

But there's no question that it achieves the rare quality of transcending it's genre. In no way is this one of the greatest movies ever made. the sequence where Broderick's character gets the password for the school computer.) Hacker movies have rarely come this close to being real - and, as someone who had been there and done that at about that time, it was scarily right. new tabletop wargaming collection officially licensed by Games Workshop. Laugh at the antiquated tech by all means, but be impressed by the effort taken to make it feel believable (cf. Earn up to 10,000 Miles Book a stateroom on any SkyMiles Cruises sailing and. That spectacular (if implausible) NORAD set is as astounding as ever, and the last line still deserves it's place in the pantheon. And the last ten minutes or so are still jaw-dropping. Obviously the onward march of technology has rendered several of the central plot devices redundant (although, to be honest, most modern techno-thriller entries are far less plausible) but the sheer tension of the story grabs you almost from the off and never lets go - there aren't many genre movies that got an Oscar-nomination for screenplay, which amply demonstrates its quality. Watching this movie 25 years on, it still works.
