Coyote Cinema: Bourne Legacy
Aug. 11th, 2012 07:49 pmUp front, solid movie but the weakest of the Bournes. I didn't feel Renner had the charisma of Damon here, and we didn't get as much of the *flash* the earlier movies were good for--the tight, whipsmart combat choreography, and the almost MacGyveresque improvisations that said "this guy is preternaturally smart and quick thinking". There was less action, but there was still the tense moving of chess pieces as the rogue agent worked to stay ahead of the Agency. I loved the way the third movie was woven into this one, and I loved the way Bourne was a phantom throughout without making an appearance. I loved how Rachael Weisz was believably a civilian who still was not reduced to screaming and being saved--a hallmark of these movies. I wish I'd had the chance to rewatch the other movies first, like we did with 'Ultimatum', because I think it would have enriched the experience. The last forty-five minutes or so are a chase scene that's probably about twice as long as it needs to be, but it did put a new twist on the rooftop escape that's in every movie.
Good performances from quite a few of the cast. Suffers from high expectations of a Bourne film. 3.5 wags.
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Date: 2012-08-12 02:18 am (UTC)The most intense fight scenes were with people you're meant to forget. The confrontation with the Big Bad Guy was anticlimactic. Tim and I actually said "Really??" in unison.
And I'm embarrassingly easy to entertain, so that's saying a lot.
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Date: 2012-08-12 02:42 am (UTC)We also talked in the car about how I felt like the ending was left hanging. CJ says there was plenty to suggest that they had dropped off the grid; I say another 30 seconds of shots with them indicating they were learning how to make their way in an off-grid society (like perhaps helping the fishing boat they were already on drag in some nets or something) and CLEARLY choosing to stay hidden would have wrapped things up better.
Having said that: I still liked the film. I also loved how they wove Bourne in without having him take over. I loved that Marta's scientist got over some of her freakout and did a little saving of her own, while still retaining her civilian-y feel. I loved that they bothered to do enough research to make Marta's science-y explanation of what the program did sound at least a little bit plausible. I loved that Jeremy Renner spent a fair amount of time with his shirt off, and for vaguely believable reasons. (Yes, of course it was gratuitous, but they tried to make it feel less so, and I appreciate that.) I loved that Rachel Weisz kept her clothes on, because while she's pretty and all, having the female lead show some skin has become far too cliche in action films.
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Date: 2012-08-12 02:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-12 04:05 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-08-12 01:29 pm (UTC)Then they introduced Beta, and they specifically introduced him as part of a program that was "Treadstone but without the emotional instability" which implies that he's just as fast, just as strong, and just as smart as Cross... but less human and more robotic and unfeeling. (And, in fact, it implies significantly *less* of a loose cannon than Cross or any other Treadstone operative.) Then suddenly they're telling a different story altogether, the story of two super-spies trying to outgun and outwit each other, still woven in with Cross and Marta trying to survive. Except they're *not* telling that story; Beta doesn't have enough time before the end of the movie to bother with establishing himself at anything other than being good at tracking Cross across rooftops, and at no point in the exhaustive motorcycle chase scene does he display any advanced tactics. He doesn't come off as "super-spy from a different program", he comes off as "guy who is really good at tracking."
[... there is a character limit, and I'm over it by 150 characters. Continued in the next comment....]
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Date: 2012-08-12 01:30 pm (UTC)Now imagine that instead of sending in Beta, they had woven in the obligatory chase scene somewhere else in the movie, somewhere that it didn't feel tacked on. Then imagine this end to the movie:
* Scene where Cross starts getting sick in the Philippines after viralling out*
Marta comes up to Cross, who is leaning against a pole.
Marta: Are you okay? *half-hearted nod from Cross* Can you walk?
*Cross starts forward shakily, Marta starts to steady him*
Marta: I've found us a room. We'll be safe there.
[I believe that's a slight re-ordering of the existing scene, in that I think she says she found the room first, then asked if he could walk. I want the scene to end with "We'll be safe there", though.]
*Cut to scene with Norton's advisor telling him about Beta and the Jax program*
*Cut to scene with Beta meeting the handler in the Philippines, where she says that everything's in the car*
*Roll credits*
You've got a setup for the next movie, you've handled my problems with the ending, and Beta can spend the next movie being the badass super-spy he was presumably trained to be. Cross and Marta think they are safe, but they're vulnerable and they've got something big coming after them that they don't know about. You could sell pre-paid tickets to the sequel in the hallway outside the theater showing this movie, and I'd fucking buy one right there. Because you've pushed Beta to the next movie, you've got room to show him as highly trained AND a loose cannon, if that's what you want (and a movie in which Ed Norton's character unleashes a super-spy to chase a super-spy and ends up having to deal with TWO rogue super-spies instead would ALSO be a fabulous movie.... or just a movie about two super-spies trying to outsmart the other... or, since Norton didn't know about Jax being up and running until he was told, presumably Jax has a different Head Honcho, and it can focus to some degree on a tense power struggle between Norton and Jax Head Honcho.)
I'm not saying it was a bad movie. I'm saying the last forty-five minutes could have been better. I was disappointed in the lack of clear resolution from Cross and Marta, and I was disappointed in how they spent so much of the early movie setting up that they were shutting down Treadstone in order to protect their other projects from the taint, and then when they brought in someone from another project, one touted as a step up from Treadstone... that operative went down too quickly and too easily.
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Date: 2012-08-12 01:54 pm (UTC)(And I thought Norton knew about the Beta, it was Keach who was all butthurt that there were super secret programmes that he wasn't in on.)
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Date: 2012-08-13 04:20 pm (UTC)