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‘Bourne’ with extra memory

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The Bourne Supremacy

Matt Damon, Joan Allen

Universal, $30

He may look like the boy next door, but Matt Damon proved himself a first-rate action star with the 2002 hit spy thriller, “The Bourne Identity.” He’s just as good in this taut sequel, which was shot in Berlin and India. Directed with savvy intelligence by Paul Greengrass (“Bloody Sunday”), this thriller finds CIA assassin Jason Bourne still stricken with amnesia and trying to unlock his past life. Things get complicated when he’s framed for a murder in Berlin. A sturdy supporting cast, including Joan Allen as an analytic CIA kingpin, surrounds Damon.

The digital edition doesn’t stint on extras. It has above-average documentaries on casting, the car chase stunts, fight training, action photography, pyrotechnics and location shooting. There are also deleted scenes and thoughtful commentary from Greengrass.

*

DodgeBall -- A True

Underdog Story

Vince Vaughn, Ben Stiller

Fox, $30

“DodgeBall,” the second of three films that Vince Vaughn and Ben Stiller appeared in together this year (the others were “Starsky & Hutch” and “Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy”), is an enjoyably silly romp.

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The shaggy underdog of a comedy follows the laid-back owner of a struggling gym who is about to be bought out by the owner of the mega-gym.

The only way he can pay off his debt is to enter the national dodgeball competition in Las Vegas.

But can he get the lovable losers who work out in his gym fit in time for the tournament?

Perhaps the most interesting extra on the DVD is the film’s original ending. Writer/director Rawson Marshall Thurber and his two stars preferred the far darker conclusion, but test audiences didn’t. So Fox told Thurber to shoot something more upbeat.

Thurber, who made his directorial debut with “DodgeBall,” was so upset that he left the project.

Vaughn and Stiller talked to him and a week later he came back to the production and shot the new sequence.

The digital edition also includes deleted and extended scenes, a gag reel, by-the-book mini-documentaries and commentary from Thurber, a subdued Stiller and a wisecracking Vaughn.

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*

Maria Full of Grace

Catalina Sandino Moreno,

Yenny Paola Vega

HBO, $28

A major award-winner at Sundance this year and a nominee for five Independent Spirit Awards, “Maria” is a harrowing, beautifully acted drama about a pregnant Colombian teenager who agrees to become a mule for drug dealers.

The performances -- especially from Catalina Sandino Moreno as Maria and Yenny Paola Vega as her boy-crazy best friend -- are uniformly first-rate. Though writer-director Joshua Marston is American, “Maria” is in Spanish.

The digital edition features the enthusiastic commentary of Marston.

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