching to link the ordeals of his fictional hero to the
stresses and the fractures of political reality. It’s almost as if he
were faintly ashamed at having to concoct yet more unlikely
shenanigans—plots within plots, at the C.I.A.—at a time when unfeigned
drama is bursting out of the headlines.
Certainly,
though the scenes in Athens come early in the movie, they mark its high
point, bringing clarity to chaos and permanent damage to my nerve
endings. Greengrass then proceeds to another topical zone: Bourne is
caught up in the case of Aaron Kalloor (Riz Ahmed), a Silicon Valley
tycoon who founded a Facebook-like corporation called Deep Dream, and
who is now under pressure from the director of the C.I.A., Robert Dewey
(Tommy Lee Jones), to assist with national security. One could argue
that Internet billionaires should be humanely culled, like badgers, but
Bourne’s duty, nonetheless, is to keep Kalloor safe and the cause of
freedom alive.
The presence of
Jones is always welcome, but notice how he slots into a well-worn
position, previously held by Chris Cooper, Brian Cox, and Albert Finney:
the older gentleman spy, whose machinations rouse the ire—and the
dormant idealism—of Bourne. Much of the latest film smacks of
established routine. Any car chase in which drivers weave through
oncoming traffic is to be applauded, but the thought that Bourne pulled
that stunt in Moscow, in “The Bourne Supremacy,” does take a slight edge
off its impact in “Jason Bourne.” True, we’re now in Las Vegas, and his
nemesis is at the wheel of an armored SWAT truck, but
it’s still more of a key change than a brand-new tune. As for the doomy
question that beats throughout the movie—Who is Bourne, anyway?—the
issue was raised and settled long ago. His true name is David Webb, and
he was recruited into black ops and deprived of his memory, though not
of his talent for martial arts or for falling down a stairwell and using
someone else as a cushion. All this we know from earlier films, and
“Jason Bourne” merely fills in the gaps. Greengrass is as dexterous as
ever, yet the result, though abounding in thrills, seems oddly stifled
by self-consciousness and, dare one say, superfluous. Come on, guys.
There are so many wrongs in the world. If Bourne could tear himself away
from the mirror for a moment, could he not be persuaded to go and right
them?
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Matt Damon stars in Paul Greengrass’s latest installment of the Bourne saga. |
Love
and death are all very well, but if you want to turn your life on its
head nothing compares with moving house in the tristate area. That was
the story of the gay couple in Ira Sachs’s “Love Is Strange” (2014),
whose income fell after their marriage, and real-estate trauma strikes
again in Sachs’s new movie, “Little Men.” Brian (Greg Kinnear) is an
actor, and his wife, Kathy (Jennifer Ehle), is a psychotherapist. When
Brian’s father dies, they inherit his house, and that means relocating
from Manhattan to Brooklyn, with their thirteen-year-old son, Jacob
(Theo Taplitz). On the ground floor of the house is a dress shop, run by
a Chilean woman named Leonor (Paulina García), who was a good friend of
the old man’s—so good that he didn’t raise her rent for eight years.
She’s still paying eleven hundred a month. Brian wants to triple it. Let
the battle commence.
To what
extent audiences elsewhere will be stirred by these agonies is hard to
say, but Sachs finds ways in which to counter the charge of
parochialism. For one thing, we see Brian play Trigorin in a stage
production of “The Seagull,” the implication being that, since Chekhov
drew our attention to the squabbles of unregarded souls, nothing lies
beyond dramatic bounds. Then there is the sad-eyed García, who earned
international acclaim in the title role of “Gloria” (2013), and who,
though meek of manner, has a resilience that verges on the unnerving. We
are so accustomed to cranky characters undergoing a sentimental
sweetening that it’s a shock when Leonor does the opposite, as her
initial greeting slowly loses its warmth. There are times when she’s
downright mean, slipping a thin jibe into the conversation like a knife
between the ribs. Talking to Brian about his father, she says, “I was
more his family, if you want to know, than you were.”
The
title of the film, likewise, has a whetted edge. Brian can be
ineffectual, and he knows it. So does his son. “He’s not that successful
or anything,” Jacob says to Gloria’s son, Tony (Michael Barbieri), who
is about the same age and whose own father is absent and unmourned. (“I
realized that he’s better when he’s not around,” Tony says.) The two
boys join forces, growing closer as their parents start to bicker and
fall out. Brian is one of the big kids, straining after adult wisdom as
if he were auditioning for a role, whereas the little men seem better
equipped to ride the bumps. Hence the lovely travelling shots of the
boys—Jacob on roller blades, Tony with a scooter—as they whisk along
sunlit streets. You get a whiff of Truffaut, and a strong sense that
none of the grownups can match that gliding ease.
The
best reason to watch “Little Men” is Michael Barbieri, who musters a
blend of soulfulness and aggression that would be remarkable at any age.
The danger for any Sachs movie is that its humane quietude could slide
into dullness. Not with this boy around. Tony plans to become an actor,
and we observe him in drama class, roaring through repetition practice
with his teacher—hurling back phrase after phrase as if he were
volleying at the net. So compelling is Tony that he starts to outgrow
not only Jacob, who seems wispy by comparison, but all other aspects of
the film. Presumably, that’s why Barbieri has been honored with a role
in the next Spider-Man adventure. I was hoping that it might take a
little longer for a promising young actor to fall into Marvel’s
clutches. No chance. ♦
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