Jason Bourne’s story was told through a trilogy of films
that concluded nearly a decade ago. From The
Bourne Identity, which saw Matt Damon playing the title amnesiac trying to
figure out who he was, why people were trying to kill him, and how he was so
capable with his fists, his language, automobiles, and weapons, to the capper The Bourne Ultimatum in which he
remembers everything and handily exposes the CIA program that made him who he
was we saw Damon and director Paul Greengrass (for the two sequels) reinvent
the action spy thriller for the new millennium. Bourne’s story being complete,
the franchise attempted to skew in a different direction with Jeremy Renner
starring. Now Damon and Greengrass have reunited, I suppose catching on to the
popularity of series reboots that have cropped up all over Hollywood in recent
years.
A blog mostly dedicated to cinema (including both new and old film reviews; commentary; and as the URL suggests - movie lists, although it has been lacking in this area to be honest), but on occasion touching on other areas of personal interest to me.
Showing posts with label Tommy Lee Jones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tommy Lee Jones. Show all posts
Saturday, August 6, 2016
Saturday, November 24, 2012
Lincoln Movie Review
2300 years ago Euclid proclaimed as one of his common
notions that things equal to the same thing are also equal to each other. This
is a founding principle of geometry and necessary for the beginnings of modern
engineering. It seems self-evident, doesn’t it? Of course Thomas Jefferson held
it self-evident that all men are created equal and endowed with unalienable
rights such as liberty, yet he was himself a slave owner. In Steven Spielberg’s
masterful biopic Lincoln, the 16th
President and drafter of the Emancipation Proclamation tries to rely on
Euclid’s notion to help him in his decisions regarding slavery that will impact
the United States and the terrible Civil War that was entering its fifth bloody
year.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
Captain America: The First Avenger Movie Review
When Steve Rogers is brought in to a super secret
military lab via a secret passage in a Brooklyn shop, you have to ask yourself
how efficacious it is to have a super secret military lab replete with doctors,
scientists, senators and military police who all had to enter via a secret
passage in a Brooklyn shop. Aren’t they at all concerned that anyone spying on
them might wonder why none of these several dozen people ever exit this magical
retail establishment? All I ask of action movies besides being exciting and fun
and written in a way that suggest the screenwriters didn’t sleep walk their way
through it, is that the story makes some logical sense on its own terms. For
the most part Captain America: The First
Avenger passes the last test. The first ones could use a bit of work.
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