Hackers (film)

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Hackers

Poster design by Dawn Patrol[1]
Directed by Iain Softley
Produced by Michael Peyser
Written by Rafael Moreu
Starring Jonny Lee Miller
Angelina Jolie
Jesse Bradford
Matthew Lillard
Fisher Stevens
Lorraine Bracco
Renoly Santiago
Laurence Mason
Music by Simon Boswell
Cinematography Andrzej Sekuła
Editing by Chris Blunden
Martin Walsh
Distributed by United Artists
Release dates September 15, 1995
Running time 107 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Box office $7,563,728 (US)[2]

Hackers is a 1995 American cyberpunk thriller film directed by Iain Softley and starring Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Renoly Santiago, Matthew Lillard, Lorraine Bracco and Fisher Stevens. The film follows the exploits of a group of gifted high school hackers and their involvement in a corporate extortion conspiracy. Made in the 1990s when the internet was unfamiliar to the general public, it is a cult classic reflective of the verbatim quotes in the film from the Hacker Manifesto, of a borderless world free of national, religious, and racial identity biases, to fight the powerful. Hackers has achieved both dated cult classic status and prescience.[3]

Plot

In 1988, 11-year old Dade "Zero Cool" Murphy is arrested and charged with crashing 1,507 computer systems in a single day and causing a single-day 7-point drop in the New York Stock Exchange. Upon conviction, his family is fined $45,000 for the events, and although he is not convicted, he is banned from owning or operating computers or touch-tone telephones until he is 18 years old.

Seven years later, Dade (Jonny Lee Miller), is now living alone with his mother (his parents are divorced) and bought himself a computer again since he can now own it. One day, he calls a local television station, dupes the security guard into giving him the modem's phone number and successfully hacks into the station's computer network, changing the current TV program to an episode of The Outer Limits. However, Dade is "attacked" by a hacker (handle "Acid Burn") on the same network, and they converse together. During the conversation, Dade identifies himself by a new alias, Crash Override, rather than reveal himself as "Zero Cool".

Dade enrolls at Stuyvesant High School in New York, where he meets Kate Libby (Angelina Jolie), who is assigned to take him on a tour of the school. After pranking Dade by claiming there's a pool on the roof of the school, only to lock him outside with several other students during a rainstorm, a rift develops between Dade and Kate. Ramon "The Phantom Phreak" Sanchez (Renoly Santiago) takes notice of Dade's skills and invites him to a hacker nightclub, Cyberdelia, where the rivalry between Dade and Kate intensifies as Dade beats Kate's high score in "Wipeout".

Soon after, Dade exacts revenge for the earlier prank by scheduling a test of the school's sprinkler system the next day. Dade begins integrating himself into Phreak's circle of hacker friends: Emmanuel "Cereal Killer" Goldstein (Matthew Lillard), Paul "Lord Nikon" Cook (Laurence Mason) (so named for his photographic memory), and Joey Pardella (Jesse Bradford), an aspiring novice hacker without an alias. At a party, Dade learns that Kate is "Acid Burn", the hacker that earlier kicked him out of the TV network.

Meanwhile, Joey, out to prove his skills, successfully breaks into "The Gibson", an Ellingson Mineral Company supercomputer. He attempts to download a garbage file as proof of his feat, but his mother enters and disconnects his computer in anger, leaving Joey with a fragmented file. However, prior to Joey's disconnection, the company's IT employee Hal (Penn Jillette) detects this unauthorized entry and summons computer security officer Eugene "The Plague" Belford (Fisher Stevens), a former hacker, to deal with the problem.

While going through the files, Plague realizes the garbage file being downloaded is in fact a virus he inserted to defraud Ellingson. Review of the garbage file could reveal that The Plague is stealing from the company via salami slicing. The Plague pretends the hackers are to blame and enlists the US Secret Service to recover the file, claiming it is the code to a second computer virus (named "Da Vinci" for an image of the Vitruvian Man that accompanies it) that Plague inserted as a red herring that will capsize the company's oil tanker fleet.

Soon after, Joey is arrested and his computer is confiscated and searched, but the Secret Service finds nothing in the software, as Joey has hidden the disk containing the files. In response, Dade and Kate decide to settle their disagreements regarding the other's computing supremacy with a bet in the form of a hacking duel, with Dade choosing a date with Kate as his prize; Kate electing to have Dade perform menial computing tasks. The hacking duel focuses on harassing Secret Service Agent Richard Gill (Wendell Pierce), "Hacker enemy number one", who was involved in Joey's arrest. Phreak, Cereal, and Nikon act as judges. After various pranks including canceling Gill's credit cards, creating a fake embarrassing personal ad in Gill's name, fabricating a criminal record, and changing his payroll status to "deceased", the duel remains tied for now on.

After being released on parole, Joey reveals the disk to Phreak in a public park; but they quickly realize that they are being followed by the Secret Service. The next day, Phreak is arrested. He uses his phone call to inform Kate that he hid the disk in a boy's bathroom at school. That evening, Kate and Cereal Killer ask Dade for his help; but, stating he has "a record" before, declines. Kate then asks Dade to copy the disk so that, if anyone else is arrested, they have the disk as un-tampered evidence. After determining that Dade is not the one who hacked into Ellingson, The Plague attempts to enlist Dade's help to find the one who did. First, he sends Dade a high-powered laptop, more powerful than his old computer, that upon start-up displays a video message from The Plague encouraging Dade to join forces with The Plague with him together. Later, he threatens to have Dade's mother incarcerated with a manufactured criminal record, which would then send him on the street. At this, Dade agrees to deliver Kate's copy of the disk.

Meanwhile, Kate, Lord Nikon, and Cereal Killer attempt to discern the contents of the disk. Dade joins them; and, after working all night, they learn the purpose of its code—a worm designed to salami-slice $25 million from Ellingson transactions. Dade confesses that he knows Plague is behind this scheme, because he was the one who wanted Kate's copy of the disk. He admits he gave Plague the disk. When they confront him about his "record", he reveals his hacking history as "Zero Cool". Lord Nikon and Cereal display great reverence and excitement finding out that Dade is Zero Cool, since he became "a hacker legend" after his 1988 hacking. Kate is nonplussed, as their futures are still at risk. Determined to stop the scheme, the assembled hackers plan to hack the Gibson again. Kate and Dade go dumpster-diving for employee memos with passwords; Cereal Killer downloads a phone tap in the Ellingson offices; and Nikon poses as a delivery boy wandering the Ellingson cubicles, memorizing employee passwords as they enter them in the secured codes.

Reading the memos, they discover that the Da Vinci virus is set to capsize the oil fleet the next day, which would provide the perfect cover to distract from the salami-slicing worm. In need of help, Dade and Kate seek out Razor and Blade, the producers of a hacker-themed pirate TV show, "Hack the Planet." Razor and Blade are at a club where Urban Dance Squad is performing and after Dade and Kate gain access to their space, they manage to convince Razor and Blade to join them in disrupting The Gibson enough that the garbage file can be located and copied. Lord Nikon and Cereal Killer learn through their Ellingson phone tap that warrants for their arrest are to be executed at 9AM the next day, and have to hurry up before that time.

The next morning, after being paged by Kate, Nikon and Cereal roller-blade from Washington Square Park, evading the Secret Service with a bug that reconfigures traffic lights and converge on Grand Central station, where they use payphones and acoustic couplers to begin their assault on the Gibson. At first, their attempts are easily rebuffed by Plague, who calls Dade to warn him to escape before he is arrested. However, Razor and Blade have contacted hackers around the world, who lend their support with virus attacks, hampering the Gibson and distracting Plague long enough for Dade to download the incriminating file to a floppy disk.

Shortly after crashing the Gibson, Dade and company are arrested. As they're being led away, Dade surreptitiously informs Cereal Killer, hiding in the crowd, that he's tossed the disk in a trashcan. As Dade and Kate are being interrogated, Razor and Blade jam the local television signals and broadcast live video of Cereal Killer, revealing the plot and Plague's complicity, along with the account number with the stolen funds. Plague is arrested while attempting to flee to Japan under the alias "Mr. Babbage." Their names cleared, Dade and Kate go on a date at a swimming pool on the roof of a building, their friends showing off their latest hack—the lights in several adjacent office buildings spelling out "CRASH AND BURN."

Cast

Production

Screenplay

The screenplay, written by Rafael Moreu, is highly inspired by the hacker and cyberpunk subcultures.[5] He saw the film as more than just about computer hacking but something much larger: "In fact, to call hackers a counterculture makes it sound like they're a transitory thing; I think they're the next step in human evolution."[6] He had been interested in hacking since the early 1980s. After the crackdown in the United States during 1989 and 1990, he decided to write a script about the subculture. For research, Moreu went to a meeting organized by the New York-based hacker magazine 2600: The Hacker Quarterly. There, he met Phiber Optik, a.k.a. Mark Abene, a 22-year-old hacker who spent most of 1994 in prison on hacking charges.[6] Moreu also hung out with other young hackers being harassed by the government and began to figure out how it would translate into a film. He remembered, "One guy was talking about how he'd done some really interesting stuff with a laptop and payphones and that cracked it for me, because it made it cinematic".[6] The character Eugene Belford uses Babbage as a pseudonym at the end of the film, a reference to Charles Babbage, an inventor of an early form of the computer. The fictional computer mainframe named the "Gibson" is a homage to cyberpunk author William Gibson and originator of the term "Cyberspace" in his 1982 book Neuromancer.

Pre-production

The cast spent three weeks learning how to type, rollerblade and got to know each other. They also read a lot about computers and met with actual computer hackers.[7] Actor Jonny Lee Miller even attended a hacker's convention.[8]

Shooting

The school scenes were filmed in Stuyvesant High School and the surrounding areas in the TriBeCa and East Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in November 1994. Many scenes included real school seniors as extras.[9][10]

Post-production

Softley did not use CGI for any of the sequences in cyberspace. He said they used "more-conventional methods of motion control, animation, models, and rotoscoping to create a real, three-dimensional world, because... computer graphics alone can sometimes lend a more flat, sterile image."[5] Psygnosis created the CGI for the arcade game sequence.[11]

Shortly after the filming ended, Jonny Lee Miller and Angelina Jolie were married, and after divorcing, remain good friends.

Marketing

MGM/UA set up a website for Hackers that soon afterwards was allegedly hacked by a group called the "Internet Liberation Front." A photograph of the film's stars Angelina Jolie and Jonny Lee Miller were doodled upon, and the words "this is going to be an entertaining fun promotional site for a movie," were replaced with "this is going to be a lame, cheesy promotional site for a movie!" The studio maintained the site during the theatrical run of the movie in its altered form.[5][12][13]

The movie poster shows Acid Burn and Crash Override with various words and ASCII symbols transposed on their faces, with the words:

  • Hacker names from the movie, including Lord Nikon, Acid Burn, and Crash Override.
  • Most commonly used passwords, noted by Plague, such as God, Sex, Love, and Secret.
  • Phreak, a "phone freak" hacker whose specialty is telephone systems, with the main Phreaker in the hacker group Phantom Phreak.

Soundtrack

The music soundtrack combines electronica, pulsating tribal rhythms and techno/house music of early hardcore groups like Prodigy, Underworld and Orbital. Extremely popular with 4.5 of 5 stars from 48 reviewers,[14] it was released in 3 separate volumes over a number of years. The first volume was composed entirely of music featured in the film (with the exception of Carl Cox's "Phoebus Apollo"), while the second and third are a mix of music "inspired by the film" as well as music actually in the film. The most featured song in the movie is "Voodoo People" by The Prodigy.

Some tracks are by Guy Pratt. According to Pratt on Twitter,[15] they feature an uncredited guitar performance by David Gilmour.

Hackers

  1. "Original Bedroom Rockers" – Kruder & Dorfmeister
  2. "Cowgirl" – Underworld
  3. "Voodoo People" – The Prodigy
  4. "Open Up" – Leftfield (featuring John Lydon)
  5. "Phoebus Apollo" – Carl Cox
  6. "The Joker" – Josh Abrahams
  7. "Halcyon and On and On" – Orbital
  8. "Communicate" (Headquake Hazy Cloud Mix) – Plastico
  9. "One Love" – The Prodigy
  10. "Connected" – Stereo MCs
  11. "Eyes, Lips, Body" (Mekon Vocal Mix) – Ramshackle
  12. "Good Grief" – Urban Dance Squad
  13. "Richest Junkie Still Alive" (Sank Remix) – Machines of Loving Grace
  14. "Heaven Knows" – Squeeze

Hackers 2: Music from and Inspired by the Original Motion Picture 'Hackers'

  1. "Firestarter" (Empirion mix) – The Prodigy
  2. "Toxygene" – The Orb
  3. "Little Wonder" (Danny Saber Dance Mix) – David Bowie
  4. "Fire" – Scooter
  5. "Narcotic Influence 2" – Empirion
  6. "Remember" – BT
  7. "Go" – Moby
  8. "Inspection" (Check One) – Leftfield
  9. "Cherry Pie" – Underworld
  10. "To Be Loved" (Disco Citizens R&D Edit) [Mix] – Luce Drayton
  11. "Speed Freak" (Moby Remix) – Orbital
  12. "Get Ready to Bounce" (Radio Attack) – Brooklyn Bounce
  13. "Off Shore" (Disco Citizens Edit) – Chicane
  14. "Original" – Leftfield

Hackers 3

  1. "Why Can't It Stop" – Moby
  2. "Godspeed" (BT Edit Mix) – BT
  3. "Absurd" (Whitewash Mix) – Fluke
  4. "Quiet Then" – Cloak
  5. "I Am Fresh" – Monkey Mafia
  6. "Phuture 2000" (radio edit) – Carl Cox
  7. "An Fhomhair" – Orbital
  8. "Fashion" (Ian Pooley Mix) – Phunky Data
  9. "Psychopath" (Leftfield Mix) – John Lydon
  10. "Stop & Panic" – Cirrus
  11. "Strong in Love" – Chicane
  12. "Hack the Planet" – Brooklyn Bounce
  13. "Diskette" – Simon Boswell
  14. "Launch Divinci" – Simon Boswell

Additional information

Songs featured in the film but not appearing on any soundtracks:

  • "Connection" – performed by Elastica
  • "Real Wild Child" – written by Johnny O'Keefe, Johnny Greenan and 'Dave Owen (VIII)' (as Dave Owens)
  • "Protection" – performed by Massive Attack
  • "Combination" – performed by Guy Pratt
  • "Grand Central Station" – performed by Deep Cover

Reception

Hackers earned mixed reviews. Some critics praised the film for its stylish visuals but criticized its unconvincing look at hackers and their subculture. Roger Ebert gave the film three out of four stars and wrote, "The movie is smart and entertaining, then, as long as you don't take the computer stuff very seriously. I didn't. I took it approximately as seriously as the archeology in Indiana Jones".[16] On the show Siskel & Ebert, Ebert gave the film thumbs up while Gene Siskel gave the film thumbs down, saying, "I didn't find the characters that interesting and I really didn't like the villain in this piece. I thought Fisher Stevens was not very threatening... The writing is so arch".[17]

In his review for the San Francisco Chronicle, Peter Stack wrote, "Want a believable plot or acting? Forget it. But if you just want knockout images, unabashed eye candy and a riveting look at a complex world that seems both real and fake at the same time, Hackers is one of the most intriguing movies of the year".[18]

USA Today gave the film three out of four stars and Mike Clark wrote, "When a movie's premise repels all rational analysis, speed is the make-or-break component. To its credit, Hackers recalls the pumped-up energy of Pump Up the Volume, as well as its casting prowess".[19] In his review for the Toronto Star, Peter Goddard wrote, "Hackers joy-rides down the same back streets Marlon Brando did in The Wild One, or Bruce Springsteen does in Born To Run. It gives all the classic kicks of the classic B-flicks, with more action than brains, cool hair and hot clothes, and all the latest tech revved to the max".[20]

Chicago Reader critic Jonathan Rosenbaum noted that, "Without being any sort of miracle, this is an engaging and lively exploitation fantasy-thriller about computer hackers, anarchistic in spirit, that succeeds at just about everything "The Net" failed to—especially in representing computer operations with some visual flair."[21]

The Los Angeles Times David Kronke wrote, "imagination of Rafael Moreu, making his feature screenwriting debut, and director Iain Softley...piles on the attitude and stylized visuals, no one will notice just how empty and uninvolving the story really is".[22] In his review for the Washington Post, Hal Hinson wrote, "As its stars, Miller and Jolie seem just as one-dimensional—except that, in their case, the effect is intentional".[23] Entertainment Weekly gave the film a "D" rating and Owen Gleiberman wrote, "the movie buys in to the computer-kid-as-elite-rebel mystique currently being peddled by magazines like Wired".[24]

The film has a metascore of 46 by critics, with a 6.1/10 by users on Metacritic[25] and a 34% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 41 reviews.[26]

See also

References

  1. Hackers Poster. IMP Awards Gallery. Retrieved 2010-07-08.
  2. "Hackers at Box Office Mojo". Retrieved May 20, 2012. 
  3. http://www.avclub.com/articles/hackers-may-have-been-of-its-time-but-it-was-also,72249/
  4. Hackers (1995) - Trivia. IMDb. Retrieved 2010-09-06.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Hackers MGM DVD 8-page booklet featuring trivia, production notes and a revealing look at the making of the film.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 McClellan, Jim (January 8, 1995). "Cyberspace: The Hack Pack". The Observer. 
  7. "Jonny Lee Miller and Angelina Jolie - The Happy Couple". Empire. June 1996. 
  8. Penfold, Phil (May 3, 1996). "Good Work If You Can Hack It". The Herald. 
  9. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113243/trivia?ref_=tt_trv_trv
  10. "Stuyvesant High School Alumni Association, Inc. - SHS | Stuyvesant High School". SHSAA. 2006-05-06. Retrieved 2010-04-16. 
  11. Yin-Poole, Wesley (22 March 2013). "WipEout: The rise and fall of Sony Studio Liverpool". Eurogamer. Gamer Network. Retrieved 22 March 2013. 
  12. Hacked website at the Wayback Machine (archived February 29, 2000) - Original MGM/UA website after defacement by the Internet Liberation Front
  13. Original MGM/UA website at the Wayback Machine (archived December 1, 1998)
  14. http://www.amazon.com/Hackers/product-reviews/B000005OMF/ref=dp_top_cm_cr_acr_txt/178-3446728-1440000?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1
  15. "believe it or not David!" in reply to "who did the David'esque guitars on't 'Hackers' OST?"
  16. Ebert, Roger (September 15, 1995). "Hackers". Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  17. Gene Siskel & Roger Ebert (September 15, 1995). Siskel & Ebert At The Movies: Hackers (Television Production). Chicago, IL: Buena Vista Television. Retrieved 2010-04-23. 
  18. Stack, Peter (September 15, 1995). "Hackers Computes Visually". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  19. Clark, Mike (September 15, 1995). "Hackers accesses thrills". USA Today. pp. 4D. 
  20. Goddard, Peter (September 16, 1995). "Great road movie for info highway". Toronto Star. pp. C8. 
  21. http://www.metacritic.com/movie/hackers/critic-reviews
  22. Kronke, David (September 15, 1995). "Hackers: World of Hip Computer Nerds". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  23. Hinson, Hal (September 15, 1995). "Hackers". Washington Post. Retrieved 2009-09-02. 
  24. Gleiberman, Owen (October 6, 1995). "Hackers". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 2010-05-25. 
  25. Hackers. Metacritic. Retrieved 2010-04-20.
  26. Hackers. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2013-08-11.

External links

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