Family is an alien concept to me. I’m 67 snd been on my own since I was 15. Where do I begin? My childhood was tumultuos. Physical snd mental abuse by my father. I’m suprised he didn’t kill me. Snd I’m a decent honest man. What gives?
We already knew he had a soul. His hesitancy on Wombosi's ship showed that much already. That was already his breaking point psychologically from his path as an assassin. The bullets and the near drowning just amplified it.
@@mnomadvfx …Losing Marie crushed him and it’s why he was in the girl’s apartment. He could now empathize with the girls pain and only way to change things for her is to tell her the truth. That line says it all…..”When what you love gets taken from you”. This was a great scene.
I agree. It's likely the most meaningful scene in the whole series. I also like it because it's very ambigous: is Jason Bourne being altruistic or egotistic? Is he doing it for her sake or for his own? Is he giving her closure or is he reopening an old wound in order to lighten the weight on his own conscience? Maybe a little bit of everything. I also like how the whole scene plays staying true to the practical nature of the Bourne character: he doesn't flinch nor does he use even a single word more than necessary to convey the facts and his own feelings. And in doing so he appears to be respectful of the pain he knows he is causing her. Scenes like this are those little moments that turn what is essentially an action-oriented blockbuster into something more interesting.
@@leonardofacchin1452 Not ego. I do like the whole ego vs confession thing in situations like this. It's a very nuanced and complicated aspect to coming to grips with former sins and what's truly best for the person that was harmed. This was incredibly difficult for Bourne to do, I do not believe he gained anything by confessing. This was so the daughter could have closure. The emotional damage and shame she's lived with her whole life can likely begin to heal with this knowledge.
The actress playing the role is Oksana Akinshina. She has gone on to be a successful actor since the making of The Bourne Supremacy. I wish her continued success.
That scene meant everything in the understanding of Bourne's character and inner turmoil. I can't think of a scene that I've pondered more than this one. Masterfully done.
I think this scene is right after the car chase and spectacular crash with the Russian policeman crashing and ultimately dying. It's been a while since I've seen this movie. This scene after the intensity of the car chase and crash is amazing. Roller coaster ride.
@@nancydemoss608 i don't think he died. they showed him moving after the crash, then Bourne showed mercy and let him live. what made that scene even more powerful was that after he made that choice, you see him walking out of the tunnel into the light, instead of the direction that leads to more darkness.
This is one of the most powerful movie scenes I have seen. In real life the bizarre deaths of her parents would have ruined her and probably like all children wondered if she was in some way responsible. Jason Bourne put her back on track. Very moving.
I disagree. You don't smile when your parent's killer sits in front of you, and when you're scared to death because he's a murderer. Many emotions rock her soul at that moment, some express themselves unwillingly in her face. But she is not smiling. it's a beginning of a movement that freezes and it does resemble a smile, but it is not.
For me, the best action movies are the ones where the non-action scenes are just as riveting and engaging (or sometimes even more so) as the action scenes. Your dialogue scenes shouldn't just be filler or exposition overloads between stunt sequences, instead they should have just as much significance and reverence as each fight and car chase. This scene is why The Bourne Supremacy is still one of my favourite action movies of all time.
@@webgpu Sorry, I'm not an anti-CGI guy. I don't really care if a movie is done practically or with tons of CG, I just want good writing and characters and a world I find interesting.
@@jorgealameda , good to know she is a star. Many talented actor don’t make it too far; nature of movie business. I like her attention to detail in this short role. The fear in her eyes, face and body language. She keeps shifting focus to the gun again and again. Directors cannot all those details ; this is left to the actor.
She is a very accomplished and talented actress in Russia and she was already very famous in her native country before this Bourne movie. It's great that the Bourne movies use so many international talents and let the audience be exposed to so many talented actors/actresses around the world and at the same time give these international actors a chance to showcase their talent.
3:07 The combined still camera focus on the profile of her face with her being dead silent and her eyes welling up with tears until they finally drop while Bourne reveals how he killed her parents is really, really good filmmaking.
Given how little time she had on screen, her impact was tremendous. Her expression when she's standing half in the doorway wondering if she's going to be robbed, raped or killed is heart-breaking.
The setting? This is an average eastern european home in an average eastern european neighborhood. You can walk into any city in an eastern european country and see suburbs that are exactly like this.
@@jonothandoeser trust me, most people that live there are happier than people who feel the need to post derogatory comments about how they pity other people.
The entire scene, Bourne and the girl...very well played. The look on the girls face could not have been done better...the insane mix of emotions such an instance would create, was on every inch of her face. And for Bourne, desperately clinging to a hope of humanity left in himself, is perfectly broken by the insanity of his own past. I have watched this clip many times.
The scene provides the moral intersection of a man where we do not know how he got to this place in his life, to facing what he did and showing regret and compassion. Now the audience turns to him as a hero instead of a bad guy. Great storytelling, great acting, camera work and directing.
its the duality of who he currently hes in a constant battle with trying to remember who he was as David Webb while at the same time dealing with the fact that he was trained to become Jason bourne
That actress's performance is genuinely stunning, when you know her character's whole story, a story that until here she doesn't even know fully. She's like a dog that's abandoned, scared, sad, but still living. A lot going on there.
Notwithstanding political and ethical (?) reasons for fall of Soviet Union leading to small East European countries, the real victims are beautiful young girls like this one living in a very unsafe and uncertain future. " Equalizer " Part 1 mirrors the plight of young Russian girls.
Wow. I liked the Bourne movies, but this scene transcends the rest. I don't even remember it, so I'm glad to have it lifted up. Excellent acting and pacing, and a deep subject.
Sequel, the girl comes back with revenge. "You knew this was coming." "Listen to me, your mother did not kill your father. I never wanted to kill your parents. I was forced into this." "SHUT UP!!!"
Aside from amending the past, It seems like he's using her reaction to reassure the path that he's taking is the right one by the way he talks about wanting to know the truth when ur loved one gets taken from u. Nice scene
What an awesome movie!! I especially love how quickly Oksana Akinshina's character picks up from his pretty bad Russian accent that Bourne is a native English speaker. Also, the fact that she too could speak English (and wanted him to stop butchering Russian) was another very realistic touch. Great acting. Great movie.
The thing that always gets me with this scene is how Bourne's eyes are flickering all over the place when he's explaining, barely settling on the girl in front of him, because he's so guilty and ashamed of what he's done to her by killing her parents. It's like if he has to see the living consequence of his actions, all the pain and grief and misery he's brought innocent people, he'll break down and cry.
I enjoyed watching the Bourne movies and this scene hit me very hard because Jason was meeting the daughter of his target that was her parents even though it was supposed to be the father that would have been killed only . Jason came to apoligize to her . The acting was phenomenal between the actress and Matt Damon .
I love this scene.. It's as if J.B. regained a part of his long lost humanity from confessing what he did to her parents, by telling the truth while she was living with another told lie. She wouldn't end up hating him for what he did in the past. Instead she would find a way to forgive and move on knowing the whole truth and nothing but the truth. So frail and powerful at the same time..
One of the Best Shot of the Movie. Bourne confession, and when he walks out of the apartment, the camera pans the high rise buildings showing the tall structures with lights all the way up. The Bourne character clearly calls out, that deep down he is a Human Being with strong sense of values and doesn’t shy away from telling the Truth. The Camera therefore shows the building and lights to signify…Bourne rises tall and taller by revealing the truth to the Child/daughter of his target and apologises to her. Brilliant thought and fearless creation of the “Bourne the Character”. ❤
This girl is so SO cute. And by cute, I mean innocent. She just exudes innocence. A perfect cast for the role. You can just see the little girl in her even though she is now older. A true sheep sent to the slaughter.
the robert ludlum masterpiece... a created assassin fixing things right... firstly to his victims... in connection to the first book that he found hislady luck soul mate... then sacrificed, that awakened his strong will and determination to fix things right...
That girl (Oksana Akinshina) was the female lead in the recent Sputnik, not to mention the star of the ultra-depressing Lilja 4-ever a few years prior to this role.
This quote from wiki "Akinshina disapproves of feminism, calling it "the destiny of ugly women" during a 2021 interview. She stated that "We live in a man’s world; it is evident and it is wonderful. This rule was worked out by nature itself." Makes me like her even more:-)
@@markleckband4495 ummm no that just isn't true. The Bourne Identity was released in US theaters in 2002. This movie, The Bourne Supremacy, was released in 2004. Bourne Ultimatum, the final film in the trilogy, was released in 2007
I just watched this last night. What can you do when the damage you have done is so far in the past? All he could say was that he was sorry. It doesn't change thing on the outside, but the girl was living with the terrible thought it was murder/suicide. Perhaps taking the onus off her mother and accepting the blame by confessing to this young woman was all he could do. Unlike the "Polar" movie, where the assassin had been compensating the daughter of his victims (found out in the end though), taking the weight off her and accepting the weight of his action was enough (had to be, right?). Does the equation balance? Who is to tell? You just do what you can when you understand your responsibility and do better next time.
The most sincere "sorry" ever uttered in the world was on a movie set. The saddest faces in the history of begged forgiveness and bestowed forgiveness were actors. That girl's face will haunt me till I die with only the greatest dialogue in movie history to relieve it. Wow.
This was a brilliant scene. The girl was afraid when she saw Bourne sitting in the chair. And that hurt look, tears when she was told the truth. Even Bourne, a killer, had trouble admitting he killed her parents. And lastly, when he walked out, that shuffle, the walk was that of a disturbed man. Masterpiece.
I didn’t appreciate this scene when I first watched this movie in fact didn’t really pay attention to this scene till the 100th view lol. His first victim and first step too redemption. Good movies a lot of good action scenes 👍
"Bourne visits his first victim." Great title for this scene. The people he killed where victims but the child of the people he killed, that is the his true first victim.
Thanks. The bourne scores are not underrated. My favourite is the one played when he's on his way to Switzerland in the first one. Cant remember name. Will look out for this one.
That last shot Jason limping into a pan shot of the Moscow projects was really poignant. The director captured the winter gloom and loneliness of a repenting assassin and his innocent victim. I really wish Bourne had found a way to get Nesky's daughter out of there. Maybe a sack full of CIA blood money to give her a fresh start.
This isn't a Moscow project. It's actually a pretty decent area (these scenes were shot in Krylatakoe and Otradnoe) and apartments there are expensive - equivalent to about 200-300 thousand dollars. There were no such thing as projects in Moscow in the US sense before the current mayor came in and started building ghetto style concentrations of ultra-high rise, poor quality flats.
Why dont they make movies lijke these anymore.....Matt wherre are you....When is the next Bourne coming out with you there. What a scene,,,So so perfect, masterful!!!,
I think people are missing some more subtle things about her acting. They way she's sitting, not straight on, right on the edge of the seat just in case she needs to quickly run away. The way she doesn't want to look away from Bourne because he's the stranger in the house. Only after she realises that she might learn the truth does she face Bourne more directly. I also don't think she's looking at Bourne when he leaves but instead looking at the picture of her mom after learning about the truth
Such a beautiful and powerful scene. In the Bourne Legacy, this „spirit“ was pretty much absent. A nice movie, otherwise - but to me, it has nothing to do with the original Bourne franchise. At all.
Legacy was more concerned with explaining the thing than actually showing it as the Bourne trilogy did. That being said Jason Bourne was just as bad, at least Legacy took it in a new direction even if it was a more sterile one (though to be fair Identity was a bit sterile too in its own way). JB/Bourne 5 on the other hand was both repetitive and insulting to the intelligence. Since when did the Bourne films ever show Jason (post amnesia) to be a patriot for Vikander's character to make that assumption based on third hand intelligence of him years apart?
Legacy is one of the most pathetic movies I've ever seen. Action scenes are the most boring action scenes I've seen. The plot is both predictable and also entirely pointless. The main character is unlikeable and unrelatable. It has nothing of what made the Bourne trilogy great, instead it explores deeper into minor details from the trilogy that nobody ever cared about anyway.
A beautiful scene depicting seeking forgiveness and getting it. Both are heart broken. That young actress emoted to the extent you want to wipe off her tears. This scene was true to every second of it.
@@ravicharles5192 I don't think he's requesting forgiveness, and she never gives him forgiveness. I think this scene is Bourne making peace with himself. Almost selfish in a way, but like he said: "I'd want to know." But you're allowed your own interpretation.
@@blusafe1 Admitting guilt to make peace with himself is interesting inference. Perhaps the young girl is too shattered to respond. I am more sympathetic to that poor girl. Bourne too feels that pain I presume as he says - " If something you love is taken away from you, it changes everything " I don't want to make assumptions how that hapless girl would have survived in the later years. Even though it is a fiction, you can't help but empathising with the characters. Thank you for a different perspective.
Understandable? She's literally terrified. confused, grief stricken and guilty all at once. Oh and did I mention anger/hatred? You do feel sorry for Bourne yes. But at the end of the day the person he was before his amnesia chose that path. He chose to be that way. It was only upon realising his loss of Marie that he could truly empathize with this girls own loss at his hands.
Hope you know what Bourne is He was indeed a trained military assasin Best one This how world of Clandestine Black ops works Job us voluntary and most trained officers Mentally Strong SOB's Bourne case was really different He lost his memory with that all the training His brain had the muscle memory of his training in his subconscious But he was a different person all together That is why he feels emotionally vulnerable in this situation like normal civilians do.
I actually traveled to Moscow in 2005 (high school trip), only a year after watching this film in theatres. I remember staying in these Soviet era apartment blocks very well.
I presume you mean more Hollywood/blockbuster roles? Because she has had consistent work in film and tv acting since this movie including a lot lead roles in Russian productions.
He should have given her all the currency the Agency gave him. At least she could have gotten out of the projects and started a scooter rental business by the sea. Oh wait…
At least in the Bourne films they at least tried to get the Russian right - in films like "The Hunt for Red October" it was very much "Hollywood" Russian - the pronunciations were terrible!
Oh come on) His Russian is terrible too. I could barely understand what he was saying. They don't care too much about such things. Eastern Promises is a great movie about Russian mafia with decent Russian in it.
@@PutinosauRUS Of course you're right Artyom, the Russian in the Bourne fims in generally not very good (like most "Hollywood" films, but it's better than many, "The Hunt for Red October" - for example). I'll definitely check-out "Eastern Promises."
@@PutinosauRUS It is possible that was the intent. After all, he apparently had a serious American accent, because she picked that up right away. "I speak English". Artyom, did it sound like Russian with an American accent, or just "bad" Russian?
@@servantofmelian9966 Well, I agree with you in some degree) Looks like Bourne had some sort of agent textbook with useful phrases in Russian. At 0:35 he says: "Тихо. Молчи. Ты понял?" "Tiho. Molchee. Ty ponyal?" "Quiet. Keep your mouth shut. Do you understand?" It took me another listening to understand this. His accent is terrible (he just learned this by heart phonetically) and also he refers to a girl in the wrong gender - he should say "Ty ponyal(a)?" He missed correct ending. Also these 3 phrases sound pretty akward both in Russian and English. He should say something like: Quiet. I will not harm you.
@@HowToTouch "THIS IS THE SIMP POLICE, YOU HAVE BEEN CAUGHT USING THE TERM 'SIMP' INCORRECTLY AND WILL FACE THE FULL FORCE OF THE LAW...you must now watch boku no picu 1000% volume in hd as punishment"
Her eyes shifting from his eyes to his gun even after he puts it away.
Amazing acting really
I think she's looking at his bloody hands
when his face falls apart when he begin asking for forgiveness it's so real
and directing.
This director really understand how human emotion works. When u get lost in your life, the best way is to go back to the very beginning
Or drink more.
It works for Archer
*the writer understands.
Seldom do directors do much at all with the story/script.
Family is an alien concept to me. I’m 67 snd been on my own since I was 15. Where do I begin? My childhood was tumultuos. Physical snd mental abuse by my father. I’m suprised he didn’t kill me. Snd I’m a decent honest man. What gives?
@@mnomadvfx heard of Matthew Reilly?
@@ggenius93 Heard of your mom?
This scene is one of the many reasons I consider Bourne Supremacy by far the superior film of the trilogy. It digs deeper than the other two.
One of the best scenes for showing Jason Bourne has a Soul. He regrets it all-but he can never go back, only say he's sorry.
We already knew he had a soul.
His hesitancy on Wombosi's ship showed that much already.
That was already his breaking point psychologically from his path as an assassin.
The bullets and the near drowning just amplified it.
@@mnomadvfx …Losing Marie crushed him and it’s why he was in the girl’s apartment. He could now empathize with the girls pain and only way to change things for her is to tell her the truth.
That line says it all…..”When what you love gets taken from you”.
This was a great scene.
@@82dupont Yes....Indeed
I agree. It's likely the most meaningful scene in the whole series.
I also like it because it's very ambigous: is Jason Bourne being altruistic or egotistic? Is he doing it for her sake or for his own? Is he giving her closure or is he reopening an old wound in order to lighten the weight on his own conscience?
Maybe a little bit of everything.
I also like how the whole scene plays staying true to the practical nature of the Bourne character: he doesn't flinch nor does he use even a single word more than necessary to convey the facts and his own feelings. And in doing so he appears to be respectful of the pain he knows he is causing her.
Scenes like this are those little moments that turn what is essentially an action-oriented blockbuster into something more interesting.
@@leonardofacchin1452 Not ego. I do like the whole ego vs confession thing in situations like this. It's a very nuanced and complicated aspect to coming to grips with former sins and what's truly best for the person that was harmed. This was incredibly difficult for Bourne to do, I do not believe he gained anything by confessing. This was so the daughter could have closure. The emotional damage and shame she's lived with her whole life can likely begin to heal with this knowledge.
The actress playing the role is Oksana Akinshina. She has gone on to be a successful actor since the making of The Bourne Supremacy. I wish her continued success.
she played that part to perfection
She was pretty successful before the Bourne Supremacy, she already had some awards even.
Lilya 4 ever
Thank you.
@@peteroltuszyk6611 I enjoyed that one. And Sputnik.
That scene meant everything in the understanding of Bourne's character and inner turmoil. I can't think of a scene that I've pondered more than this one. Masterfully done.
I think this scene is right after the car chase and spectacular crash with the Russian policeman crashing and ultimately dying. It's been a while since I've seen this movie. This scene after the intensity of the car chase and crash is amazing. Roller coaster ride.
There’s no trilogy without this scene.
who is the girl actress?
@@Kampup she's russian actress - Oksana Akinshina
@@nancydemoss608 i don't think he died. they showed him moving after the crash, then Bourne showed mercy and let him live. what made that scene even more powerful was that after he made that choice, you see him walking out of the tunnel into the light, instead of the direction that leads to more darkness.
2:45 that little smile and then sadness, knowing that your parents, especially your mom wasn't the bad one. GREAT acting from her!
Almost like she felt a huge relief or a "I knew it"- moment
This is one of the most powerful movie scenes I have seen. In real life the bizarre deaths of her parents would have ruined her and probably like all children wondered if she was in some way responsible. Jason Bourne put her back on track. Very moving.
I disagree. You don't smile when your parent's killer sits in front of you, and when you're scared to death because he's a murderer. Many emotions rock her soul at that moment, some express themselves unwillingly in her face. But she is not smiling. it's a beginning of a movement that freezes and it does resemble a smile, but it is not.
@@EyalBarCochva that smile is a symbolic gesture of resigning to her fate.
@@EyalBarCochva I agree. She was probably still scared to hell, and despite relief of knowing the truth, she wouldn't smile in that moment
For me, the best action movies are the ones where the non-action scenes are just as riveting and engaging (or sometimes even more so) as the action scenes. Your dialogue scenes shouldn't just be filler or exposition overloads between stunt sequences, instead they should have just as much significance and reverence as each fight and car chase. This scene is why The Bourne Supremacy is still one of my favourite action movies of all time.
Well said sir
we are the culprits for hollywood making all those dull CGI movies as long as we keep filling movie theaters to watch them.
@@webgpu Sorry, I'm not an anti-CGI guy. I don't really care if a movie is done practically or with tons of CG, I just want good writing and characters and a world I find interesting.
True! I got this feeling too when watching Andor.
@@mrquirky3626 plenty of cgi in this, especially in the car chases where Damon is being crsshed around
Amazing acting by this girl. Very short role but very convincing.
Now she is an star in Russia
@@jorgealameda , good to know she is a star. Many talented actor don’t make it too far; nature of movie business. I like her attention to detail in this short role. The fear in her eyes, face and body language. She keeps shifting focus to the gun again and again. Directors cannot all those details ; this is left to the actor.
@@jorgealameda she was a star before this
@@thierrycompany848 I know she made Lylia but after Bourne his career explode sadly only in Russia
She is a very accomplished and talented actress in Russia and she was already very famous in her native country before this Bourne movie. It's great that the Bourne movies use so many international talents and let the audience be exposed to so many talented actors/actresses around the world and at the same time give these international actors a chance to showcase their talent.
3:07 The combined still camera focus on the profile of her face with her being dead silent and her eyes welling up with tears until they finally drop while Bourne reveals how he killed her parents is really, really good filmmaking.
Your observations are something a person who works in movie or tv industry does.
Very keen
@@ligidaykurin9106 Don't think is really that good, but thanks.
One of the few times they actually held the camera still!
Matt Damon was born for the role of Jason Bourne. Period!
Jason Bourne was born for Matt Damon
Ben Affleck would be better.
Just as Keanu Reeves was born to be the one.
Sterling Archer would have made this much more entertaining
He played a lot of roles. He's a good actor. Watched the martian?
Good actress. Her performance combined with the setting gives the audience a hint of how difficult her life has been.
Given how little time she had on screen, her impact was tremendous. Her expression when she's standing half in the doorway wondering if she's going to be robbed, raped or killed is heart-breaking.
The setting? This is an average eastern european home in an average eastern european neighborhood. You can walk into any city in an eastern european country and see suburbs that are exactly like this.
@@timba1181 wanted to say this :D
@@timba1181 And that is why we pity her.
@@jonothandoeser trust me, most people that live there are happier than people who feel the need to post derogatory comments about how they pity other people.
I think this is the best scene out of all the Bourne movies.
The entire scene, Bourne and the girl...very well played. The look on the girls face could not have been done better...the insane mix of emotions such an instance would create, was on every inch of her face. And for Bourne, desperately clinging to a hope of humanity left in himself, is perfectly broken by the insanity of his own past. I have watched this clip many times.
I accepted....
And this part is the best part of the movie........
Nope that was
Get some rest pam... You look tired
@@newsupdates860 The best part is when Pam goes back into that hospital room and sees Bourne is gone.
The scene provides the moral intersection of a man where we do not know how he got to this place in his life, to facing what he did and showing regret and compassion. Now the audience turns to him as a hero instead of a bad guy. Great storytelling, great acting, camera work and directing.
its the duality of who he currently hes in a constant battle with trying to remember who he was as David Webb while at the same time dealing with the fact that he was trained to become Jason bourne
That actress's performance is genuinely stunning, when you know her character's whole story, a story that until here she doesn't even know fully. She's like a dog that's abandoned, scared, sad, but still living. A lot going on there.
Notwithstanding political and ethical (?) reasons for fall of Soviet Union leading to small East European countries, the real victims are beautiful young girls like this one living in a very unsafe and uncertain future. " Equalizer " Part 1 mirrors the plight of young Russian girls.
@@ravicharles5192 As per usual no one really cares about men... who actually build that country
@@MageBlackstone True.
Same actress from Lilya 4-Ever
@@purplehaze8557 If you consider her role in Sisters (2001) Bourne could have been the victim in this scenario :)
watch?v=0_7KtgW11tw
What a perfect way to end this movie. After all the guns, explosions, car chase scenes, nothing tops just sheer emotion
She's probably the first Hollywood teenager who looks like a teenager
She's Russian
Her acting was also great.
@@PrideDefiler yup that's for sure
yup
she played in some pretty good Russian movies.
This woman's acting is really good. Her trembling voice made it really believable.
Oksana is our treasure. BTW, f putin and f this senseless braindead war.
Her expression when he tells her is brilliant.
This scene is riveting. The struggle inside our hearts can be the most challenging in our lives.
Indeed. Especially when that struggle can take many sudden forms.
Wow. I liked the Bourne movies, but this scene transcends the rest. I don't even remember it, so I'm glad to have it lifted up. Excellent acting and pacing, and a deep subject.
I'm so glad it surfaced.
I don't remeber this scene too, even though I have watched all Jason bourne
I remember this scene. Going back to set things right as best he could.
Totalmente de acuerdo
Bourne Supremecy was the best out of the three in my opinion.
One of the best scenes in the movie.
4:35 the contrast between the warm, sheltered, normal people in their hotel and the cold, orphan like indifference of Bourne's world is genius
Those are Russian Apartments*
But I agree, what a contrast indeed
I didn't even notice that...wow
Well noticed, it really is excellent cinematography
those soviet apartments are notoriously hard to warm up, so those people are probably freezing themselves.
Jason's got blood on his hands figuratively and literally in this scene. That is very fitting.
Sequel, the girl comes back with revenge.
"You knew this was coming."
"Listen to me, your mother did not kill your father. I never wanted to kill your parents. I was forced into this."
"SHUT UP!!!"
Aside from amending the past, It seems like he's using her reaction to reassure the path that he's taking is the right one by the way he talks about wanting to know the truth when ur loved one gets taken from u.
Nice scene
What an awesome movie!! I especially love how quickly Oksana Akinshina's character picks up from his pretty bad Russian accent that Bourne is a native English speaker. Also, the fact that she too could speak English (and wanted him to stop butchering Russian) was another very realistic touch. Great acting. Great movie.
It's OK to butcher Russian. Russians butcher English, so 1-1.
they made them switch to english because americans hate reading subtitles. they do this kind of stuff in a lot of movies.
you would think that a 30 million dollar super soldier would be able to speak some languages that aren't english
@@dubious_potat4587 why? they're just killers.
If you're gonna spend 30 million you might as well get the most that you can get right?
The thing that always gets me with this scene is how Bourne's eyes are flickering all over the place when he's explaining, barely settling on the girl in front of him, because he's so guilty and ashamed of what he's done to her by killing her parents.
It's like if he has to see the living consequence of his actions, all the pain and grief and misery he's brought innocent people, he'll break down and cry.
Best most realistic film of all time
yeah that was ver good acting by matt damon
@@tweeze123
By both of them.
I feel bad for him, since he went through all the trouble just to confess to the poor girl's dead parents.
I enjoyed watching the Bourne movies and this scene hit me very hard because Jason was meeting the daughter of his target that was her parents even though it was supposed to be the father that would have been killed only . Jason came to apoligize to her .
The acting was phenomenal between the actress and Matt Damon .
I've always loved this scene even with all the fantastic action sets throughout the series. Great emotional grounding.
I love this scene.. It's as if J.B. regained a part of his long lost humanity from confessing what he did to her parents, by telling the truth while she was living with another told lie. She wouldn't end up hating him for what he did in the past. Instead she would find a way to forgive and move on knowing the whole truth and nothing but the truth. So frail and powerful at the same time..
Can't blame him. CIA manipulates, turning him into a killer.
But I don't think she'll forgive him ever. She would probably hate him for the rest of her life for taking her parents away from her.
I cried at this scene when he tells her your mother didnt kill your father
Think everyone dud
I didn't cry when I first saw this. Only now...
I cry whenever Bourne beat up someone brutally, specially with Pencil
One of the Best Shot of the Movie. Bourne confession, and when he walks out of the apartment, the camera pans the high rise buildings showing the tall structures with lights all the way up. The Bourne character clearly calls out, that deep down he is a Human Being with strong sense of values and doesn’t shy away from telling the Truth. The Camera therefore shows the building and lights to signify…Bourne rises tall and taller by revealing the truth to the Child/daughter of his target and apologises to her. Brilliant thought and fearless creation of the “Bourne the Character”. ❤
Jason Bourne trilogy is way underrated than we think.
This girl is so SO cute. And by cute, I mean innocent. She just exudes innocence. A perfect cast for the role. You can just see the little girl in her even though she is now older. A true sheep sent to the slaughter.
the robert ludlum masterpiece... a created assassin fixing things right... firstly to his victims... in connection to the first book that he found hislady luck soul mate... then sacrificed, that awakened his strong will and determination to fix things right...
Oksana, what a beauty.
She's gorgeous !
She's amazingly beautiful.
predator alert
That girl (Oksana Akinshina) was the female lead in the recent Sputnik, not to mention the star of the ultra-depressing Lilja 4-ever a few years prior to this role.
Wat
She must have only been about 17 when she played this part. Best part in the film I thought.
She's a cutie.
This quote from wiki "Akinshina disapproves of feminism, calling it "the destiny of ugly women" during a 2021 interview. She stated that "We live in a man’s world; it is evident and it is wonderful. This rule was worked out by nature itself." Makes me like her even more:-)
Lilja 4-ever was heartbreakingly sad.
I came back here after watching that last episode of Falcon and Winter Soldier but still feel Supremacy really nailed this better.
definitely, FAWS should've let the scene played out..
got similar scene in FAWS?
Bucky apologized to the victims for murdering love ones
Bourne apologized to the victim for murdering love ones
Bourne’s was WAAAAAAY better. Bucky’s didn’t even feel earned.
Great acting by both. What talent. You feel like you are there, feeling the tension.
3:15 that tear drop...
In the next movie you discover that bourne put himself in a huge risk coming to see this girl, that show how much important this was for him
I broke when i saw this in theater. After a hell of a good movie we get to understand the victim's pain. What an awesome sequel!
In the US, this film was not released in theaters. The first Bourne movie with a theatre release was Ultimatum.
@@markleckband4495 ummm no that just isn't true. The Bourne Identity was released in US theaters in 2002. This movie, The Bourne Supremacy, was released in 2004. Bourne Ultimatum, the final film in the trilogy, was released in 2007
I couldn't hold my tears back watching this for the first time. How come an action movie is that heartbreaking?
I just watched this last night. What can you do when the damage you have done is so far in the past? All he could say was that he was sorry. It doesn't change thing on the outside, but the girl was living with the terrible thought it was murder/suicide. Perhaps taking the onus off her mother and accepting the blame by confessing to this young woman was all he could do. Unlike the "Polar" movie, where the assassin had been compensating the daughter of his victims (found out in the end though), taking the weight off her and accepting the weight of his action was enough (had to be, right?). Does the equation balance? Who is to tell? You just do what you can when you understand your responsibility and do better next time.
A most unforgettable scene and performance for Matt Damon's career.
I love her redemption here, she thought her background was so tragic and even though it still is, it's far less damaging than she thought.
Do you even know the meaning of "redemption"?
@@tropickman Redemption isn't applicable to only one type of situation, do you even know that?
Maybe my favourite scene of the Bourne movies. Also that girl did great acting without saying but a few words. :)
She's sad and happy at the same time, knowing the truth about what happened to her parents.
The most sincere "sorry" ever uttered in the world was on a movie set.
The saddest faces in the history of begged forgiveness and bestowed forgiveness were actors.
That girl's face will haunt me till I die with only the greatest dialogue in movie history to relieve it.
Wow.
If you want to watch more of her, watch "Lilya 4-ever". Beautifully acted and a very sad movie.
This was a brilliant scene. The girl was afraid when she saw Bourne sitting in the chair. And that hurt look, tears when she was told the truth. Even Bourne, a killer, had trouble admitting he killed her parents. And lastly, when he walked out, that shuffle, the walk was that of a disturbed man. Masterpiece.
One of the most powerful scene , someone is trying his best to get back his soul , amazing acting by both ,,,
I didn’t appreciate this scene when I first watched this movie in fact didn’t really pay attention to this scene till the 100th view lol. His first victim and first step too redemption. Good movies a lot of good action scenes 👍
"Bourne visits his first victim." Great title for this scene. The people he killed where victims but the child of the people he killed, that is the his true first victim.
Ending soundtrack is called "Atonement". Best Bourne movie in my opinion!
Thankya
Ash, totally agree and i just finished the trilogy. I don't think Damon gets enough credit for his acting. This scene really moves me.
@@artlover4668 I got the trilogy DVD set! Indeed incredible acting from Matt Damon. His best franchise ever!
Thanks. The bourne scores are not underrated. My favourite is the one played when he's on his way to Switzerland in the first one. Cant remember name. Will look out for this one.
@@francoisona Indeed 👍 It's called "Bourne On Land".
That last shot Jason limping into a pan shot of the Moscow projects was really poignant. The director captured the winter gloom and loneliness of a repenting assassin and his innocent victim. I really wish Bourne had found a way to get Nesky's daughter out of there. Maybe a sack full of CIA blood money to give her a fresh start.
This isn't a Moscow project. It's actually a pretty decent area (these scenes were shot in Krylatakoe and Otradnoe) and apartments there are expensive - equivalent to about 200-300 thousand dollars. There were no such thing as projects in Moscow in the US sense before the current mayor came in and started building ghetto style concentrations of ultra-high rise, poor quality flats.
Great scene. Great franchise. Great acting by beautiful Oksana Akinshina!
Matt Damon is a good actor! I can watch any of his movies that's just how great an actor he is!
Why dont they make movies lijke these anymore.....Matt wherre are you....When is the next Bourne coming out with you there.
What a scene,,,So so perfect, masterful!!!,
Amazing acting...!!!
I think people are missing some more subtle things about her acting. They way she's sitting, not straight on, right on the edge of the seat just in case she needs to quickly run away. The way she doesn't want to look away from Bourne because he's the stranger in the house. Only after she realises that she might learn the truth does she face Bourne more directly. I also don't think she's looking at Bourne when he leaves but instead looking at the picture of her mom after learning about the truth
Love the piano in the background
I'm happy others appreciate that small part of the soundtrack. I thought I was the only one. :)
The violin is better at the end
The soundtrack towards the end is named 'Atonement', apt for this scene. John Powell hits it spot on with the scores in this movie.
Such a beautiful and powerful scene.
In the Bourne Legacy, this „spirit“ was pretty much absent. A nice movie, otherwise - but to me, it has nothing to do with the original Bourne franchise. At all.
Vikander's brother was in the trilogy
Legacy was more concerned with explaining the thing than actually showing it as the Bourne trilogy did.
That being said Jason Bourne was just as bad, at least Legacy took it in a new direction even if it was a more sterile one (though to be fair Identity was a bit sterile too in its own way).
JB/Bourne 5 on the other hand was both repetitive and insulting to the intelligence.
Since when did the Bourne films ever show Jason (post amnesia) to be a patriot for Vikander's character to make that assumption based on third hand intelligence of him years apart?
down with legacy and that new bourne film
Legacy is one of the most pathetic movies I've ever seen. Action scenes are the most boring action scenes I've seen. The plot is both predictable and also entirely pointless. The main character is unlikeable and unrelatable. It has nothing of what made the Bourne trilogy great, instead it explores deeper into minor details from the trilogy that nobody ever cared about anyway.
A beautiful scene depicting seeking forgiveness and getting it. Both are heart broken. That young actress emoted to the extent you want to wipe off her tears. This scene was true to every second of it.
What forgiveness?
@@blusafe1 Bourne asking forgiveness for killing her parents. I am sure you would have been seen the film.
@@ravicharles5192 I don't think he's requesting forgiveness, and she never gives him forgiveness. I think this scene is Bourne making peace with himself. Almost selfish in a way, but like he said: "I'd want to know." But you're allowed your own interpretation.
@@blusafe1 Admitting guilt to make peace with himself is interesting inference. Perhaps the young girl is too shattered to respond. I am more sympathetic to that poor girl. Bourne too feels that pain I presume as he says - " If something you love is taken away from you, it changes everything
" I don't want to make assumptions how that hapless girl would have survived in the later years. Even though it is a fiction, you can't help but empathising with the characters. Thank you for a different perspective.
I watched this movie in a theater and didn't want the movie to end after this but continue all day
The Jason Bourne franchise is just something else🔥🔥🔥
In case someone wondering, Oksana Akinshina is an actress from Russia and has been in some quite amazing films.
My favorite scene from the whole series.
Aksana was pretty incredible in this scene. These movies were so well done. It’s hard to believe they are nearly 20 years old.
Whats the name of the actress? she is not credited on imdb
@@chasx7062 Aksana Akinshina
@@mikechan231 Oksana Akinshina
@@chasx7062 Oksana Akinshina
@@katerinsh thanks she is not listed on IMDB
Hindi ko na kailangang panuorin ang ibang bourne movies para maintindihan to, pure masterpiece ito
this scene made me cry
YES, A SHORT ROLE BUT VERY EMOTIONAL THAT GIVES SPICE AND FULLNESS TO THE MOVIE.
Yes. . this is the best scene
The humane side of born, a real human being. Great scene and very emotional and touchy!
What a powerful scene in the movie.
The best scene in all 4 bourne movies.
I can't get enough of her face.
Sterling Archer "The worlds Greatest Spy" would have shown up drunk and made a pass at her.
Agreed
I think you mean James Bond
@@Unknown_Entity- If I had meant that ponce I would have said so. lol
A quite brilliant scene - not one that one forgets...
That music at ending...👌👍
Amazing scene. I wonder how many takes it took to nail it? Great acting from them both.
These movies man Jason Bourne movies are something else
Bourne: I killed your parents.
Daughter: Understandable, have a nice day!
Audience: I feel sorry for Bourne.
*Terrific storytelling
LOL, when you put it like that it sounds pretty damned stupid. :D
Understandable?
She's literally terrified. confused, grief stricken and guilty all at once.
Oh and did I mention anger/hatred?
You do feel sorry for Bourne yes.
But at the end of the day the person he was before his amnesia chose that path.
He chose to be that way.
It was only upon realising his loss of Marie that he could truly empathize with this girls own loss at his hands.
Like so called righteous Captain America fearcely defending Bucky killer of Tony Starks both parents
Hope you know what Bourne is
He was indeed a trained military assasin
Best one
This how world of Clandestine Black ops works
Job us voluntary and most trained officers
Mentally Strong SOB's
Bourne case was really different
He lost his memory with that all the training
His brain had the muscle memory of his training in his subconscious
But he was a different person all together
That is why he feels emotionally vulnerable in this situation like normal civilians do.
I actually traveled to Moscow in 2005 (high school trip), only a year after watching this film in theatres. I remember staying in these Soviet era apartment blocks very well.
Yes. One of the BEST for sure.
Brilliant those first three films, especially the second and third.
I'm surprised that lady didn't get more roles, great little actress
I presume you mean more Hollywood/blockbuster roles? Because she has had consistent work in film and tv acting since this movie including a lot lead roles in Russian productions.
I don't know anything about Russian roles. Just commenting on her great work in this film . I wish her the best
Hey Blackburn.
This scene is brilliant. And it hits hard.
Have you seen the original ending where Bourne collapses in the snow then ends up in hospital. ?
What!
@@madelinetorye9967 … They pulled Matt Damon off the set of Oceans eleven to film the different ending.
It changes things, that knowledge.
Should he leave his email in case she wants more details at a later stage?
na, she got whatsapp him already
@@simypkl Hahahaha...
@@simypkl Telegram?
Considering the life he lives, bad things would happen to both him and the girl.
He should have given her all the currency the Agency gave him. At least she could have gotten out of the projects and started a scooter rental business by the sea. Oh wait…
I adore this scene: the humanity.....
At least in the Bourne films they at least tried to get the Russian right - in films like "The Hunt for Red October" it was very much "Hollywood" Russian - the pronunciations were terrible!
Oh come on) His Russian is terrible too. I could barely understand what he was saying. They don't care too much about such things. Eastern Promises is a great movie about Russian mafia with decent Russian in it.
@@PutinosauRUS Of course you're right Artyom, the Russian in the Bourne fims in generally not very good (like most "Hollywood" films, but it's better than many, "The Hunt for Red October" - for example).
I'll definitely check-out "Eastern Promises."
@@PutinosauRUS It is possible that was the intent. After all, he apparently had a serious American accent, because she picked that up right away. "I speak English". Artyom, did it sound like Russian with an American accent, or just "bad" Russian?
@@servantofmelian9966 Well, I agree with you in some degree) Looks like Bourne had some sort of agent textbook with useful phrases in Russian. At 0:35 he says: "Тихо. Молчи. Ты понял?" "Tiho. Molchee. Ty ponyal?" "Quiet. Keep your mouth shut. Do you understand?" It took me another listening to understand this. His accent is terrible (he just learned this by heart phonetically) and also he refers to a girl in the wrong gender - he should say "Ty ponyal(a)?" He missed correct ending. Also these 3 phrases sound pretty akward both in Russian and English. He should say something like: Quiet. I will not harm you.
VVonderful. Never gets old. VVish there was just a bit more added to it. 🖤
This girl is absolutely gorgeous
Its just a picture, such a compelling line. All the grief and loneliness of an orphans life in one simple sentence.
She is sooooooooo cute.
She looks ordinary
Simp
@@HowToTouch "THIS IS THE SIMP POLICE, YOU HAVE BEEN CAUGHT USING THE TERM 'SIMP' INCORRECTLY AND WILL FACE THE FULL FORCE OF THE LAW...you must now watch boku no picu 1000% volume in hd as punishment"
@Milind Benjamin |也1的一
She's russian 😍 so no surprise there!
The best of the Bourne movies