The Bourne Supremacy

Production year: 2004

Thriller PG-13   Running time: 1:49 

IMDB rating:   7.8     Aspect: Wide;  Languages: English, French, Spanish;  Subtitles: English, French, Spanish;  Audio: DD 5.1

Good enough to suggest long-term franchise potential, The Bourne Supremacy is a thriller fans will appreciate for its well-crafted suspense, and for its triumph of competence over logic (or lack thereof). Picking up where The Bourne Identity left off, the action begins when CIA assassin and partial amnesiac Jason Bourne (a role reprised with efficient intensity by Matt Damon) is framed for a murder in Berlin, setting off a chain reaction of pursuits involving CIA handlers (led by Joan Allen and the duplicitous Brian Cox, with Julia Stiles returning from the previous film) and a shadowy Russian oil magnate. The fast-paced action hurtles from India to Berlin, Moscow, and Italy, and as he did with the critically acclaimed Bloody Sunday, director Paul Greengrass puts you right in the thick of it with split-second editing (too much of it, actually) and a knack for well-sustained tension.

Director

Features

Deleted/extended scenes
Featurettes/Behind-The-Scenes/Documentaries

Special features

Explosive Deleted Scenes
Crash Cam: Racing Through the Streets of Moscow
Bourne to Be Wild: Fight Training, Blowing Things Up, To G-Mobile Revs Up the Action
Anatomy of a Scene: The Explosive Bridge Chase Scene
Matching Identities: Casting
Keeping It Real
On the Move with Jason Bourne
The Bourne Supremacy