ANY MORE JASON BOURNE MOVIES MOVIE
I'll talk about the differences between the book and movie, as well as the movie itself.įirst of all, the movie is not bad if you don't mind a mindless and relatively predictable spy romp. I have very rarely seen a good book->movie translation, much less it come out a good movie. I heard that they did the movie "in the spirit of the book, so I was a bit worried :) Caution: some plot is discussed, with spoilers hidden, but read with caution! A bit later on, when Cuvarack told me it was based on a book by Robert Ludlum, I borrowed it and read it (slowly I'll admit), finishing it not long before the movie was out. In a way he became more human, instead of a brain washed 30 million dollar government weapon.Ever since the first trailers appeared for this, I thought it looked cool, with a nifty twist on the spy thriller. We see Bourne not wanting to kill out of revenge, both in Supremacy/Ultimatum, he apologized Neski's daughter, and tried to live a normal life with Marie.
ANY MORE JASON BOURNE MOVIES SERIES
I think you can appreciate that the Bourne series while having amazing fight/chase scenes, also works on a level not seen in other thrillers. Obviously this wasn't what the CIA wanted but they have to deal with it. Now, they have an assassin with deadly skills no longer under CIA control, and could potentially tell others what he had been though and did. He became internally dangerous at the end of Identity, when he tells Conklin that he no longer wants to do this. I just checked back and saw the updated part. Between the 3rd and the 4th is when Bourne does damage to U.S/CIA, but you have to wonder if it has any lasting effects, given that Iron Hand is, to quote Nicky, "worse than before". Between the first 3 movies, the CIA manages to keep what there doing under secrecy, because right after Treadstone, Blackbiar happened. We can only speculate as to what happens to international relationships, and the U.S reaction to Bourne. It's more of a personal story with Bourne trying to regain his memory, coming to terms with what he did, and attempting to start over. It's hard to say because the movies don't focus on international relationships, or what happens after Bourne goes back into hiding. Who received the most damage, the U.S or foreign countries? We know one of the assassins was captured and tortured, and blames Bourne for this. Given that the new movie acknowledges the Snowden leaks, we can assume something similar happened when Bourne leaked Blackbriar. At the end Vosen is arrested and we can only assume that the CIA is brought under review. With the help of Landy, he grabs Blackbriar files and leaks it to the public. Unless Neski's daughter confessed to the police, the Russians never find out that Bourne assassinated a Russian politician and his wife because of Conklin/Abbott.īourne comes to New York to try and figure out who he is. There is only a brief scene in the CIA, with everyone agreeing that Bourne must be stopped, and they can't have him ripping apart the agency any more. Abbott was a traitor and wanted Bourne dead simply to stop the investigation of Bourne/stolen money. The second one sees Bourne in Berlin/Moscow looking for answers as to why the CIA is after him again when he is trying to lead quiet life in India. The oversight committee seems to believe Abbott when he says that Treadstone was decommissioned and simply a "game program". Abbott kills Conklin, and shuts the program down. At certain points Conklin assures Abbott it will be cleaned up, only to fail miserably at each attempt. Abbott realized what damage this could have done to the CIA and to a larger extent U.S relations with foreign countries. In the first one, he was in Paris trying to make sense of what happened to him, and out running assassins with Marie. Being a huge fan of the movies, I'll try and answer the question the best that I can.