The Bourne Supremacy (film)

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The Bourne Supremacy
Directed by Paul Greengrass
Produced by Doug Liman
Frank Marshall
Written by Novel:
Robert Ludlum
Screenplay:
Tony Gilroy
Uncredited:
Brian Helgeland
Starring Matt Damon
Franka Potente
Brian Cox
Julia Stiles
Karl Urban
Gabriel Mann
and Joan Allen
Music by John Powell
Editing by Christopher Rouse
Richard Pearson
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) July 23, 2004
Running time 108 min.
Language English
Budget $75 million[1]
Gross revenue Domestic
$176,241,941[1]
Foreign
$112,258,276[1]
Worldwide
$288,500,217[1]
Preceded by The Bourne Identity
Followed by The Bourne Ultimatum
IMDb profile

The Bourne Supremacy is a 2004 film loosely based on the Robert Ludlum novel of the same name.

It is also a sequel to the 2002 film The Bourne Identity and the second film of the Bourne Trilogy. The Bourne Supremacy continues the story of Jason Bourne, an amnesiac and former CIA assassin played by Matt Damon, and his attempt to learn more of his shadowy past as he is once more enveloped in a conspiracy surrounding the CIA and Operation Treadstone. The film also stars Franka Potente as Marie Helena Kreutz, Brian Cox as Ward Abbott, Joan Allen as Pamela Landy and Julia Stiles as Nicolette Parsons.

It substantially deviates from its source material as Alexander Conklin is now dead and the CIA is Bourne's enemy rather than his friend (the plot actually incorporates aspects of the Bourne novel The Bourne Legacy written by Eric Van Lustbader as well). In addition, the book's narrative takes place in Hong Kong with Marie getting kidnapped so Bourne will accept a mission.

The film was directed by Paul Greengrass, written by Tony Gilroy and Brian Helgeland[2] and produced by Doug Liman and Frank Marshall. Universal Studios released the film to theaters in the United States on July 23, 2004 and it received a positive critical and public reaction similar to its predecessor, The Bourne Identity. The film is followed by a 2007 sequel entitled The Bourne Ultimatum.

Contents

The narrative of this film sets in two years after the events in The Bourne Identity. Bourne and his girlfriend from the first film, Marie, are living in Goa, India. Bourne is having flashbacks of an assassination in a Berlin hotel. Meanwhile, in Berlin, CIA officers under Deputy Director Pamela Landy are paying $3 million for the "Neski files," documents about the theft of $20 million seven years earlier. An assassin, Kirill, plants Jason Bourne's fingerprints and proceeds to kill the agent and the source, stealing the files and money and giving them to Russian oil magnate Yuri Gretkov. Tying up loose ends, Kirill arrives in Goa to kill Bourne, but Bourne spots him and flees with Marie. As he and Marie drive away, Kirill sees Bourne in the driver's seat. As Bourne and Marie drive over a bridge, they switch seats, Bourne preparing to leap from the car and ambush Kirill. Kirill did not see the seat change, so he shot for the driver of the car, accidentally killing Marie instead of Bourne. When the car crashes off a bridge into the river, Kirill believes that Bourne is dead. However, Bourne narrowly escapes and leaves for Naples with money and passports in an attempt to learn why he is again being targeted and to put an end to Treadstone's pursuit of him for good.

In Berlin, Landy finds the planted fingerprints and goes to CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia to find out whose they are. She discovers that they belong to Bourne and asks Abbott about Treadstone. He admits that he had Conklin killed after a failed mission and has no idea where Bourne is. Landy tells Abbott that the CIA agent who stole the $20 million was named in the stolen files. A Russian politician, Vladimir Neski, was about to identify the thief when he was murdered by his wife in a Berlin hotel. Landy believes that Bourne and Conklin were involved, and, based on the prints, Bourne was the assassin in Berlin. Both Abbott and Landy go to Berlin to find Bourne and take him down.

Bourne (Matt Damon) and Nicky (Julia Stiles)
Bourne (Matt Damon) and Nicky (Julia Stiles)

In Naples, Italy, Bourne uses a known passport, causing him to be identified by security. He incapacitates an Italian Carabinieri officer and his CIA interrogator and copies the agent's SIM card on his own cell phone, then escapes. Bourne then listens in on a call from Landy, learning her name, phone number, and that he is suspected of several killings. He then steals a car and heads to Germany. In Munich, he breaks into another Treadstone agent's house. The agent, Jarda, tells him that Treadstone was shut down after Conklin's murder. He and Bourne are the only ones left. After a struggle, Bourne is forced to kill him and blows up his house to escape from arriving agents.

In Amsterdam, Landy and Abbott meet Nicky Parsons, Treadstone's handler in Paris. Bourne follows them, believing that Landy ordered the hit in Goa. He targets her with a rifle from a neighboring roof, and calls her to ask why people are after him again. She tells him that it is because he killed two people in Berlin, and he thinks she is talking about the people in his flashbacks. He arranges to meet Nicky at the Alexanderplatz, where he uses a crowded anti-capitalist protest to evade surveillance. He then kidnaps and interrogates her, discovering that Abbott was, in fact, the head of Treadstone, not Conklin. Bourne's flashbacks of Neski's assassination at the Brecker Hotel return, but Nicky knows nothing about it. Upon hearing their conversation over Nicky's transmitter, Landy begins to believe that Bourne is being framed. To the surprise of Landy and Abbott, Bourne lets Nicky go unharmed after interrogating her. Separately, Abbott is shown evidence of Bourne being framed and abruptly kills the young CIA agent, Danny Zorn, who had unsuspectingly told him.

Bourne visits the Brecker Hotel in Berlin and begins to remember more of his mission. He killed Neski on Conklin's orders. When Neski's wife unexpectedly showed up, he shot her to make it look like a murder-suicide. Bourne breaks into Abbott's hotel room and records a conversation between him and Gretkov that incriminates Abbott and Gretkov in the theft of the money. Abbott also confesses that he ordered the assassination in Goa, Neski's murder by Bourne, the murder of the agents by Kirill, and the planted fingerprints at the scene. As Landy arrives to confront Abbott, he shoots himself. Bourne sends the tape of the confession to Landy.

Bourne goes to Moscow to find Neski's daughter, where he is shot and wounded by Kirill. After an extended high-speed chase through Moscow, Bourne forces Kirill to crash in a tunnel. Bourne proceeds to the apartment of Neski's daughter, where he informs her that her mother did not kill her father then commit suicide; Bourne had killed them both on a mission gone wrong. He apologizes for killing them. Gretkov is arrested by Russian police due to Landy providing them with the evidence she got from Bourne. The film then ends with Bourne fading into a New York City crowd to the tune of "Extreme Ways" by Moby.

  • Matt Damon as Jason Bourne
  • Joan Allen as Pamela "Pam" Landy: a CIA Deputy Director and Task Force Chief, pursues Bourne after her operation goes badly
  • Brian Cox as Ward Abbott: a CIA Deputy Director formerly in charge of Treadstone, is actually in league with Gretkov for stolen CIA money
  • Julia Stiles as Nicky Parsons: formerly Bourne's Treadstone contact, is taken from her post-Treadstone assignment to assist in the search for Bourne
  • Karl Urban as Kirill: a Russian secret service agent and an expert assassin who is working for Gretkov as a favor to Abbott
  • Karel Roden as Gretkov: Kirill's employer, collaborating with Abbott for stolen CIA money
  • Franka Potente as Marie Helena Kreutz: Bourne's girlfriend.
  • Gabriel Mann as Danny Zorn: formerly assigned to Treadstone headquarters, is now on Abbott's staff

The Bourne Supremacy grossed $288,500,217.[1] Reviews on Internet critic sites suggest an overall positive disposition towards the film, though the film was criticized for its shaky camera work, which has made various action scenes difficult to see,[3] an often criticized stylistic choice which carries on with The Bourne Ultimatum.[4] Despite these shortcomings, Rotten Tomatoes scores the film at 82 percent.[5] At the 2005 Taurus World Stunt Awards, veteran Russian stunt coordinator Viktor Ivanov won the "Best Vehicle" award for his driving in the Moscow car chase scene. Dan Bradley, the film's second unit director won the overall award for stunt coordinator.[6]

The DVD contains an alternate ending for the film. It has Bourne collapsing in the Moscow park after confessing to Neski's daughter, waking up in a hospital, and being told his real name by Landy, before he escapes.

Year Organization Award Category/Recipient Result
2005 ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards ASCAP Award Top Box Office Films: John Powell Won[7]
2005 Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films, USA Saturn Award Best Action/Adventure/Thriller Film and Best Actor- Matt Damon Nominated[7]
2005 Broadcast Film Critics Association Critics Choice Award Best Popular Movie Nominated[7]
2005 Cinema Audio Society Awards C.A.S. Award Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Motion Pictures Nominated[7]
2005 Empire Awards, UK Empire Award Best Actor- Matt Damon and Best Film Won[7]
2005 Empire Awards, UK Empire Award Best British Director- Paul Greengrass and Scene of the Year- the Moscow car chase sequence Nominated[7]
2005 MTV Movie Award MTV Movie Award Best Action Sequence-the Moscow car chase sequence and Best Male Performance- Matt Damon Nominated[7]
2005 Motion Picture Sound Editors, USA Golden Reel Award Best Sound Editing in Domestic Features - Dialogue & ADR and Best Sound Editing in Domestic Features - Sound Effects & Foley Nominated[7]
2005 People's Choice Awards, USA People's Choice Award Favorite Movie Drama Nominated[7]
2005 Teen Choice Award Teen Choice Award Choice Movie Actor: Action/Adventure/Thriller-Matt Damon and Choice Movie: Action/Adventure Nominated[7]
2005 USC Scripter Award USC Scripter Award Tony Gilroy (screenwriter) and Robert Ludlum (author) Nominated[7]
2005 World Soundtrack Award World Soundtrack Award Best Original Soundtrack of the Year-John Powell and Soundtrack Composer of the Year-John Powell Nominated[7]
2005 World Stunt Awards Taurus Award Best Stunt Coordinator and/or 2nd Unit Director and Best Work with a Vehicle Won[7]
2005 World Stunt Awards Taurus Award Best Fight- Darrin Prescott and Chris O'Hara Nominated[7]

  1. ^ a b c d e The Bourne Supremacy. boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
  2. ^ http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0372183/
  3. ^ [[1]]
  4. ^ Corliss, Richard (2007-08-02). The Bourne Ultimatum: A Macho Fantasy. TIME. Retrieved on 2007-08-12.
  5. ^ The Bourne Supremacy. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved on 2007-08-06.
  6. ^ 2007 Taurus World Stunt Awards
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n The Bourne Supremacy (2004) Awards. IMDB.com. Retrieved on 24 August, 2007.

The film never explains how Kirill is ready for Bourne to arrive in Moscow. The most we're shown that he knows is simply that Bourne is alive. Gretkov could not have known that Bourne was coming to Moscow, as this is discovered by Landy after Gretkov cuts communications with Abbott. Bourne's goal in coming to Moscow (to tell Neski's daughter the truth about her parents) would not likely have occurred to Gretkov or Kirill.

Bare minutes pass between the time that Abbott suggests that someone find Zorn and the announcement that Zorn's body has been found, yet Zorn was left for dead in a basement stairwell in a building being used by the CIA -- not somewhere that anyone would have looked for Zorn within minutes of Abbott's suggestion.


Preceded by
I, Robot
Box office number-one films of 2004 (USA)
July 25, 2004
Succeeded by
The Village
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