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- HACKERS
- By Harvey S. Karten, Ph.D.
- United Artists
- Director: Iain Softley
- Writer: Rafael Moreau
- Cast: Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie
-
- In the beginning there was "War Games," during the stone
- age of computer hackers, where Matthew Broderick changes
- Ally Sheedy's grades and is rewarded with the starring role in
- "How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying." And
- "War Games" eventually begat "The Net" just after Sandra
- Bullock was found hiding behind Peter Gallagher, Sylvester
- Stallone and Keanu Reeves and made a star in her own right,
- playing a computer nerd who never had her teeth cleaned
- (she knew no one who could identify her except her shrink).
- And "The Net" begat "Hackers," which teaches us that
- students from Manhattan's prestigious Stuyvesant High
- School can get their diplomas doing more interesting things at
- night than English homework. (The school is called Stanton
- High in the movie, but you couldn't fool the audience at a
- recent screening, 90% of whom were students in the state-of-
- the-art academy in New York's financial district, who yelled
- their approval each time Andrzej Sekula's camera whirred
- past the locker room, the bathroom, and the pristine halls.)
-
- The story is perhaps the least important aspect of "Hackers,"
- treading past familiar material--good guy meets villain (they
- understand each other since they're merely opposite sides of
- the same computer coin); boy meets girl (they dislike each
- other at first, but then...); high school geeks freak out midtown
- Manhattanites at high profile places like Grand Central
- Station, Central Park, the World Trade Center and the top of
- the Empire State Building; and of course the pyramid of
- cracked-up cars. "Hackers" is all about special effects, really,
- about how the upcoming generation of computer whizzes see
- the world simultaneously as normal people do and as
- computer nerds might--with a third eye, a sort of X-ray vision
- that Superman would envy. The FX team has conjured up a
- world of virtual reality where buildings are made of glass and
- electrons traffic their byways faster than you could say "World
- Wide Web." It's befitting that the story line, such as it is,
- keeps pace with the rolling circuitry, zooming image after
- image past us so fast that we haven't a second to say, "Hey,
- that doesn't make sense." "Hackers" will cut some ice with
- high school youngsters and with quite a few in the middle
- grades: this is the audience it's aiming at. Adults, with or
- without computer skills, will find the hyperactive kids ultimately
- irritating and the bad guy too much fun to take seriously.
-
- Jonny Lee Miller stars as a kid who has just transferred
- reluctantly from Seattle to his new school in Manhattan. He's
- a bit long in the tooth to be a preppy and looks as if he's just
- come off Lufthansa from Hamburg. He's a dazzler in looks,
- sure to appeal to the Seventeen set, and would you know that
- he and Angelina Jolie (who looks androgynous but darn good
- here) will shed their mutual dislike for better things once they
- win the war against a cyberspace embezzler known as The
- Plague (Fisher Stevens). Writer Rafael Moreu got his ideas
- from chillin' with the kids. His vision of a society in which one
- could bring down the stock market, turn all traffic lights green,
- set off a sprinkler system inside a school, have an ATM spit
- $700 on a sidewalk in an Idaho town, trash a credit card, fill
- out a rap sheet for hundreds of moving violations, turn a
- respectable mom into a wanted criminal, and expose a plot to
- embezzle millions from a corporate headquarters to a private
- Swiss account--all with a pocket-sized $2,000 machine--is
- given stylish life by director Iain Softley. Whether you're
- comfortable in cyberspace or a downright computerphobe,
- feel free to leave this flick strictly for the kids. Rated PG-13.
- Running Time: 103 minutes. (C) 1995 Harvey Karten
-
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