Do you have a video playback issues?
Please disable AdBlocker in your browser for our website.
Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
The most dangerous former operative of the CIA is drawn out of hiding to uncover hidden truths about his past while battling a sinister network that utilizes terror and technology to maintain unchecked power.
Escapist fare of the fast and furious kind, Jason Bourne will likely impress diehard fans of the long-running series. Others may prefer to have the invincible spook finally put out to pasture.
Of all the indignities Damon's title character, dug out of retirement after nine years, has to suffer in the disappointing Jason Bourne, the worst is how out-of-touch the new conspiracy he unravels feels
Sure, Jason Bourne has all the hallmarks of a story - there are characters who are involved in scenes, and those scenes indicate the forward march of time - but nothing here actually matters.
Greengrass is as dexterous as ever, yet the result, though abounding in thrills, seems oddly stifled by self-consciousness and, dare one say, superfluous.
Jason Bourne is a good and entertaining action film, but it's also completely unnecessary. There's no longer many secrets left in the closet for this spy. [Full review in Spanish]
Much of Jason Bourne consists of grim action set pieces interspersed with long sequences of people sitting in front of computer screens. Somehow the movie is simultaneously frenetic and static, going nowhere really, really fast.