Why bourne legacy
Edward Norton as Byer. Promo Photos Top cast Edit. Rachel Weisz Dr. Marta Shearing as Dr. Marta Shearing. Tony Guida Dr. Benezara as Dr. Sonnie Brown Dr. Lieberburg as Dr. Neil Brooks Cunningham Dr.
Dan Hillcott as Dr. Dan Hillcott. Zeljko Ivanek Dr. Donald Foite as Dr. Donald Foite. Tony Gilroy. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. When a British reporter was writing an expose about Black Ops operations Treadstone and Black Briar, and the ones responsible for them are concerned. Renner's Cross is a conflicted hero built to take advantage of the "Hurt Locker" star's best qualities as an actor — his default intensity, the way he conveys that complicated mental calculations are taking place under cover of watchful stillness, even underwater.
Director and co-writer Tony Gilroy "Michael Clayton" has custom-tailored "The Bourne Legacy" for the present by opening up the narrative. Unnerving scenes of backroom operations among shadowy governmental and private-enterprise types reveal the machinations of a much bigger, more nefarious tangle of players than previously imagined.
There are mystery men running the country — and, by remote control, the world. This movie recommends worrying. But this time we get a guy who might be charismatic — if he were actually given any lines or allowed to be anything other than a robot.
Wordlessly, 3 pursues Aaron and Marta through motorbike chases and crazy city streets in Manila. And the longer this goes on, the less we care. The whole final act of the film feels like a sadly rote actioner punctuated by brief glimpses of Edward Norton and David Strathairn doing headset acting. In the end, conspiracy thrillers like the Bourne series depend on a compelling central character, and possibly a mesmerizing bad guy. Yes, a film like Bourne Legacy is definitely an action film, but it's also a psychological suspense story.
It's about what's happening inside Aaron's mind, as well as how many bridges he can climb and how many intelligence agents he can piss off. When we aren't given any reasons to care about Aaron, or even to be curious about what's in his mind, the whole movie falls apart.
I didn't have super high hopes for this film, but I was still incredibly disappointed with the result. There are long, long stretches of people discussing plot points from the third movie in excruciating detail, while Jeremy Renner is sitting in Alaska staring into space.
There literally isn't a single memorable action sequence in the film, and the only character I even remotely cared about was Rachel Weisz, until she turns into Renner's whiny sidekick.
The A. Since he doesn't have a single word of dialogue, it's impossible to say if he has any idea how important Cross and Shearing are, but he keeps coming like the Energizer Bunny. This chase lasts way too long. I glanced twice at my watch. It goes up and down stairs and down the middle lanes of expressways, and causes countless crashes, and is edited in that frustrating style where you see fragments of action but don't always have the whole picture.
At its conclusion — poof! I wonder how long Bourne's name will stay in the series titles. After all, he's still Out There. Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from until his death in In , he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Rated PG for violence and action sequences. David Strathairn as Noah Vosen. Stacy Keach as Adm. Mark Turso. Jeremy Renner as Aaron Cross. Rachel Weisz as Dr.
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