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SALLY: You’ve Got Mail! LARS: Terminator! JUSTIN: Attack of the Killer Tomatoes! ROOM: [very silent]
So what I’m trying to say is that the key question isn’t whether Hackers is an accurate portrayal of the hacker community — now or then — or whether Hackers even has a clue what computers can and cannot do (more on that later), but instead, whether Hackers is a situation where you should just cast off the nit-picking and sarcasm to just enjoy something that’s energetic and wildly nuts. I think it is. I also think you should switch deodorant brands to something that can better cover up your supernaturally bad B.O. Like Cinderella and Snow White before it, Hackers lives in a fairy tale world where computer geniuses are actually cool and not irritating 1337-spelling morons that infest website forums everywhere with no (or ALL) capitalization and angry swears completely played out in acronyms. Dade (Miller) was a child hacker caught by the government in the 80’s doing Very Bad Stuff, and forbidden from using a computer for a Very Long Time. The now-high school student has moved to NYC with his mother, where he meets a group of underground computer science rejects. They are, in the class photo from left to right, Kate (Jolie), Joey (Joey Pardella), Emmanuel (Matthew Lillard), Paul (Laurence Mason), and Ramon (Renoly Santiago). They boast about their hardware and software, roller blade everywhere, play high-tech pranks on the FBI, and style ludicrous outfits that just… might… work. It’s all fun and LAN games until "The Plague" (Fisher Stevens) sets the group up to take the fall for a computer virus that steals millions. Also, Penn Jillette (from, you know, Penn and Teller) hangs out to collect a paycheck. Even die-hard fans of Hackers will grow shy and suddenly feel the need to urinate if you bring up the depictions of computer use in this movie. Having seen the film a dozen or so times, I cannot say, in conscience, that the filmmakers even grasp what a computer is. Any time a computer is referenced or used, prepare yourself for goofy graphics, slick clip art and nonsense galore. If you were completely clueless, you might swallow this whole thing without a murmur of indigestion; otherwise, any basic knowledge of computers whatsoever will throw you into stark contrast with Hackers. Hackers’ computers work in the following ways:
So we see that hacking is pretty much done by pounding on the keyboard and having cool graphics sail off the screen and onto the faces of the hackers. So easy, your momma could do it if she weren’t cleaning up after your latest bout of bedwetting. So, the computer stuff is not quite up to par. Why watch? Well, for one thing, the music jams. Really sweet techno. Hackers was a film where the soundtrack sold far more than the movie, due to a rockity-bop collection of top trance, techno and house tunes — so much, in fact, that they quickly released Hackers 2 and Hackers 3 albums (no movies to match, however). The music ties in with the energy of the story, which shamelessly sacrifices accuracy for smooth watchability. Our characters are ultra-geeks; in most movies, they’d be the despised, teased ones. Here, they’re the ones who really have the power and the wits to outsmart their enemies. They dress in funky, $5,000 outfits, sail up and down streets on roller blades, hang out at the coolest geek club you’ve ever seen, and don’t hesitate to pop out their laptops, jack in to the telephone system, and do their voodoo. While Dade is a bit of a dud, personality-wise, he does get into a sparkling duel with Libby over the course of the film to see who’s the better hacker. Sexual tension galore. By the way, Angelina Jolie has never, ever looked hotter than in Hackers. Just a warning to those of you who are pregnant, have heart conditions or neck problems. Hackers is both a visual and dialog ballet between these characters as they jockey for top dog while spitting in the face of computer illiterates. I just had a great time watching this film even ten years later, eye candy or not, and continue to watch movies alone because my friends have all gone to see lame dreck like Man in the Iron Mask.
The war is halted, however, when members of the group are being framed for implanting in a computer a virus that capsizes oil tankers. Dade and Kate, along with the other hackers, team up to clear their friends and get the bad guys. All in all, Hackers is fast-paced and wildly entertaining. Matt Lillard is my favorite hacker, Cereal Killer, and his comedic antics steal the scenes. The only reason Hackers didn't receive 4 elite hackers is because at times it becomes a tad hard to understand if you don't know a lot about computers.
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Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Unnecessary Background [some sources: Wikipedia]
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
The "Hacker Manifesto" read by Agent Bob was actually written by a hacker of great renown in the 1980s who went by the name of The Mentor. It was published in PHRACK magazine, issue 07, file 03 in 1986. The character name "Emmanuel Goldstein" is taken from George Orwell's novel "Nineteen Eighty-Four". It is also used as a pseudonym by Eric Corley, who publishes the magazine "2600, The Hacker Quarterly". Corley was a consultant for this film. Around the movie's release, the official website was actually hacked into and digital graffiti was added to many graphics on the site. Appreciating the irony of this, the studio decided to leave the website and not remove the graffiti. The game being played in the arcade is a high-quality prototype of the Playstation game "Wipeout" by Psygnosis. It is done on a high-end SGI server and allowed the development team to try out tracks and gameplay, before porting it to the Playstation. As a result, there are features and graphics in the movie that do not exist in the actual game, including the "high score smashing" sequence. Groovy Quotes
Kate: You would have looked better. Ramon Sanchez: It's in that place where I put that thing that time. Cereal Killer: When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child, but when I became a man, I put away childish things. What? It's Corinthians one, chapter thirteen verse eleven. Cereal Killer: We have just gotten a wake-up call from the Nintendo Generation. The Plague: Kid, don't threaten me. There are worse things than death, and uh, I can do all of them. Kate: I hope you don't screw like you type. The Plague: There is no right and wrong. There's only fun and boring. Agent Bob: [reading the Hackers Manifesto] "This is our world now. The world of the electron and the switch; the beauty of the baud. We exist without nationality, skin color, or religious bias. You wage wars, murder, cheat, lie to us and try to make us believe it's for our own good, yet we're the criminals. Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. I am a hacker, and this is my manifesto." Huh? Right? Manifesto? "You may stop me, but you can't stop us all." Cereal Killer: Spandex: it's a privilege, not a right.
Ramon Sanchez: So, uh, what's your interest in Kate Libby, eh? Academic? Purely sexual?
Curtis: If it isn't Leopard Boy and the Decepticons. Razor: Remember, hacking is more than just a crime. It's a survival trait. The Plague: Someone didn't bother reading my carefully prepared memo on commonly-used passwords. Now, then, as I so meticulously pointed out, the four most-used passwords are: love, sex, secret, and... god. So, would your holiness care to change her password? Soundtrack Review
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