DVD - Wide Screen Expanded Special Edition Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Pan & Scan Expanded Special Edition | $14.99 |
| DVD - Wide Screen / Repackaged | $14.99 |
| DVD - Full Frame/Collector's Edition | $14.99 |
| DVD - Pan & Scan | $14.99 |
"Matt Damon: From Identity to Supremacy": Exclusive interviews with Matt Damon and Franka Potente explore making The Bourne Identity -- and build a bridge to the upcoming sequel, The Bourne Supremacy; Deleted scenes: Declassified information; "Inside a Fight Scene": Join Matt Damon on the set as he and the film's stunt choreographer map out the explosive action-packed U.S. Embassy fight sequence; "Cloak and Dagger: Covert Ops": CIA Liaison Chase Brandon delivers a detailed, real-world analysis of the making of a super-spy; "The Bourne Diagnosis": A renowned UCLA psychologist probes into the intriguing causes and effects of Jason Bourne's amnesia and its central role in this gripping espionage thriller; "The Bourne Mastermind": A compelling look at the best-selling author of the internationally acclaimed Bourne Trilogy
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. "Dead" Man
2. It's Not Coming Back
3. To Switzerland
4. The Wombosi Problem
5. My Name Is Jason Bourne
6. The American Embassy
7. Find Jason Bourne
8. Marie Helena Kreutz
9. Home
10. Assassin
11. The Right Thing
12. Paris Pursuit
13. Mr. Kane's Hotel Bill
14. The Wombosi Connection
15. Eamon
16. The Killer Outside
17. Bourne's Game
18. A Malfunctioning Weapon
19. Forced Retirement
20. End Titles
At first glance, boyish Matt Damon might strike you as unsuited to play a formidable secret agent, but he does remarkably well in the role in this intricate, action-packed, and well-crafted spy thriller. Adapted from the bestselling novel by Robert Ludlum, The Bourne Identity opens with the rescue of a badly wounded amnesiac (Damon), who carries beneath his skin a tiny capsule bearing the number of a Swiss bank account. Upon recovering, the befuddled young man claims a veritable fortune -- and passports bearing several different names -- from his safety deposit box. Understandably eager to find out which one of these identities is his real one, he hires a young Gypsy woman (Run Lola Run’s Franka Potente) to drive him to Paris. From this point, the script by Tony Gilroy and William Blake Herron gets incredibly complicated; the Damon character, who uses his "Jason Bourne" identity for the time being, becomes the object of repeated assassination attempts, which he foils by employing skills he never knew he had. Fine character actors Chris Cooper and Brian Cox are chillingly convincing as CIA bigwigs who decide that "Bourne" must be eliminated and assign their top assassin (Clive Owen) to do the job quickly and, if possible, quietly. Doug Liman (Swingers) directs with headlong single-mindedness, hurling his protagonist into one death trap after another and extricating him with dizzying speed. Wintry European exteriors and drab interior settings give the film a grayish cast, but The Bourne Identity isn’t about pretty pictures; it’s about international intrigue and one man’s refusal to be a pawn in some sinister, global chess game. Improbable but engrossing, The Bourne Identity will keep you poised on the edge of your chair. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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