Bourne could destroy Indiana Jones, James Bond and Spiderman

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Jedi007
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Bourne could destroy Indiana Jones, James Bond and Spiderman

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For that matter, Bradley says, Bourne could take James Bond and Spider-Man, too. (He speaks from experience, having directed the action on the second and third installments of Spider-Man, and he’s about to jump into director Marc Foster’s Bond 22 in Europe.)


Thrill of the chase. The Bourne Ultimatum, starring Matt Damon, features hair-raising thrills that is “bound to influence the action-direction canon.”


By Sheigh Crabtree
Los Angeles Times


JASON BOURNE could destroy Indiana Jones if it came down to a fight, according to Dan Bradley, the mastermind behind the action in The Bourne Ultimatum, its predecessor The Bourne Supremacy and Steven Spielberg’s upcoming fourth installment of Indiana Jones.

“There are two actors I’ve worked with who would make top-notch fight guys as actual stuntmen, and that’s Matt Damon and Harrison Ford,” says Bradley, who is officially credited as second unit director and stunt coordinator, but is known in the industry as one of the preeminent action directors working. Despite the real-life actors’ fighting abilities, and even figuring in their age differences, Bradley still thinks Bourne would kill Indy. “Bourne is pretty hard-edged, realistic stuff, and Indy is very much cliffhanger, B-movie, old-school action style,” he explained on a recent phone call from the Indiana Jones set in Hawaii.

For that matter, Bradley says, Bourne could take James Bond and Spider-Man, too. (He speaks from experience, having directed the action on the second and third installments of Spider-Man, and he’s about to jump into director Marc Foster’s Bond 22 in Europe.)

“People are really entertained by a big cartoon, but I don’t think people are as convinced on a visceral or emotional level” by Spider-Man, Bradley explained. “Whereas I think James Bond is more about gadgets. With Bourne, it’s more about his sheer intellect and will. I think the reason Bourne has captured the audience he has is because he’s a thinking man’s action hero.”

With Bourne Ultimatum, Bradley delivers three big action sequences, each bound to influence the action-direction canon in some way. First is a chase scene on foot inside the bustling Waterloo train station in London, where Bourne meets up with a reporter (Paddy Considine) who knows his spy agency’s secrets.

It is followed by a breathtaking rooftop chase and brutal fight sequence the crew shot for 14 days in the medina in Tangier, Morocco, during Ramadan. The action is centered on Bourne and Desh (Joey Ansah), a newer black-ops agent, who has an order to kill Nicky Parsons (Julia Stiles). In one shot, touted in the movie’s trailer, Bourne leaps down from a rooftop to crash into a picture window. The action was captured by a stuntman who jumped right behind Bourne while carrying a small, lightweight Arriflex 235 film camera.

“I very often hand cameras to stunt people,” Bradley said. “They’re not too freaked out about getting hit or sliding under something while holding a camera. Some of the best shots in Supremacy and Ultimatum are because the stunt guys were operating.” If anything differentiates Bradley’s approach to choreographing and shooting action, it is this first-person point of view that he said he gleaned from his days working as a stuntman. It was the bare-knuckle, six-minute car chase through a Moscow tunnel in Supremacy that catapulted Bradley into the limelight, making action directors around the world reconsider how to stage convincing action set pieces.

“I always try to make it very, very real,” he said. “So I used my own experience as a stuntman. I’ve driven in hundreds of car chases, and I always saw these amazing things that were never captured on film. So my intention was just to go out and shoot my own experience.”

For Ultimatum, Damon and the studio asked Bradley to devise a condensed version of his Moscow car-chase sequence. But this time, he was given half the screen time and taxed with incorporating the same amount of action while setting it all in Manhattan’s congested streets in the middle of the day. Bradley put Bourne in a small police car and has the amnesiac spy doing skateboard grinds off of cement barriers.

“I think it’s a bit of a gamble to do another big car chase,” Bradley said. “There’s an argument to do it and there’s an argument to do something different. But they wanted a newer car chase. So I am anxiously waiting to see how the audience reacts to this one.”

According to Bradley, the real secret to avoiding action that looks staged in the Bourne films is rehearsing a great deal, then going for a chaotic and frenetic blend of action. “I tell my camera department that I really want to feel lucky that I got to see the moment,” said Bradley, who, as second unit director, typically runs a second unit camera crew. “I don’t want them putting the cross hairs on the action and panning on the scene perfectly. I would rather feel like it’s going so fast and furiously that it’s really hard to keep in the frame. The hard part is that camera guys train their entire careers not to do that. They train to make it smooth and perfect. I just go in and tell them to ‘F it up more.’”


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Post by Commander 0077 »

Naw, the real James Bond in the films at least has been portrayed as a fighting genius -- natural prowess plus what Fleming called 'the touch.' So no matter if Bourne were programmed with Matrix-style fighting, he still couldn't beat Bond -- no matter if Bond is fighting is Osato's office and can pick up whatever is available (a sofa, for instance :lol: ) or in a bare parking lot. Bond would always win.

On the 'Bond' of CR, well that's another matter, since this Bond is a relative of Bourne, so they would be fighting on the same level. :?
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Post by james stock »

It really chokes me to say but from what i have seen in royale and the direction that the next film appears to be going it looks have if James Bond is dead and buried :cry: Im mean from reports we are going to have an unkempt scuffily dressed Bond in the next film, i mean why keep the pretence that he is James Bond :shock:
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Post by Commander 0077 »

james stock wrote:It really chokes me to say but from what i have seen in royale and the direction that the next film appears to be going it looks have if James Bond is dead and buried :cry: Im mean from reports we are going to have an unkempt scuffily dressed Bond in the next film, i mean why keep the pretence that he is James Bond :shock:
It seems to be getting stranger and stranger. No matter how much of the original Bond is thrown out, people who have actually read the books and seen all the films will accept a Bond who looks like a henchman, dresses down and follows the crowd of generic 'heroes'. In an ideal world Bond fans should have stood up when Bond was stripped of his past as a naval commander, became blond and bland, who didn't care about 'his' once-beloved and quirky martini, etc etc :(
You move very well for a dead man, Mr Bond
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