This movie is pure kino. Killer soundtrack. Killer visuals. Costume design on point. Perfect amount of camp, never takes it self too serious or gets too ridiculous.
Crazy what happened to Phantom Phreak in the movie "Daylight." And Cereal Killer gets moved to Utah, Utah!@#!, in the movie "SLC Punk." At least now he has grass to mow?
As someone with a background in IT, I can't even begin to explain how much easier my professional life became once I started wearing rollerskates, fingerless gloves, and sunglasses
This movie turned me and my friends in middle school into social engineers. After this we were trying that recordning the phone tones trick (even though none of us really had any reason to make long distance calls) one friend was phishing for AOL passwords, trying to get free pizzas, etc. Those early days of the internet felt like a new wild west.
The nostalgia feels.... i used a radio shack talking picture frame for my red box. One day in '97 i got busted on rollerblades beige-boxing a call to canada from a junction box between 2 commercial buildings. Cops couldnt figure out what i was doing so i spent the night in jail for loitering. I phreaked calls from the holding cell all night to a buddy's pager sending him 3 digit ascii codes to spell out where i was and what was going on. I thought for sure i was going to leavenworth for that adventure but the judge was equally techno-ignorant so i got 2 years informal probation and a 6000 dollar fine. Most expensive free phone call i ever made. Hack the planet!
Jolie was a revelation to 15 year old me. Since the only way to really see her back then was to watch Hackers over and over, I watched Hackers over and over.
I think my favorite thing about the movie is how endearingly weird the ensemble is. They're weird characters in a scene where being weird and different is celebrated, rather than the normal "they're nerds and nerds are weird, so let's laugh derisively at them".
seriously agree! the whole cast even the villains are prefect for this movie. I'm not sure how it happened but all the actors have great chemistry as well.
I kinda agree with you but I don't see Wargames as a "hacker" movie it seems more AI to me. But Hackers, Sneakers, The Net and possibly Swordfish with an honorable mention???
@@hawktriad oh yes, I forgot about Swordfish and The Net! I like those hacker movies, too! Thank you for reminding me! I think Wargames is classified as a hacker movie because David is the main character and his characteristics and behavior are what define and drive the movie. The rogue AI Joshua is a supporting character (or maybe even plot device?) that wasn’t active until David hacked in and started playing war games. But I could be mistaken.
Hackers and Sneakers for sure. Swordfish and the Net weren't really in the same league. Swordfish at least tried though! I'd love an obscene 7 monitor desk set up. There aren't many heist style hacker movies made anymore. It plays a role in the Mission Impossible movies. It's really hard to make hacking visually interesting (the movie Hackers did that ... but only by being utterly insane and divorced from the reality of hacking). Maybe... Enemy Of The State? Maybe? Also another 90s movie. I don't know if I'd count it as a hacking movie though (there's a Gene Hackman pun in there somewhere). Hacking adjacent ... like Wargames. The first 20 minutes of the movie The Matrix? Edit - Just finished the video. I forgot about the series Mr Robot (which they showed). That show is phenomenal and hacking is very central and they do have very heist like things going on with some of the plot points.
Hackers is my second favourite movie of all time. Like said in the video, it inspired the young teen I was at the time to pursue an interest in computers and technology and drove the career I'm in today. But besides my career path, the soundtrack also played a large role in my life as the catalyst to a burgeoning obsession with electronic music that was on the fringe of popular music at the time in Canada. I had watched and rewatched Hackers with friends up until our mid 20s, and I continue to watch it every couple of months after ripping a DVD copy to watch on my phone at any moment. This copy has saved me numerous times. Listening along to the movie during a long stint in traffic late last year, I rattled off line after line as if I were each character in the show. I cannot articulate how important this movie is to me, and how much I love it. Thank you for doing the film justice rather than knocking it's unauthentic yet artful representation of hacking!
> Fast and The Furious did for street racing Kill it off considering the Fast and Furious movies aren't about Street Racing? x3 Honestly only Tokyo Drift is worthwhile to watch for actually having more of a focus in, street racing.
At around 14 min, it was mentioned that they wanted to show how hacking felt on the screens, and not just text. Many people I knew criticized the lack of "actual" hacking in place for this visual. I always told people that I interpreted that as how it feels when hacking, based on my own experiences hacking and learning. It's awesome to hear that is what was actually meant by the creators. Just another reason why I love this movie!
Ghost in the Shell is one of the best depictions of future internet/cyber tech. I wish it got more love. Even the followup movies/shows were great (except the latest 2045 or whatever - the 3D animation and voice acting were really bad).
The funny thing, that as far as actual life goes with all virtual reality (currently is more-less dead now), the "Mnemonic" is became same retro-futuristic, as Gilliam's "Brazil"
Hackers is still to this day in my top 5 favorite movies of all time. Absolutely love this film! Just watched it earlier this week, they just put in on one of the streaming services I have
I went to watch Hackers at the mall on its second week high on LSD. Mind blown and deeply in love with a B-movie actress named Angelina. What's even crazier is that I saw it with 2 defense information specialists from Quantico who not only loved it as well, but were also tripping balls.
Wauw whished I had that experience that must have been freaking awesome. Great life choice - was it the start of more great life choices? I remember watching it as a kid on tv ~1997 I was blown away and realised much of it was actually possible. Laughed my balls of with "the pool on the roof must have a leak". Inspired me to start a carreer in software and got a bachelor of CS.
Seeing them going through reams of perforated paper printouts was so nostalgic to me. It reminded me of when I would fire up the dot matrix and print out computer files in hexi-decimal and scour them looking for any chain of values that coincided with whatever information I was looking for. Then editing those chains to change values in the program. I wouldn't have called myself a "hacker" as I don't think I knew anywhere near enough to be that. I just knew enough to play around with it. I ended up going more in to the hardware side when 486's became so common and parts to build much more affordable. I still do my own systems today. Today it's easier in some ways since you don't have a bunch of jumpers to set up on the MB for the various processors, ram and such. Back when Cyrix was making PC processors.
Love, love, love this movie. I’ve worn out two different VHS tapes and am on my second DVD since it’s arrival. Still love this movie over 20 years later. Fantastic actors were chosen. Still an awesome movie to watch today.
This was the film that introduced me to the world of IT. Now, years later I still work with IT as digital data analyst & cloud architect. All thanks to this llitle, strange movie.
The only "guilty pleasures" are those that'll land you with potential prison time. Everything else is just a pleasure, and the rest of the world be damned ;-).
This movie in 1995, through 2001 with "Swordfish" is the golden age of movies during the dark age of the internet/social media lol. Both flicks have great techno soundtracks and I was OBSESSED with that kind of music during that era (and not just the popular techno music on the radio at the time either. I used to find this stuff wherever I could back then).
The Swordfish soundtrack is still one of the best electronic albums I own. Paul Oakenfold did amazing things with that soundtrack. Including a remix of the Grease theme when John Travolta came onscreen th-cam.com/video/ns-M_nKjcDQ/w-d-xo.html
I remember seeing this during its (apparently very short) theatrical run! My friends and I loved it and quoted it endlessly... no surprise, as we were 100% the target audience ("geeky"/intelligent teenagers, early adopters of computers and the internet... the kinds of guys who would discuss phreaking ideas over a BBS and then actually build a blue box and try to make long distance calls with it on a payphone at the local mall).
Hack the planet!!!! I love this movie. The soundtrack is killer. This is one of the films that made me wanna move to NYC. The beginning when the city turns into a motherboard always made me smile. They finally released the score soundtrack not too long ago with the finale music when they're a grand central station. Prior you had to have rip it from the credits. This is also when I realized fisher stevens was the same guy from mario and short circuit...and he wasn't Indian 😂
The closest to get to those parties as far as I know was the NASA parties and the tunnel with a mini skate ramp park on one the floors and at marks place and just some people lived rent free cuz of this knowledge those were the days. The wiz previewed that game he beats Jolie in. lol
NYC isn't a motherboard it is a disease. Throbbing and pulsing with tendrils extending out from it on the ground and in the air. Taking and spreading, ebb and flow. A malignant cancer upon the land.
During my degree in computer science starting in 1998, it was pretty much everyone's favourite film, there were quite alot of people who decided to become IT professional because of that film. Yes I laughed at the Hacking graphics but once you get the mindset that we are visualising the mind of a teenage hacker, then it makes a bit more sense, quite brilliant actually.
As I was one of those teenagers who fell in love with the movie when it came out and continues to love it to this day: thank you for making this video.
I unashamedly loved this movie and still do. At the time, I was renting a room and the owner of the house wasn't about to "put internet on the phone" (let me use the landline for dialup). So I went out and got an IT job with a local ISP and paid for a 2nd landline into my room. So thankful for growing up on the frontier of a new age.
The movie was just so immensely stylish and cool, the soundtrack was awesome and it's style and story just hit my nerve as a rebellious teen back then. I still love it to this day and watch it at least twice a year 🤘
This is one of my favorite films next to War Games with Matthew Broderick. Thanks for this video.... It's nice to get the behind the scenes info on how the film was cast and eventually produced.
The first time I saw Hackers was at a Thanksgiving dinner at my cousin's place. It just happened to be on HBO that night. My brother was already a fan of the film and had a huge crush on Angelina Jolie. I remembered not only how cool it looked, but also how fun it made computers look. When I bought the movie on DVD almost a decade later, I was hooked. A screenshot of the mainframe became my wallpaper, and I ended up looking up all of the "crayola" books and downloaded their respective pdf files, minus the NSA book, of course. Hackers was the movie that got me into computer hardware and software, and it will always be one of my favorite movies.
Wait it's on prime right now? Cause It's a movie that I always go to try and find but it's surprisingly hard to a lot of times at least streaming.I'm watch it as soon as I get home from work if it's on prime though.
Jolie was cool back then in this movie.I thought she and Jonny had incredible chemistry.Oddly enough I became aware of the concept of hacking from Tron when Flynn is trying to break into the Encom computer system.
worked with Fisher Stevens when he directed an episode of Dear Edward. It took ever fiber of my being not to bring up this movie. had no idea it had some real life links behind its creation.
I am a Gen X slacker.. I saw the movie on opening weekend.. I laughed when they bragged about having a 28.8 kilobaud modem, because at the time X2 56K modems were out, so it felt dated already.. Now I know why.. Still love the movie and the nostalgia it brings..
I love this movie so much I'm sure I've seen it over a hundred times. The soundtrack was a huge part of my teenage years it's awesome. Mess with the best, die like the rest 😎
I watched this movie when it came out. I was 13, a geek and my favorite thing in the world was my IBM 386. Needless to say, I was captured, these characters became idols for me. I started drinking Jolt and experimenting with social engineering angles. My finest moment in those days was grabbing the admin password to my schools network. I didn't do anything bad, I didn't even change my grade, I just installed some games like Duke Nukem so I had something fun to do in computer class while everyone was learning to type. I was the king of the computer geeks which was, like, 5 people including myself. But still, it was a huge promotion in my social ladder. I work in cybersecurity today. No, not the sexy red team stuff, I do digital forensics and cyber awareness training. But hey, it scratches the itch, I get paid to do it and I stay out of trouble. Don't know if I'd be doing this today if it wasn't for this film, goofy as that may sound. It left an indelible mark on my young mind portraying my computer nerd obsession as something sexy and cool. I never learned to roller blade or hooked up with Angelina Jolie, but other than that, my Hackers inspired fantasies mostly came true.
I loved it when it first came out and still love it to this day. Whenever I see in some of my streaming services I hit play and sit back and quote every line. I even have the CD's that had the music from and inspired by the movie.
Hackers, Strange Days, Johnny Mnemonic, and Virtuosity are classic movies with technology and futuristic ideology. I love them all for many different reasons. Plus, I'm into IT and computers myself. Lol!
I also love this movie. It's the reason I thought I was a L33t hacker back in the day. When all I was really doing was scamming perverts out of CC info online w/ trojans. Those weirdos bought me a lot of clothes, which got me a ton of pussy. Back when being a dork didn't mean you were into cartoons and being pegged.
That's how I came across this film too, HBO had a free weekend and I caught this film by chance. Still one of my favorite films, never gets old, very entertaining and pure 90's nostalgia.
If it wasn't for Hackers there's a decent chance I would never have gotten deep into computers, linux, programming... I'm now a software engineer, it's crazy how one epic movie can change your life.
This movie was like nothing else at the time. Halcyon at the start of the movie was perfect and ever since it reminds me of hackers. The cast worked wonders and sparked more interest in the Net. Things were so much different back then that people today on the internet wouldn't recognize it.
I have no idea why Jonny Lee Miller wasn't a much bigger star. he is greatly underutilized. imo of course. his take on a modern day Sherlock Holmes was excellent. the attorney suffering musical hallucinations from a brain tumor as Eli Stone was just as amazing.
I remember hounding the local record store for months to get the soundtrack, which eventually came out the following year, and I found out they had trouble getting it made because no record company wanted to make it. Director Iain Softley was told "They said nobody in America listens to techno, so this is just going to go over everybody’s head." Anyway that explains why the original CD looks last-minute slapped together, using weird group poses and none of the fonts or colours from the movie... only for it to go on and have two more discs released of music "inspired by" the movie, and a 25th anniversary re-release with new tracks added. Also one of the few soundtracks I can listen to from beginning to end.
The soundtrack is still absolute fire and holds up much better now than many soundtracks of the day that were full of pop songs from the time. The fact that they nailed so many bands that became huge is also a testament to how in touch the filmmakers were.
For clarification, IBM was developing a computer network, and communication between machines, well before DARPA got interested in the idea and scooped it up. So there was more history there than what was mentioned. As for the movie, while certainly a guilty pleasure, it always felt like it was written by someone who had just read a small book of 90's computer 'fun facts' and thought "No I am a programmer!", since the characters keep repeating the same 'facts' over and over again. Pretty much they know about 5 basic things and pass it as "elite" knowledge.
The scene where Dade digitally signs for the laptop The Plague sent him was pretty forthtelling of the future we were entering. Although nowadays, they just yet it on your porch. I watched this video, so I had to watch the movie, and came back to make this comment 😅
"Duck and Cover" drills happened in the 1950s. By the 1960s the reality was realized on how stupid the concept was. I highly doubt anyone was still practicing "duck and cover" in the mid 1980s.
I am in cyber security because of this movie. While I was never truly leet, I hung out with a crew who ran multiple bbs and cracked protection code for video games. These characters were as real as my friends were at the time.
visually yes, in practice no, a lot of the hacking they did in that movie was real, that one dudes name phantom phreak is a direct link to phone phreaking. not to mention them talking about security protocol handbooks.
The 3D hacking scenes in the movie have to be viewed as an artful cinematic representation of the hacking, not the literal hacking. It's art, and part of the vibe of the times. Really awesome, imo.
Considering the other ‘hacking’ movies at the time either used mostly text screens or crazy graphics in the case of Johnny Mnemonic, Hackers was visually appealing in their portrayal of hacking. Visually appealing usually wins out in movies for some reason so that was definitely a better choice for some reason 👀😂
@@FUBARGunpla In practice YES as someone with a Bachelor's degree who manages an IT department ALL of these movies are god awful and wildly unrealistic...Some writer somewhere literally just flipped through an IT for dummies book.
A few months before the movie came out, a relative on my dad's side managed to get ahold of one of the VHS copies that they would send out to theaters as a tester, for the theaters to watch and decide if they wanted to screen the movie or not. So, I had a legit VHS copy of the movie before it even was in theaters. 12 year old me loved the shit out of that movie. 39 year old me still loves it.
To me, Hackers looks like Hollywood's idea of cybercrime, totally over the top. Sneakers (1992) is a much less flashy and grounded representation of hacking. The techniques used are still valid.
This movie's soundtrack changed my life. Such a superb compilation, and that compilation took the movie to a whole other level. The chase scene where Prodigy - Voodoo people plays will always be burnt into my mind, in a good way. It still gets me pumped!
This is the best documentary about the greatest movie about hackers ever made. Not even those where Kevin Mitnik appeared nor some movie star got sucked while coding. That surely ain't real. Hackers from the 90's ate chips, drank coffee and reverse engineer server guards after office hours just for kicks. Amazing info. I've read a lot about this movie and a lot of things here where really new to me. Many many thanks to you for sharing and caring. Hack the planet!
As a '90s geek kid, growing up in a family too poor and a mom and siblings with 0 interest to have a computer, hackers was a movie that blew my mind away and in the same vein as Tron or Lawnmower Man and so many tv shows, kept me on track to eventually becoming a software dev. It kept the fire going for everything computer related up until I was old enough to buy my own shit.
I am into IT work now, and while I have never been a hacker, I always loved and respected this movie. It helped push my interest into learning more about computers and software, which is my passion today.
I was 13 when this movie came out and I was already a computer geek in middle school. After seeing it, I made my passwords and screen names some variation of Zero Cool and Crash Override. It was such a cool movie in 1995. Every weekend, my parents would take me and my sister to the local Video Tyme rental store and let us pick out one rental. I usually went for a SNES or Genesis game but once this movie hit VHS, it was my pick 3 or 4 weeks in a row. After about the 3rd or 4th time of me picking it to rent, my mom finally just bought it for me so she could stop wasting money on the rental. It was my favorite movie until 99 when The Matrix came out. And we had a computer in our house ever since I was 8 or 9. Our first one was an Apple IIe. When this movie came out, we were using a Packard Bell with Windows 3.11 for Workgroups. I spent a lot of hours on that little machine playing games and on the intetnet via Prodigy and AOL. I taught myself HTML and learned to get into places on computers and the internet that you aren't supposed to get into. 2:09 By the way, no one was practicing duck and cover drills in 1995. That was more my dad's era. The Berlin Wall came down in 89-90 so by 1995, the Cold War had been long over. The only drills we did in school were for fire and tornados. We loved the internet because it was cool, not to "block out the noise" or "as escape". It was just cool and fun. I even got a job at AOL when I graduated high school. This movie, and others like it including War Games, directly influenced my career decisions later in life. Computers were just cool, man.
Seen this movie as a child. I loved it. fell in love with computers. Never even heard of the other hacking movies. I'm thankful the movie was made and so much love was put into it.
Saw a 35mm print of it last year. The colors just pop, and add to the creative feel of the characters, like it's hand made. 35mm audio just puts you there, and makes you feel this is important, you need to listen.
One of my favorite parts of this movie are the COSTUMES. They did an absolutely incredible job on the clothes. I love that orange strap thing Dade wears on his legs.
hackers was my childhood man i was 12 when this film came out and i loved it.. it was amazing i look at it now as my education into the computer world.
love all the comments that reflect my own feelings about the film and surrounding inspirations, etc. makes me miss the days of walking into a B&N bookstore and flipping thru the new copies of 2600. and of course, the music (which I don't miss because I still constantly listen to it).
Thank you so much for creating this video. Of all the films I've ever watched. I have definitely watched Hackers the most. I'm talking mid-triple digits. And now, as an adult who also happened to study film, I can comprehend all the aspects that make this a great film. I never knew about its development and pre-production background. All I knew was that I loved this film and its soundtrack.
This movie is pure kino. Killer soundtrack. Killer visuals. Costume design on point. Perfect amount of camp, never takes it self too serious or gets too ridiculous.
It got kinda ridiculous. But I loved it back in the 90’s
Crazy what happened to Phantom Phreak in the movie "Daylight." And Cereal Killer gets moved to Utah, Utah!@#!, in the movie "SLC Punk." At least now he has grass to mow?
I love it so much
As someone with a background in IT, I can't even begin to explain how much easier my professional life became once I started wearing rollerskates, fingerless gloves, and sunglasses
Lol
So true
Is there any other way to succeed in IT?
😅 nowadays: Hoodies
Well, its all about that speed..
This movie turned me and my friends in middle school into social engineers. After this we were trying that recordning the phone tones trick (even though none of us really had any reason to make long distance calls) one friend was phishing for AOL passwords, trying to get free pizzas, etc. Those early days of the internet felt like a new wild west.
"trying that recordning the phone tones trick"
It's called Phreaking. As in The Phantom Phreak aka The King of NYNEX
like now with crypto
@@occamsrazor1285 thank you for this comment
The nostalgia feels.... i used a radio shack talking picture frame for my red box. One day in '97 i got busted on rollerblades beige-boxing a call to canada from a junction box between 2 commercial buildings. Cops couldnt figure out what i was doing so i spent the night in jail for loitering. I phreaked calls from the holding cell all night to a buddy's pager sending him 3 digit ascii codes to spell out where i was and what was going on. I thought for sure i was going to leavenworth for that adventure but the judge was equally techno-ignorant so i got 2 years informal probation and a 6000 dollar fine. Most expensive free phone call i ever made. Hack the planet!
Same!!! I recorded it on my talk boy lol 😂
Jolie was a revelation to 15 year old me. Since the only way to really see her back then was to watch Hackers over and over, I watched Hackers over and over.
I endorse that statement 😊
And that movie Gia.
@@AP-vo7hz yes
AmaIng tits
@@AP-vo7hz
GIA
unrated version
I think my favorite thing about the movie is how endearingly weird the ensemble is. They're weird characters in a scene where being weird and different is celebrated, rather than the normal "they're nerds and nerds are weird, so let's laugh derisively at them".
seriously agree! the whole cast even the villains are prefect for this movie. I'm not sure how it happened but all the actors have great chemistry as well.
They were nerds with confidence and sick style and didn’t let others get under their skin ❤
I remember explaining to friends (regarding this movie) "that's now what hacking is like, but it IS what hacking FEELS like."
100%
This is a favorite hacker movie of mine. My three favorite hacker movies are Hackers, Sneakers, and of course, Wargames. 😊
@Mr.DeStylez I also like Three Days of the Condor and The Conversation. They aren’t hacker movies but they are “hacker / phreaker adjacent”. 😂
I kinda agree with you but I don't see Wargames as a "hacker" movie it seems more AI to me. But Hackers, Sneakers, The Net and possibly Swordfish with an honorable mention???
@@hawktriad oh yes, I forgot about Swordfish and The Net! I like those hacker movies, too! Thank you for reminding me!
I think Wargames is classified as a hacker movie because David is the main character and his characteristics and behavior are what define and drive the movie. The rogue AI Joshua is a supporting character (or maybe even plot device?) that wasn’t active until David hacked in and started playing war games. But I could be mistaken.
I wish I could like this comment twice.
Hackers and Sneakers for sure. Swordfish and the Net weren't really in the same league. Swordfish at least tried though! I'd love an obscene 7 monitor desk set up.
There aren't many heist style hacker movies made anymore. It plays a role in the Mission Impossible movies. It's really hard to make hacking visually interesting (the movie Hackers did that ... but only by being utterly insane and divorced from the reality of hacking).
Maybe... Enemy Of The State? Maybe? Also another 90s movie. I don't know if I'd count it as a hacking movie though (there's a Gene Hackman pun in there somewhere). Hacking adjacent ... like Wargames.
The first 20 minutes of the movie The Matrix?
Edit - Just finished the video. I forgot about the series Mr Robot (which they showed). That show is phenomenal and hacking is very central and they do have very heist like things going on with some of the plot points.
Hackers is my second favourite movie of all time. Like said in the video, it inspired the young teen I was at the time to pursue an interest in computers and technology and drove the career I'm in today. But besides my career path, the soundtrack also played a large role in my life as the catalyst to a burgeoning obsession with electronic music that was on the fringe of popular music at the time in Canada. I had watched and rewatched Hackers with friends up until our mid 20s, and I continue to watch it every couple of months after ripping a DVD copy to watch on my phone at any moment. This copy has saved me numerous times. Listening along to the movie during a long stint in traffic late last year, I rattled off line after line as if I were each character in the show. I cannot articulate how important this movie is to me, and how much I love it.
Thank you for doing the film justice rather than knocking it's unauthentic yet artful representation of hacking!
This movie did for computer culture what Fast and The Furious did for street racing
I still love both
And excellent video!
Except street racing started in the 60s, including early movies about such sub-culture.
> Fast and The Furious did for street racing
Kill it off considering the Fast and Furious movies aren't about Street Racing? x3
Honestly only Tokyo Drift is worthwhile to watch for actually having more of a focus in, street racing.
@mrdestylezYeah we didn't have the internet in my house until 3 years later in 1998. I remember thinking how cool the internet was at 13.
@@octavius8562 I never TRY anything, I just do it. Wanna try me?
Please tell me I'm not the only one who would have rather had a Hackers X releasing this year instead of Fast X...
At around 14 min, it was mentioned that they wanted to show how hacking felt on the screens, and not just text. Many people I knew criticized the lack of "actual" hacking in place for this visual. I always told people that I interpreted that as how it feels when hacking, based on my own experiences hacking and learning. It's awesome to hear that is what was actually meant by the creators. Just another reason why I love this movie!
This is how I tried explaining it to one of my 1337 hacker friends and he just told me I was wrong and the movie is for posers. 😂
The movie would had been pretty bland if all the interaction was a command line. There had to be some liberty taken to visualize it for the masses.
It’s an art film.
2 movies sent me down my cybersecurity path. Hackers and Ghost in the Shell. I remember when both were brand new. It all seemed so magical back then.
No Wargames? 😢
@@RKingis Wargames, Sneakers etc came later.
Ghost in the Shell is one of the best depictions of future internet/cyber tech. I wish it got more love. Even the followup movies/shows were great (except the latest 2045 or whatever - the 3D animation and voice acting were really bad).
@@JustPlainRob I've only seen the original movie and the SAC series, which I also loved. The Laughing Man season is one of my most quotable seasons.
Same, although I'd add in Sneakers as well.
"Johnny Mnemonic is still kind of awesome" You're god damn right.
The funny thing, that as far as actual life goes with all virtual reality (currently is more-less dead now), the "Mnemonic" is became same retro-futuristic, as Gilliam's "Brazil"
Yes it is quite a good read.
You mean the matrix1.0
Abso-fraggin-lutely
One of Gibson's shortest but most engaging stories for sure.
I remember being 15 and seeing laptops for the 1st time watching Hackers...blew me away
totally
Hackers is still to this day in my top 5 favorite movies of all time. Absolutely love this film! Just watched it earlier this week, they just put in on one of the streaming services I have
jhonny lee miller should have been Anakin Skywalker, he had an established chemistry with ewan Macgregor and could pull of the silliest lines.
Yes 1,000%
It's a timeless classic
My comfort movie for sure, having a bad day? Hackers, good day? Hackers, bored? Hackers.
@@miahmc9970 hackers, biodome, the fifth element. Top 3 comfort flicks for me
You must have missed Foxfire?
I went to watch Hackers at the mall on its second week high on LSD. Mind blown and deeply in love with a B-movie actress named Angelina. What's even crazier is that I saw it with 2 defense information specialists from Quantico who not only loved it as well, but were also tripping balls.
Wauw whished I had that experience that must have been freaking awesome. Great life choice - was it the start of more great life choices?
I remember watching it as a kid on tv ~1997 I was blown away and realised much of it was actually possible. Laughed my balls of with "the pool on the roof must have a leak". Inspired me to start a carreer in software and got a bachelor of CS.
I still remember them shutting down my high school over a weekend to film a bunch of scenes for this. Good times.
This one holds up, I re-watch it every now and then. The entire movie is just a great vibe from a bygone era.
Seeing them going through reams of perforated paper printouts was so nostalgic to me. It reminded me of when I would fire up the dot matrix and print out computer files in hexi-decimal and scour them looking for any chain of values that coincided with whatever information I was looking for. Then editing those chains to change values in the program. I wouldn't have called myself a "hacker" as I don't think I knew anywhere near enough to be that. I just knew enough to play around with it. I ended up going more in to the hardware side when 486's became so common and parts to build much more affordable. I still do my own systems today. Today it's easier in some ways since you don't have a bunch of jumpers to set up on the MB for the various processors, ram and such. Back when Cyrix was making PC processors.
Love, love, love this movie. I’ve worn out two different VHS tapes and am on my second DVD since it’s arrival. Still love this movie over 20 years later. Fantastic actors were chosen. Still an awesome movie to watch today.
10:34 I love it when a deep dive into a beloved movie includes getting the main character's name wrong.
I caught that too and that I was going crazy for a sec but at least he put this video together for us which was a nice treat.
Hackers my favorite movie had it on tape and watched it hundreds of times. So much info in this video i never knew before, unreal!!!
This was the film that introduced me to the world of IT. Now, years later I still work with IT as digital data analyst & cloud architect. All thanks to this llitle, strange movie.
This is a 90's guilty pleasure for me. I love it and I love that you guys covered it.
The only "guilty pleasures" are those that'll land you with potential prison time. Everything else is just a pleasure, and the rest of the world be damned ;-).
@@nikoteardrop4904 Touche😂
A personal favorite of mine.
One of my cringe-favourites :) it’s so simultaneously lame but awesome. Even when it first came out it was cringe but we still loved it
@@creatrixZBD exactly
This movie in 1995, through 2001 with "Swordfish" is the golden age of movies during the dark age of the internet/social media lol. Both flicks have great techno soundtracks and I was OBSESSED with that kind of music during that era (and not just the popular techno music on the radio at the time either. I used to find this stuff wherever I could back then).
The Swordfish soundtrack is still one of the best electronic albums I own. Paul Oakenfold did amazing things with that soundtrack. Including a remix of the Grease theme when John Travolta came onscreen th-cam.com/video/ns-M_nKjcDQ/w-d-xo.html
I remember seeing this during its (apparently very short) theatrical run! My friends and I loved it and quoted it endlessly...
no surprise, as we were 100% the target audience ("geeky"/intelligent teenagers, early adopters of computers and the internet... the kinds of guys who would discuss phreaking ideas over a BBS and then actually build a blue box and try to make long distance calls with it on a payphone at the local mall).
Hack the planet!!!!
I love this movie. The soundtrack is killer. This is one of the films that made me wanna move to NYC. The beginning when the city turns into a motherboard always made me smile. They finally released the score soundtrack not too long ago with the finale music when they're a grand central station. Prior you had to have rip it from the credits.
This is also when I realized fisher stevens was the same guy from mario and short circuit...and he wasn't Indian 😂
Blows me away everytime I see him in Succession. It's like.. .OMG Plague became a total corporate shill.
The closest to get to those parties as far as I know was the NASA parties and the tunnel with a mini skate ramp park on one the floors and at marks place and just some people lived rent free cuz of this knowledge those were the days. The wiz previewed that game he beats Jolie in. lol
And it was today that I found out about Fisher Stevens...
NYC isn't a motherboard it is a disease. Throbbing and pulsing with tendrils extending out from it on the ground and in the air. Taking and spreading, ebb and flow. A malignant cancer upon the land.
"Ooooooo, Newton! Her pants are blazing for you!"
During my degree in computer science starting in 1998, it was pretty much everyone's favourite film, there were quite alot of people who decided to become IT professional because of that film. Yes I laughed at the Hacking graphics but once you get the mindset that we are visualising the mind of a teenage hacker, then it makes a bit more sense, quite brilliant actually.
man i loved this movie back in early 2000s, the music still makes my heart warm.
The very first VHS I purchased for myself was Sneakers. The second, Hackers. These shaped my life.
YESSSSS SNEAKERS
Sneakers definitely needs the WTF HAPPENED TO THIS MOVIE treatment 🙏
Also ahead of it's time
As I was one of those teenagers who fell in love with the movie when it came out and continues to love it to this day: thank you for making this video.
Oh Man! This will always be one of my favourite movies of all time. It came out here just when I got internet for the first time. Best memories ever.
I unashamedly loved this movie and still do. At the time, I was renting a room and the owner of the house wasn't about to "put internet on the phone" (let me use the landline for dialup). So I went out and got an IT job with a local ISP and paid for a 2nd landline into my room. So thankful for growing up on the frontier of a new age.
The movie was just so immensely stylish and cool, the soundtrack was awesome and it's style and story just hit my nerve as a rebellious teen back then. I still love it to this day and watch it at least twice a year 🤘
This is one of my favorite films next to War Games with Matthew Broderick. Thanks for this video.... It's nice to get the behind the scenes info on how the film was cast and eventually produced.
I saw it at release, and over the years I have re-watched it a few more times. Such a classic!
The first time I saw Hackers was at a Thanksgiving dinner at my cousin's place. It just happened to be on HBO that night. My brother was already a fan of the film and had a huge crush on Angelina Jolie. I remembered not only how cool it looked, but also how fun it made computers look. When I bought the movie on DVD almost a decade later, I was hooked. A screenshot of the mainframe became my wallpaper, and I ended up looking up all of the "crayola" books and downloaded their respective pdf files, minus the NSA book, of course. Hackers was the movie that got me into computer hardware and software, and it will always be one of my favorite movies.
Love this movie so much. Still absolutely 1 of my faves.
@mrdestylez it perfectly encapsulates a very specific time in culture and technology.
Did you just rewatch this on Amazon Prime as well? lol
If you were a clubber in the 90s, the soundtrack of this movie always puts a smile on my face.
Wait it's on prime right now? Cause It's a movie that I always go to try and find but it's surprisingly hard to a lot of times at least streaming.I'm watch it as soon as I get home from work if it's on prime though.
@@jlogg8738 I watched it last weekend. It was on my list of "Will watch again one day". I forgot how many good tunes were in that film.
I did - just this weekend!
Halcyon and On and On...still blast this every now and again 😁🖤.
I memorized this movie. Not sure how many times I've seen it. Bought my first 486 after seeing it. Crash and Burn!!!
The editing on this was phenomenal. One of the best JoBlo videos EVER
The visuals looked cool, they didn't need to look realistic. This was an awesome movie to watch as a teenager.
Me and my mom watched this movie a lot in the 90s. She even bought the Soundtrack.
Jolie was cool back then in this movie.I thought she and Jonny had incredible chemistry.Oddly enough I became aware of the concept of hacking from Tron when Flynn is trying to break into the Encom computer system.
worked with Fisher Stevens when he directed an episode of Dear Edward. It took ever fiber of my being not to bring up this movie. had no idea it had some real life links behind its creation.
I am a Gen X slacker.. I saw the movie on opening weekend.. I laughed when they bragged about having a 28.8 kilobaud modem, because at the time X2 56K modems were out, so it felt dated already.. Now I know why.. Still love the movie and the nostalgia it brings..
You Skolnick !!! LOL !! OMG that was fun !! Man this world is gonna suck when all of US Xers Die off LOL.
I love this movie so much I'm sure I've seen it over a hundred times. The soundtrack was a huge part of my teenage years it's awesome. Mess with the best, die like the rest 😎
I watched this movie when it came out. I was 13, a geek and my favorite thing in the world was my IBM 386.
Needless to say, I was captured, these characters became idols for me.
I started drinking Jolt and experimenting with social engineering angles. My finest moment in those days was grabbing the admin password to my schools network. I didn't do anything bad, I didn't even change my grade, I just installed some games like Duke Nukem so I had something fun to do in computer class while everyone was learning to type. I was the king of the computer geeks which was, like, 5 people including myself. But still, it was a huge promotion in my social ladder.
I work in cybersecurity today. No, not the sexy red team stuff, I do digital forensics and cyber awareness training.
But hey, it scratches the itch, I get paid to do it and I stay out of trouble.
Don't know if I'd be doing this today if it wasn't for this film, goofy as that may sound.
It left an indelible mark on my young mind portraying my computer nerd obsession as something sexy and cool.
I never learned to roller blade or hooked up with Angelina Jolie, but other than that, my Hackers inspired fantasies mostly came true.
I loved it when it first came out and still love it to this day. Whenever I see in some of my streaming services I hit play and sit back and quote every line. I even have the CD's that had the music from and inspired by the movie.
This movie embodies the 90’s- early 2000’s and brings me back before everyone became crazy
Hackers, Strange Days, Johnny Mnemonic, and Virtuosity are classic movies with technology and futuristic ideology. I love them all for many different reasons. Plus, I'm into IT and computers myself. Lol!
Yo NOBODY knows about Strange Days.
I have rocked people's worlds showing them that movie. Way too underrated imo
Strange Days lovers unite! The VR adventures of Voldemort and the queen of Wakanda is as great as Hackers.
I owned Strange Days on VHS!! Fucking love that movie
No Wargames? 😢
This is your life, right here, right now! It's real-time, you hear me, real time! Time to get real, not playback. You understand me?
It came out. It was and still is one of the greatest movies of 1995 and all of time.
I love this movie. Its one of the reasons I went into IT in the first place.
I do IT on the side as a hobby, but this movie was definitely an inspiration.
I also love this movie. It's the reason I thought I was a L33t hacker back in the day. When all I was really doing was scamming perverts out of CC info online w/ trojans. Those weirdos bought me a lot of clothes, which got me a ton of pussy. Back when being a dork didn't mean you were into cartoons and being pegged.
@@intellectic9155l33t indeed😂 that reminds me of the Malcolm in the middle ep where Craig reveals he scams pervs outta plane tickets
Still my all time favorite film! 20 years later I got to train Renoly Santiago's dogs and tell him how much I love that movie.
Such a cult film. Back around the beginning of the pandemic many fashion pages had a fanatic obsession with hackers and cyber fashion
The 90's and early 2000's had so many anti-corporate, power to the people movements. I wonder why that stopped?
This was the first movie I ever watched by myself on one of those free premium cable weekends. Changed my life for real.
That's how I came across this film too, HBO had a free weekend and I caught this film by chance. Still one of my favorite films, never gets old, very entertaining and pure 90's nostalgia.
If it wasn't for Hackers there's a decent chance I would never have gotten deep into computers, linux, programming... I'm now a software engineer, it's crazy how one epic movie can change your life.
This movie is like a warm sweater.
They pegged the lifestyle we pined for. An underground flamboyance.
It's like a thorn wooly, laced with fish hooks sweater
A great movie. Angelina and Jamie gorgeous. Changed my adolescence. The soundtrack put me into club culture until my thirties
This movie was like nothing else at the time. Halcyon at the start of the movie was perfect and ever since it reminds me of hackers. The cast worked wonders and sparked more interest in the Net. Things were so much different back then that people today on the internet wouldn't recognize it.
I have no idea why Jonny Lee Miller wasn't a much bigger star. he is greatly underutilized. imo of course.
his take on a modern day Sherlock Holmes was excellent. the attorney suffering musical hallucinations
from a brain tumor as Eli Stone was just as amazing.
I remember hounding the local record store for months to get the soundtrack, which eventually came out the following year, and I found out they had trouble getting it made because no record company wanted to make it. Director Iain Softley was told "They said nobody in America listens to techno, so this is just going to go over everybody’s head."
Anyway that explains why the original CD looks last-minute slapped together, using weird group poses and none of the fonts or colours from the movie... only for it to go on and have two more discs released of music "inspired by" the movie, and a 25th anniversary re-release with new tracks added.
Also one of the few soundtracks I can listen to from beginning to end.
The soundtrack is still absolute fire and holds up much better now than many soundtracks of the day that were full of pop songs from the time. The fact that they nailed so many bands that became huge is also a testament to how in touch the filmmakers were.
I play the soundtrack at my job from time to time, fucking love it ❤
As someone who owned all three CDs, thank you for bringing it up.
I though I so cool because I had the second disc in college. I didn’t know there was a third and now I’m sad
i will never get tired of watching this movie it slaps hard, killer soundtrack too
For clarification, IBM was developing a computer network, and communication between machines, well before DARPA got interested in the idea and scooped it up. So there was more history there than what was mentioned.
As for the movie, while certainly a guilty pleasure, it always felt like it was written by someone who had just read a small book of 90's computer 'fun facts' and thought "No I am a programmer!", since the characters keep repeating the same 'facts' over and over again. Pretty much they know about 5 basic things and pass it as "elite" knowledge.
The scene where Dade digitally signs for the laptop The Plague sent him was pretty forthtelling of the future we were entering. Although nowadays, they just yet it on your porch.
I watched this video, so I had to watch the movie, and came back to make this comment 😅
I had such a crush on Angelina in this movie. Just off the charts with that pixie look.
"Duck and Cover" drills happened in the 1950s. By the 1960s the reality was realized on how stupid the concept was. I highly doubt anyone was still practicing "duck and cover" in the mid 1980s.
Yeah we still were ESP after the movie The Day After came out . At least in Texas.
I am in cyber security because of this movie. While I was never truly leet, I hung out with a crew who ran multiple bbs and cracked protection code for video games. These characters were as real as my friends were at the time.
Probably the most unrealistic hacker movie ever…but still ‘90s nostalgia personified! Plus, the soundtrack is awesome with “Halcyon On and On”!
Prodigy too. And the score
visually yes, in practice no, a lot of the hacking they did in that movie was real, that one dudes name phantom phreak is a direct link to phone phreaking. not to mention them talking about security protocol handbooks.
The 3D hacking scenes in the movie have to be viewed as an artful cinematic representation of the hacking, not the literal hacking. It's art, and part of the vibe of the times. Really awesome, imo.
Considering the other ‘hacking’ movies at the time either used mostly text screens or crazy graphics in the case of Johnny Mnemonic, Hackers was visually appealing in their portrayal of hacking. Visually appealing usually wins out in movies for some reason so that was definitely a better choice for some reason 👀😂
@@FUBARGunpla In practice YES as someone with a Bachelor's degree who manages an IT department ALL of these movies are god awful and wildly unrealistic...Some writer somewhere literally just flipped through an IT for dummies book.
A few months before the movie came out, a relative on my dad's side managed to get ahold of one of the VHS copies that they would send out to theaters as a tester, for the theaters to watch and decide if they wanted to screen the movie or not.
So, I had a legit VHS copy of the movie before it even was in theaters. 12 year old me loved the shit out of that movie. 39 year old me still loves it.
This started my crush on Angelina Jolie. I remember being high school and and seeing the computer craze happen
To me, Hackers looks like Hollywood's idea of cybercrime, totally over the top. Sneakers (1992) is a much less flashy and grounded representation of hacking. The techniques used are still valid.
This movie's soundtrack changed my life. Such a superb compilation, and that compilation took the movie to a whole other level. The chase scene where Prodigy - Voodoo people plays will always be burnt into my mind, in a good way. It still gets me pumped!
As a child of the 70s, I always wondered how the hell ducking under our desks was going to help in the event of a nuclear attack.🙄😫🥴🤣‼️
This is the best documentary about the greatest movie about hackers ever made.
Not even those where Kevin Mitnik appeared nor some movie star got sucked while coding. That surely ain't real.
Hackers from the 90's ate chips, drank coffee and reverse engineer server guards after office hours just for kicks.
Amazing info. I've read a lot about this movie and a lot of things here where really new to me.
Many many thanks to you for sharing and caring.
Hack the planet!
As a '90s geek kid, growing up in a family too poor and a mom and siblings with 0 interest to have a computer, hackers was a movie that blew my mind away and in the same vein as Tron or Lawnmower Man and so many tv shows, kept me on track to eventually becoming a software dev. It kept the fire going for everything computer related up until I was old enough to buy my own shit.
I am into IT work now, and while I have never been a hacker, I always loved and respected this movie. It helped push my interest into learning more about computers and software, which is my passion today.
Hackers is a classic and that will never change!
I've seen Hackers numerous times. Today I'm just finding out Special Agent Ray was played by Marc Anthony.
I was 13 when this movie came out and I was already a computer geek in middle school. After seeing it, I made my passwords and screen names some variation of Zero Cool and Crash Override. It was such a cool movie in 1995. Every weekend, my parents would take me and my sister to the local Video Tyme rental store and let us pick out one rental. I usually went for a SNES or Genesis game but once this movie hit VHS, it was my pick 3 or 4 weeks in a row. After about the 3rd or 4th time of me picking it to rent, my mom finally just bought it for me so she could stop wasting money on the rental. It was my favorite movie until 99 when The Matrix came out. And we had a computer in our house ever since I was 8 or 9. Our first one was an Apple IIe. When this movie came out, we were using a Packard Bell with Windows 3.11 for Workgroups. I spent a lot of hours on that little machine playing games and on the intetnet via Prodigy and AOL. I taught myself HTML and learned to get into places on computers and the internet that you aren't supposed to get into.
2:09 By the way, no one was practicing duck and cover drills in 1995. That was more my dad's era. The Berlin Wall came down in 89-90 so by 1995, the Cold War had been long over. The only drills we did in school were for fire and tornados. We loved the internet because it was cool, not to "block out the noise" or "as escape". It was just cool and fun. I even got a job at AOL when I graduated high school. This movie, and others like it including War Games, directly influenced my career decisions later in life. Computers were just cool, man.
Seen this movie as a child. I loved it. fell in love with computers. Never even heard of the other hacking movies. I'm thankful the movie was made and so much love was put into it.
This movie is legit why I ended up picking the career path I did !
One of my earliest childhood movies!
You say they predicted future tech, I see it as it pushed younger people to dream and make what they idolized.
Johnny Lee Miller was a 30 year old looking teenager in this movie. 😂
One of my favorite movies :) what is the background music to this video with the slow beat and synthesizers?
Absolutely one of my favorites and definitely in my top five of all time. I will watch it every time I see it on.
Saw a 35mm print of it last year. The colors just pop, and add to the creative feel of the characters, like it's hand made. 35mm audio just puts you there, and makes you feel this is important, you need to listen.
This was incredibly thorough- great work!
my start with the internet was the BBS Usenet with a 2400 baud modem.
One of my favorite parts of this movie are the COSTUMES. They did an absolutely incredible job on the clothes. I love that orange strap thing Dade wears on his legs.
hackers was my childhood man i was 12 when this film came out and i loved it.. it was amazing i look at it now as my education into the computer world.
I wasn't expecting an explanation of the TCP/IP stack.
"Hack the planet!"
love all the comments that reflect my own feelings about the film and surrounding inspirations, etc. makes me miss the days of walking into a B&N bookstore and flipping thru the new copies of 2600. and of course, the music (which I don't miss because I still constantly listen to it).
I love that period in film when no one was really sure of what computers could or couldn't do. Magic science
Thank you so much for creating this video. Of all the films I've ever watched. I have definitely watched Hackers the most. I'm talking mid-triple digits. And now, as an adult who also happened to study film, I can comprehend all the aspects that make this a great film. I never knew about its development and pre-production background. All I knew was that I loved this film and its soundtrack.
It is still one of my all-time favorite movies...
My most re-watched movie of all time, HACK THE PLANET!!!