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I would mostly credit the cast with the “why” of this film’s likeability. The ensemble works very well together, creating dynamic and entertaining characters. Jonny Lee Miller has long been an actor I keep an out for; it’s an interest born from both Trainspotting and his role in this film. Playing Dave, alias hacker Crash Override, Miller is sarcastic, relatable, cool and dorky, all at the same time. Of course, there’s also the young Ms. Jolie, who simply smoulders on the ![]() screen. With a destructive smirk on her lips and a pixie-like hairdo, she cuts a mean figure of a cyberpunk character for the real world. With the palpable sexual tension that she and co-star Miller share, it’s no surprise they ended up getting married after filming had finished. All of this isn’t to dismiss the work of the supporting characters. Matthew Lillard tends to be a fairly divisive guy. Some people care for his neo-stoner shtick and others find that it drives them up the wall. Personally, I like the guy, and with his character Cereal Killer, he has perhaps the best venue for his film persona he’s ever had (that said, I haven’t seen either of the Scooby-Doo films, of which pretty much all I’ve heard is how good he is as Shaggy). Fisher Stevens is another guy that’s always been close to my heart, ever since I was a kid watching the Short Circuit movies (I never said I was a very discerning kid). To his credit, he takes a bizarre villain that’s clueless to how uncool he is and makes him…well, not threatening, because Stevens is so short and petulant that his villainy is like having a fourteen-year-old try to push you around…but he’s certainly funny. And that’s what Hackers is. Fun. Funny. Watching it, it seems director Iain Softley wasn’t overly concerned with accurately depicting the hacker sub-culture. Rather, he wanted to make a slick, cool film that took elements of the cyberpunk genre and grafted it onto reality. What we’re left with is a film that it’s easily the definition of a cult favourite, and something that is now, ten years later, still entertaining to watch. Unless you’re actually a hacker. Then it just pisses you off. Next week: Another dip into the Masterpiece Cinema archives. AUTHOR: Steven Lochran TAGS: Reviews world Love US style time Music Movie Reviews BOOKMARK: Digg it | Add to Del.ICIO | Add to FARK ACTIONS: Comment Save Print Register free acount |




