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"Bourne" Trilogy Headed To The MoMA

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JENNIFER PELTZ | May 28, 2008 04:04 PM EST | AP

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In this image originally released by Universal Pictures, Matt Damon is shown as the character Jason Bourne in "The Bourne Ultimatum." One of the Museum of Modern Art's latest film acquisitions isn't an art-house experiment by the likes of Andy Warhol or Michelangelo Antonioni. It's the spy-action blockbuster "The Bourne Identity" and its sequels. This week the museum is screening the films and hosting a panel discussion with "Bourne" director/producer Doug Liman and a noted neuroscientist to talk about memory, identity and the mysterious workings of the brain. (AP Photo/Universal Pictures, Jasin Boland, file)

NEW YORK — One of the Museum of Modern Art's latest film acquisitions isn't an art-house experiment by Andy Warhol or Michelangelo Antonioni. It's the spy-action blockbuster "The Bourne Identity" and its sequels.

This week the museum is screening the films and hosting a panel discussion with "Bourne" director/producer Doug Liman and a noted neuroscientist to talk about memory, identity and the mysterious workings of the brain.

For the uninitiated: The films center on amnesiac assassin Jason Bourne, played by Matt Damon, who possesses superb espionage skills but no memory of his past, which includes the ultrasecret CIA unit that trained him and now wants to kill him to cover up an operation gone wrong.

Based on the late Robert Ludlum's series of best-selling novels, the "Bourne" movies _ packed with dizzying chases, gripping fights and more scenic European locales than the Michelin guides _ took in more than $525 million at U.S. box offices alone. The last installment, "The Bourne Ultimatum," won Academy Awards this year for film editing, sound editing and sound mixing.

The "Bourne" movies aren't the first smash-hit spy capers among MoMa's more than 22,000 films, which include all of James Bond's adventures. But the "Bourne" acquisition does raise interesting questions about what makes a movie art.

"You say the word 'action movie,' and everyone's standards go down," Liman said Tuesday. "And it was my goal with 'The Bourne Identity' to create a movie wherein the drama would hold up even if you took the action out."

Liman, who directed "Identity" and served as executive producer of sequels "Supremacy" and "Ultimatum," called the films' inclusion in the museum's renowned collection "a huge, huge honor."

Cinemaphiles have praised not only the movies' technical skill and heart-pounding pace, but their relatively realistic feel and character development as Bourne strives to find out who he is and why killers stalk him wherever he goes.

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"What the 'Bourne' films managed to do was to move people's expectations into a whole new area in terms of what the spy genre could deliver," said MoMA chief film curator Rajendra Roy.

Roy presides over one of the nation's biggest motion picture archives, housed in a specially built repository in Hamlin, Pa. The holdings are as diverse as 1895's "Feeding the Baby (Repas de BeBe)" _ one of the earliest motion pictures ever shown in a theater _ and the 2006 barnyard charmer "Charlotte's Web."

The "Bourne" trilogy was a clear fit for the 73-year-old collection, which has long included what curators see as significant commercial movies, as well as experimental and historical works, Roy said.

"We would never ignore the fact that we are also engaged with a very popular medium," he said.

Nor should they, says Andrew G. Sarris, a noted cinema critic and Columbia University film history and theory professor.

There's a point to placing the "Bourne" pictures and other popular, well-executed mainstream movies alongside film festival favorites, he said: It "proves that, occasionally, the system still works."

Friday's panel at MoMA is part of World Science Festival, a five-day gathering of researchers, artists and writers meeting throughout the city. Besides Liman, it will feature University of Wisconsin-Madison psychiatrist Dr. Giulio Tononi.

That discussion is likely to focus in part on the nature of Bourne's deep amnesia.

While Liman said he focused on "character truth," not scientific veracity, Tononi said the condition depicted is real, if very rare.

Like the multilingual Bourne, who easily fends off assassins with his extraordinary physical skills, some patients do retain abilities they can't remember acquiring, the scientist said.

Tononi also said Bourne's anguish over not remembering his past rings true. On or off the screen, he said, "we have this incredible, compelling need to create a narrative about who we are."

___

On the Net:

World Science Festival: http://www.worldsciencefestival.com/

Museum of Modern Art: http://www.moma.org/

NEW YORK — One of the Museum of Modern Art's latest film acquisitions isn't an art-house experiment by Andy Warhol or Michelangelo Antonioni. It's the spy-action blockbuster "The Bourne Identity...
NEW YORK — One of the Museum of Modern Art's latest film acquisitions isn't an art-house experiment by Andy Warhol or Michelangelo Antonioni. It's the spy-action blockbuster "The Bourne Identity...
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- splang I'm a Fan of splang permalink

Bravo!!! Wonderful series...I would say the best ever. Rarely does a movie ever come close to doing justice to a writers depiction. I read the Ludlum books and wow! The movie's do them justice. Top shelf indeed!

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 03:09 PM on 5/29/2008
- gun I'm a Fan of gun permalink

That Ludlum was a piece of work. I found a couple interviews with him on google. Started out as an actor at 14, worked on stage until 40, then tried writing longhand. Travelled everywhere. Monogamous. Died in early 70's of a blood clot, I think. The Bourne Ultimatum, like My Father's Glory, pulls of the wonderful trick of making a good book even better with cinema resources at their best.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 02:34 AM on 5/29/2008
- TerrapinCB I'm a Fan of TerrapinCB 18 fans permalink
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Mr. Ludlum passed away in March, 2001.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:21 PM on 5/29/2008
- gun I'm a Fan of gun permalink

Best movie of the year... can only ascribe it not being in the running for best picture to the pretensions of the 4,000 pointy-headed, status seeking Oscar voters who didn't understand how well and how deep it ran.

People, the audience, voted with their tickets.

Got higher tomato rating on rotten tomatoes and multiplied the grosses of those pieces of merde -- No Country for Old Men and that other craven pit of depression about a man obsessed with oil who kills the kid with a bowling pin...

The Bourne Ultimatum won every oscar it was up for. Watch it with Greengrasses' commentary, it's gold.

Glad MOMA gets it.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 02:30 AM on 5/29/2008
- trishinpitt I'm a Fan of trishinpitt 23 fans permalink

I couldn't agree more... I saw "No Country for Old Men".... I got up to use the restroom and the darned thing ended.... strangest movie that could have had such potential.

Then... I rented "There Will Be Blood".... my husband said it was boring but i kept holding out hope... then it ended... and I decided there was 2+ hours of my life I would never get back....

I don't know how the Academy people pick their movies but they can sure pick some winners.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:49 PM on 5/29/2008
- JoyIsGwenNYC I'm a Fan of JoyIsGwenNYC 22 fans permalink
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HOT!!! I am so there tomorrow... Don't get me started.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 AM on 5/29/2008
- RRonin I'm a Fan of RRonin 25 fans permalink
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OH PUHLEEZE "mainstream Hollywood films are not art?" Cheap bottom of the bill films from the late forties and early fifties were considered nothing until the French critics dubbed them Film Noir. Some of the finest films I've ever seen were "commercial" stuff. And some of the dreariest "art" I've seen on screen is stuff the critics went gaga over. I love the "Bourne" series and am delighted that MOMA is calling attention to it. Each of the films stands alone as an intelligently made thriller,entertaining on both a visceral and intellectual level. And even though I'm a an old fart I loved the kinetic camerawork on "Ultimatum".

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 5/29/2008

If there is a Part IV, hopefully they 'll do away with the hand-held camera technique.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 12:27 AM on 5/29/2008

The Bourne films are great roller coaster movies, but is an art gallery the place for a roller coaster?

Yes, I know I'm an out of touch elitist, but mainstream Hollywood films are not art.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:55 PM on 5/28/2008
- InofTouch I'm a Fan of InofTouch permalink

So is a mainstream hollywood film like No Country like old men not art

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 11:32 PM on 5/28/2008
- leftLibertarian I'm a Fan of leftLibertarian 21 fans permalink

The Bourne Trilogy are movies I can watch over and over again.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 PM on 5/28/2008
- lady49 I'm a Fan of lady49 9 fans permalink

Robert Ludlum was the BEST! When I first read that Matt Damon was playing Jason Bourne, wasn't sure he could pull it off. Much to my surprise and delight, he has created such depth and 'layers' to the bourne character. Masterful!!!!

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 08:14 PM on 5/28/2008
- Abycat I'm a Fan of Abycat 5 fans permalink

Wow! Same here, Lady49. I'm a big Ludlum fan dating back to 'The Osterman Weekend'. I saw
Richard Chamberland in the original take on Bourne. No way did I think that Matt Damon could do the story justice. Well, I was dead wrong. Damon spent months preparing for the role. He took boxing and karate lessons, language lessons and he spent time in the countries were shooting would take place before making the film. He now owns the role. I'm hoping for another sequel.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 5/28/2008
- hoodrat I'm a Fan of hoodrat 26 fans permalink
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Ludlum was indeed the Man - a life long martial artist, and knowing the "Bourne Brothers" were all trained in Israeli Krav Maga - Damon and his stuntmen showed what TRUE martial arts should look like, instead of the UFC most see on television. I wish the films delved into the other "brothers" as Ludlum did though. Still, as thrillers go - Bourne, and The Hunted(Tommy Lee Jones,Benicio Del Toro), are top shelf.

    Favorite     Flag as abusive Posted 01:52 AM on 5/29/2008
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