Mercurius
Legend
This sort of riffs off of this post in the Stranger Things thread. Basically I'd like to speculate about the future of old franchises, whether currently active, ending, in limbo, or dead (and likely to be revived).
The three that come most readily to mind are Jason Bourne, James Bond, and MCU 2.0, aka "The Mutant Edition." For this post, I'll just cover Jason Bourne and the Bourneverse, and then talk about Bond and MCU in a follow-up. For these entries, I start with a brief recap of the franchise and what we know about the current status (or what I could find with a bit of cursory research), and then go into speculations about possible futures.
JASON BOURNE
After the dud that was Treadstone (I didn't watch it, but assume it was cancelled for a reason)--and the overall pattern of decline from the original great trilogy (2002-07) to the solid but Bourne-less The Bourne Legacy (2012) to the meh rehash that added nothing interesting or new in Jason Bourne (2016) except the exquisite Alicia Vikander, and then to the flop tv series (2019)--one would think the franchise was kaput. But then in 2025, after the rights expired in March, Universal re-purchased the rights to the franchise for a reported nine-figure deal in August, which means they're going to do something with it. There are lots of Jason Bourne books that haven't made it into film. I believe the original plan was to use Treadstone as a jumping-off point for new films, but it wasn't commercially successful. But Universal must have a plan; they've got hundreds of millions invested in it.
The main problem: Well, Matt Damon. Everyone likes Matt Damon, but he's 55 years old and doesn't quite have the box office draw of ten years ago, though he's still quite active and entered "Hall of Fame working actor" status. He's hardly the spring (or at least summer) chicken you want to headline a franchise that redefined action cinema for the 21st century. Now 61-year old Keanu Reeves still pulls off John Wick, but that can only continue for so long; but Keanu has at least one more film in the books (JW 5) and while I didn't see it yet, Ballerina was supposedly pretty good. But as one article (can't remember which) mentioned, the main lesson from The Bourne Legacy and Treadstone is that the franchise is synonymous with Matt Damon, so Universal must figure out ways to work with that. Plus, that same article pointed out that he's headlining Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey next year, so that should give him a boost in terms of visibility.
The good news: There's lots of material to draw from. While Robert Ludlum's original three books were exhausted by the trilogy, Eric Van Lustbader wrote 11 more (including Legacy) and Brian Freeman 8 more and counting. Having not read them, I can't speak to their quality, but I believe the Ludlum books were changed enough that I don't see why the later books couldn't at least provide source material to draw from.
The options: First, what I wouldn't do: redo the original trilogy with a new actor (cue arguments about Jane Bourne). Matt Damon is Jason Bourne, maybe even more than Sean Connery was James Bond. Sure, the role doesn't require the most dynamic actor and you could equal or surpass the trilogy in terms of pure cinematics. But given today's world, 2002-07 isn't that long ago and the films still stand strong (in a similar way that you couldn't really successfully remake Lord of the Rings...at least not for the foreseeable future). So I see three options, in rough order of likelihood (imo):
The three that come most readily to mind are Jason Bourne, James Bond, and MCU 2.0, aka "The Mutant Edition." For this post, I'll just cover Jason Bourne and the Bourneverse, and then talk about Bond and MCU in a follow-up. For these entries, I start with a brief recap of the franchise and what we know about the current status (or what I could find with a bit of cursory research), and then go into speculations about possible futures.
JASON BOURNE
After the dud that was Treadstone (I didn't watch it, but assume it was cancelled for a reason)--and the overall pattern of decline from the original great trilogy (2002-07) to the solid but Bourne-less The Bourne Legacy (2012) to the meh rehash that added nothing interesting or new in Jason Bourne (2016) except the exquisite Alicia Vikander, and then to the flop tv series (2019)--one would think the franchise was kaput. But then in 2025, after the rights expired in March, Universal re-purchased the rights to the franchise for a reported nine-figure deal in August, which means they're going to do something with it. There are lots of Jason Bourne books that haven't made it into film. I believe the original plan was to use Treadstone as a jumping-off point for new films, but it wasn't commercially successful. But Universal must have a plan; they've got hundreds of millions invested in it.
The main problem: Well, Matt Damon. Everyone likes Matt Damon, but he's 55 years old and doesn't quite have the box office draw of ten years ago, though he's still quite active and entered "Hall of Fame working actor" status. He's hardly the spring (or at least summer) chicken you want to headline a franchise that redefined action cinema for the 21st century. Now 61-year old Keanu Reeves still pulls off John Wick, but that can only continue for so long; but Keanu has at least one more film in the books (JW 5) and while I didn't see it yet, Ballerina was supposedly pretty good. But as one article (can't remember which) mentioned, the main lesson from The Bourne Legacy and Treadstone is that the franchise is synonymous with Matt Damon, so Universal must figure out ways to work with that. Plus, that same article pointed out that he's headlining Christopher Nolan's The Odyssey next year, so that should give him a boost in terms of visibility.
The good news: There's lots of material to draw from. While Robert Ludlum's original three books were exhausted by the trilogy, Eric Van Lustbader wrote 11 more (including Legacy) and Brian Freeman 8 more and counting. Having not read them, I can't speak to their quality, but I believe the Ludlum books were changed enough that I don't see why the later books couldn't at least provide source material to draw from.
The options: First, what I wouldn't do: redo the original trilogy with a new actor (cue arguments about Jane Bourne). Matt Damon is Jason Bourne, maybe even more than Sean Connery was James Bond. Sure, the role doesn't require the most dynamic actor and you could equal or surpass the trilogy in terms of pure cinematics. But given today's world, 2002-07 isn't that long ago and the films still stand strong (in a similar way that you couldn't really successfully remake Lord of the Rings...at least not for the foreseeable future). So I see three options, in rough order of likelihood (imo):
- OPTION A: Continue with Damon and expand outward. Bring back Old Man Bourne as a starting point - make him central to one film, or start up a series, and then expand outward with other characters - Treadstone/Blackbriar agents, or former agents. Bring back Jeremy Renner, while you're at it, and--if possible--Jason Straithairn and Joan Allen--at least in limited roles (Pamela Landy and Noah Vosen age too!). You don't need to continue with these characters, but they would ground it as feeling like a return to the Bourneverse. Maybe bring in characters from other programs in different countries.
- OPTION B: As Above, but Damon-less. This would be the contingency plan if Damon isn't willing to help restart things - maybe he's busy, or maybe he feels he's too old, or maybe he doesn't want to do it if he knows he'll be phased out. But the same basic idea applies: Not a reboot, but a continuation. This is more risky as it is the Bourneverse without Bourne, and you need the right characters, but it can be done.
- OPTION C: Continue with new actor. This would probably involve doing a Superman Returns and going back to the end of the trilogy and filling out the missing 12 years of Bourne's life. You cast a guy in his 30s and go from there. Jason Bourne is sort of just left ambiguous as to whether it is the future that Bourne ends up at, or just an alternate "Bourne tale" - it wouldn't really matter. You can still expand the Bourneverse like in Option A & B, but the key is that it remains centered on Bourne, just not Matt Damon.


