"Kevin Mitnick è il migliore hacker in circolazione, ma anche il criminale informatico più ricercato dall'FBI. L'unico avversario al suo livello è Shimomura, ora passato dalla parte dei ""bu... Leggi tutto"Kevin Mitnick è il migliore hacker in circolazione, ma anche il criminale informatico più ricercato dall'FBI. L'unico avversario al suo livello è Shimomura, ora passato dalla parte dei ""buoni"": insieme ad un agente federale è sulle tracce di Mitnick, che deve giocare la sua ul... Leggi tutto"Kevin Mitnick è il migliore hacker in circolazione, ma anche il criminale informatico più ricercato dall'FBI. L'unico avversario al suo livello è Shimomura, ora passato dalla parte dei ""buoni"": insieme ad un agente federale è sulle tracce di Mitnick, che deve giocare la sua ultima carta..."
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
- Mitch Gibson
- (as Chris McDonald)
Recensioni in evidenza
Markoff, a hack journalist who did everything that he could to portray Kevin a danger to society in order to keep writing articles about him, has claimed wild rumors about Mitnick to be fact (rumors such as Kevin hacking into NORAD computers, harassing Christie McNickle, and converting home phones into pay phones) with no regard for the fact that he was demonizing Kevin in the eyes of society and in the eyes of a justice system - a system that would eventually lock Kevin in solitary confinement for 8 months because they were afraid he would use prison phones to launch nuclear missiles if placed in general population. Tsutomu Shimomura is nothing but a smart-ass hacker wanna-be whose main contribution to the book "Takedown" was a list of his skateboarding and eating habits.
If anyone out there really wants to learn the true Kevin Mitnick story, please view "Freedom Downtime" by Emmanuel Goldstein. [http://us.imdb.com/Title?0309614]
Whatever the accuracies of the story (and considering the egos involved, I guess we'll never know), this is a pretty riveting tale of an underground hacker playing and defeating the system. Which is all you could ever ask for in a movie. :-)
Johnny Depp lookalike Skeet Ulrich, Russell Wong, Donal Logue, Cara Buono, Amanda Peet and Angela Featherstone make this low budget movie worth while.
Whether or not the real Kevin Mitnick is a nice fellow or what he did was totally legal doesn't detract much from this ripping yarn. The production values are ok (but what would you expect from a guy who spends most of his time sitting behind a monitor in a small room?), however, the concept makes it more than worth while. Especially the "social engineering" segments are cool. Not to be missed if you're at all interested in movies about sub-cultures and the guerilla mentality.
I would say this general portrayal is unfair, and nearly propagandistic in its intent. The movie really becomes a base for expounding the moral issues of hacking and 'freedom of information' in a society that survives on security. It is a clear warning, and it does NOT favor hacking or hackers.
I am appalled by that, because a more open picture of both sides might have been painted. "Hackers" brought the world to the standards of today, and daily test the security and limits of it... likewise, "programmers" continue to strive for safety, but also encrypt for greed, control, power, and politics. It is not all back and white.
Either a hacker OR a programmer are capable of accidentally, or intentionally creating havoc in a real world of banking, traffic lights, airports, and defense systems, although the chances seem less with programmers (unless you know about "The Singularity").
All I am saying is that this movie is VERY biased against hackers, it allows them NO redeemable social attributes, and it radically stereotypes them. It is intended to PERSUADE you. THAT, I regard as a THREAT to my own individual freedom of thought, and when you cross that line... alarms go off.
BEWARE of this if you haven't seen this movie yet.
Did "Big Brother" produce this film? ("Big Brother" is a reference to George Orwell's novel "1984") Regardless, the movie has good detail within a fast-moving and captivating plot.
Lastly, NO, I am NOT pro-hacker oriented. Mitnick is clearly a criminal with a long record of convictions dating all the way back to 1981... but, I don't like being told what, or how, to think about a whole class of people.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizEditors of 2600 magazine (a hacker publication) learned of this film early in its development and were at the time campaigning for Kevin Mitnick's release from prison. They filmed the documentary "Freedom Downtime" as they tried to correct many glaring errors and personal attacks on Mitnick's character in the film, protesting outside Miramax offices in New York amongst other things.
- Citazioni
Kevin Mitnick: Why am I here and you are not?
- ConnessioniReferenced in Freedom Downtime (2001)
- Colonne sonoreThere's A Shadow
Performed by The Silos & Richard S. Butler
Written by Walter Salas-Humara, Scott Z. Burns, Richard S. Butler
Published by Lagartijo Music (BMI), Scott Z. Burns Music (BMI), Hookmeister Music (ASCAP)
Courtesy of Walter Salas-Humara
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 32 minuti
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- Mix di suoni
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- 1.85 : 1