No longer about Jason Bourne’s search for identity, Legacy nonetheless maintains consistency
with the prior trilogy by not only retaining supporting actors like Joan Allen,
Scott Glenn, Albert Finney and David Strathairn in small roles, but also
bringing in one of the series’ scripter Tony Gilroy (on the heels of his two
great directorial outings Michael Clayton
and Duplicity) to write and
direct. Without Damon’s Bourne, this film focuses on a new character, Aaron
Cross, a secret agent in a similar secret program. He’s played by Jeremy
Renner. (After Mission: Impossible 4 and The Avengers, this marks the third time he's been brought in to boost a franchise's ranks). The plot of this film starts parallel to the action of The Bourne Ultimatum. While Jason Bourne
is doing what he does there, Cross is off in the Alaskan wilderness on a
training exercise. When the masterminds of this whole national-security
conspiracy panic, they decide to eliminate this particular program, swooping in
to kill their field assets before the whole experiment is revealed to the
public.
Of course, Cross avoids death and sets off to find answers.
Back in the program’s headquarters, while the familiar suits are on
Bourne-related business, new characters played by Edward Norton, Stacy Keach,
Donna Murphy and Corey Stoll fret in dark, tense control rooms, staring at
monitors and flipping through classified documents. They’re trying to stay one
step ahead of the agents they’re trying to dispose of. Cross sidesteps them and
finds himself aiding and aided by a government scientist (Rachel Weisz) who is
also targeted in this bloody cover-up. Soon they’re racing together on an
intercontinental escape from the people they once worked for. This is familiar Bourne material with a clever, skillful protagonist
moving through fake passports and running from all kinds of armed security,
while the real villains sit drumming their fingers impatiently in tense
conference rooms and in front of glowing screens.
Although in the grand scheme of all that’s come before, this
is merely a feature-length footnote in an epilogue, time will tell if this is a
spin-off, a reboot, a one-off, or a cause for Jason Bourne to come out of
hiding in a future sequel and bring it all full circle. I don’t know what to
hope for, myself, since Ultimatum finished
off his story so spectacularly. It’d be difficult to top. But anyways, we’re
talking Bourne Legacy here. It’s a
tense film filled with lengthy scenes of grim exposition and quick bursts of
well-staged action. Gilroy ditches Greengrass’s shaky-cam style for something
moderately more stately with effective tension-gathering cinematography from
the great Robert Elswit. At the very least, together they manage to create a
car chase sequence that’s a more than adequate addition to this franchise’s
hallmark area of excellence. They also keep the chilly spy-versus-spy feeling of
it all nice and cool.
Renner gives a fine performance as a troubled betrayed
operative and Weisz is more than ready to work as his rattled counterpart.
They’re fine action movie actors, but it’s hard for the story to not feel a
little thin. They’re cogs more than characters. Because the earlier films had a
MacGuffin that tied intimately into the character’s inner dilemma – Bourne was
searching for his history, his true identity, after all – it’s a little
disappointing to find that Gilroy has put in its place a more literal object to
retrieve. Aaron Cross and his scientist ally are on the lookout for a little
pill that his phase of the top-secret project was forcing agents to take.
Without it, Cross will be debilitated or something. It doesn’t really matter
what the pill will do; all that matters is that it’s important enough to keep
the plot moving. Which also happens to be the movie’s main reason for
existence. It keeps the Bourne franchise
going. And if that has to happen, it sure could be a lot worse than just a fun,
if inconsequential, action thriller, even though the franchise has set a much
higher bar for itself.
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