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Hackers is a 1995 film that follows the misfortunes of the young hackers Dade Murphy ('Crash Override'/'Zero Cool', played by Jonny Lee Miller), Kate Libby ('Acid Burn', played by Angelina Jolie) and their friends. It was written by Rafael Moreu and directed by Iain Softley. The movie failed to make a profit at the box office but has developed a cult following from its video release. It contains numerous inaccuracies, among them that metaphorical and graphical sequences are used as a substitute for the real actions involved in hacking and systems administration. It is the first major film to star future Academy Award winner Angelina Jolie, and helped to launch the career of Matthew Lillard.
Plot summaryIn 1988, Seattle youth Dade "Zero Cool" Murphy (Jonny Lee Miller) is arrested and charged, at the age of 11, with crashing 1,507 systems in one day and causing a single day 7 point drop in the New York Stock Exchange. Upon conviction he is banned from owning or operating computers or touchtone telephones until his 18th birthday. Shortly before Dade turns 18 his divorced mother Lauren Murphy (Alberta Watson) takes a new job in New York City. Upon turning 18 Dade calls a local television station, dupes the security guard into giving him the modem's phone number (using a tactic known as social engineering) and successfully hacks into the station's computer network, changing the current television program to an episode of The Outer Limits. However, Dade - now calling himself 'Crash Override' - is attacked by hacker 'Acid Burn' on the same network and is eventually kicked off. Dade enrolls in the prestigious Stuyvesant High School where he meets the beautiful Kate Libby (Angelina Jolie) who is responsible for taking him on a tour of the school. After being told of a 'pool on the roof' (which results in Dade and several other students being locked on the roof during a rainstorm) a feud erupts between Dade and Kate. This feud, which spans most of the movie, is umpired by Kate and Dade's mutual friends in the hacking community, Emmanuel Goldstein a.k.a. Cereal Killer (Matthew Lillard), Ramon Sanchez a.k.a. Phantom Phreak (Renoly Santiago), and Paul Cook a.k.a. Lord Nikon (Laurence Mason). The real trouble erupts when Joey Pardella (Jesse Bradford), the younger, novice hacker of the group, successfully breaks into the supercomputer of a petroleum company, Ellingson Mineral Corporation, to prove to the rest of the clique that he is more than a mere script kiddie. In order to validate this feat, he downloads part of a garbage file. Unfortunately, the company's IT staff detect this unauthorized entry into their systems and summon computer security expert Eugene "The Plague" Belford (Fisher Stevens), himself an amoral Greyhat hacker, to deal with the problem. After investigating the matter, however, The Plague realizes that the seemingly innocuous file that was downloaded is more than just a garbage file - he himself has been using it as a hidden location from which he has been running an illegal program for years, stealing money from the company via salami slicing. Knowing a hacker would instantly recognize the tricks of the trade and his otherwise cleverly disguised handiwork, The Plague resolves to cover his tracks. He creates an insidious virus "The DaVinci Virus" (parodying the real life Michelangelo Virus) and installs it across Ellingson's entire network, then enlists the Secret Service to arrest Joey, dismantle his equipment and confiscate the file for him. In order to "motivate" Ellingson and the Secret Service in this matter, The Plague's virus leaves a message: unless Ellingson allocates five million US dollars into a numbered bank account within a week, the virus will capsize a large portion of Ellingson's automated tanker fleet, causing a global ecological catastrophe. The full source code for the virus, The Plague claims, is located in the file, and he will need it in order to track down and fully disable the virus that Joey allegedly distributed throughout the system. When the file is not found, however, due to some quick thinking on Joey's behalf, he is released pending a trial regarding the many other illegal warez discovered in his possession. He brings the disk (hidden in a cigarette carton in the ceiling grating of his bedroom) to Phantom Phreak. Phreak realizes that Joey is being watched by Secret Service agents and both flee. Knowing he will probably also be arrested, Phreak hides the disk, then later calls Kate from jail and pleas for her to do whatever possible to figure out what's on the disk so they can clear their names. Kate and Dade put their competition on hold as Dade, Kate, Cereal Killer and Lord Nikon attempt to decipher Joey's garbage file. However, after Kate asks Dade to make a copy of the disk, Plague demands his file back, threatening to change Dade's mother's criminal records to include drug offenses and parole violation, so that she will be arrested and incarcerated without trial, and then change them back, effectively making her "disappear." Dade reluctantly complies. After a marathon midnight brainstorming session, Dade, Kate, Nikon and Cereal Killer have figured out what the file contains: portions of the source code to a computer worm, planted within the Ellingson computer system, that has been stealing a few cents from each transaction Ellingson makes. At this point, the worm has stolen over $21 million. Upon realizing that in order to clear Joey and Phreak, they need to know who planted the worm, at which point Dade reveals that he knows that Plague is behind it, that he gave him the disk, and that Plague came to him because Dade, as Zero Cool, was his first suspect. Desperate to stop Plague's plans, Dade plans to hack into Ellingson's Gibson supercomputer where the file is believed to have originated. Dade and Kate raid Ellingson's dumpster for discarded Ellingson memos to collect passwords, Cereal Killer poses as a telecom worker to install a wiretap, and Nikon poses as a delivery boy and wanders into Ellingson's cube farm, memorizing passwords as workers type them in. While listening in on the wiretap, they discover that Plague has told the Secret Service that Ellingson has been hacked again, and subsequently the four of them are scheduled to be arrested at nine the following morning. Trying to get more help, they ask for aid from hacker personalities Razor and Blade, who run a late-night pirate TV show entitled "Hack the Planet." They tell Kate and Dade that they will need more than just a pair of media icons; they will need a vast hacker army. The next morning, the four of them make their way to Grand Central Station, but not before first causing a multi-car accident that keeps the Secret Service at bay. Plague, meanwhile, has been made aware of their attempts and begins fending off their virus attacks. Plague calls Dade to tell him that he has traced their calls and sent the Secret Service to Grand Central, and warns him to flee if he wants to avoid jail. Dade rebuffs him, and Plague severs Dade's connection. Just in time, however, Razor and Blade's "hacker army" arrives, as hackers from around the world begin launching viruses at the Gibson. Joey finds the original file, copies it and then the collective hackers crash the Gibson. Just then, Dade and company are arrested. Dade surreptitiously throws the new disk in the trash, and yelling, "They're TRASHING our rights!" informs Cereal Killer, hiding amongst the crowd, where the disk is hidden. As Richard Gill prepares to give another press conference, his feed is cut, and his image is replaced with that of Cereal Killer, who reveals the entire plot: the Da Vinci virus is nothing more than a ruse, to distract from the $25 million Plague was stealing from the company. Plague attempts to escape incognito, posing as Charles Babbage, but he is arrested aboard a flight to Tokyo. Finally in the clear, Dade and Kate go on a date together, and "Mess with the Best, Die like the Rest," as were the terms if Dade had won their contest. They sneak onto a pool on the roof of a skyscraper, where they see the lights on several neighboring skyscrapers spell out "Crash and Burn." BackgroundThe protagonist, Zero Cool, is based on Robert Tappan Morris. The film quotes the Hacker Manifesto (written by Loyd Blankenship, also known as The Mentor) from Phrack magazine, issue 07, file 03 in 1986. In the film, the character reading the manifesto was holding a copy of 2600 magazine, not Phrack. Also, the name of one character, Emmanuel Goldstein ("Cereal Killer"), is borrowed from the pseudonym of Eric Corley, one of the editors of 2600 (Corley got the name from George Orwell's 1984). Corley helped advise the filmmakers on the hacker subculture, but remains a critic of the film's accuracy. The film also makes a brief allusion to the Macintosh's launch phrase as Phreak exclaims "Yo...this is 'insanely great,' it's got a 28.8 bps [sic] modem!" upon seeing Kate's new laptop during the party. The racing game briefly featured in the movie was a video prototype created during development of Wipeout. The movie also includes a fictional pirate television show called Hack the Planet. Film notes
SoundtrackLabel: Edel America Tracks
Non released tracksSome musical pieces were not released on the official soundtrack, but do make a significant impact on the movie, such as the 'worm hacking' scene and the music around and in Grand Central Station
Soundtrack: Hackers 2Full Title Hackers 2: Music From and Inspired by the Original Motion Picture Tracks (from Hackers 2)
Soundtrack: Hackers 3Full Title Hackers 3: Music From and Inspired by the Original Motion Picture Tracks (from Hackers 3)
Also SeeReferencesExternal links
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Mercedes Car
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