Plot
Angela Bennett's a software engineer type who works from home and has few friends outside of cyberspace...
Release Year: 1995
Rating: 5.7/10 (29,695 voted)
Director:
Irwin Winkler
Stars: Sandra Bullock, Jeremy Northam, Dennis Miller
Storyline Angela Bennett's a software engineer type who works from home and has few friends outside of cyberspace. Taking her first vacation in years she becomes embroiled in a web (sic) of computer espionage.
Writers: John D. Brancato, Michael Ferris
Cast: Sandra Bullock
-
Angela Bennett
Jeremy Northam
-
Jack Devlin
Dennis Miller
-
Dr. Alan Champion
Diane Baker
-
Mrs. Bennett
Wendy Gazelle
-
Ruth Marx
Ken Howard
-
Michael Bergstrom
Ray McKinnon
-
Dale Hessman
Daniel Schorr
-
WNN Anchor
L. Scott Caldwell
-
Public Defender
Robert Gossett
-
Ben Phillips
Kristina Krofft
-
Nurse #1
Juan García
-
Resort Desk Clerk
Tony Perez
-
Mexican Doctor
Margo Winkler
-
Mrs. Raines
Gene Kirkwood
-
Stan Whiteman
Taglines:
Her driver's license. Her credit cards. Her bank accounts. Her identity. DELETED.
Release Date: 28 July 1995
Filming Locations: Alameda, California, USA
Box Office Details
Budget: $22,000,000
(estimated)
Opening Weekend: $10,037,745
(USA)
(30 July 1995)
(1 Screen)
Gross: $110,627,965
(Worldwide)
Technical Specs
Runtime:
Did You Know?
Trivia:
One of the few PG-13 rated movies to use the word "fuck" in a sexual context.
Goofs:
Continuity:
It would not be as dark as shown at 7pm at Santa Monica Pier.
Quotes: Angela:
What is this? Oh my God.
User Review
25 years ago this would have been science fiction. Today it's cliché.
Rating: 6/10
Odd the way technology works. Less than a decade ago, there was this
completely different technological world, a world of pagers, floppy disks,
dial-up modems (which are as obsolete as typewriters), and gigantic
brick-like cell phones. I remember being amazed at that little tiny flap at
the bottom of the phone, as thin as a credit card and yet able to pick up
your voice and transmit it through the air. Now it's a feature so obsolete
that it may as well never have been there. Sandra Bullock plays Angela
Bennett, a lonely computer analyst who is so connected to her computer that
she sits on the beach in Mexico, on her first vacation in six years, with
her laptop on her lap. It's not only like a source of nourishment but her
connection to the world and the establishment and maintenance of her
identity.
This is where her problems begin. Like The Manchurian Candidate back in the
1960s (and again in less than a week from this writing), The Net plays on
the popular fears of the society in which it is released. The Manchurian
Candidate originally played off the fears instilled in people by the
recently ended Cold War, while The Net, a much less potent thriller,
suggests the scary possibilities of a world in which we are so inextricably
connected to computers. Probably the most interesting thing in the movie now
is the computers, such as the massive laptops with the tiny screens, the
indispensable floppy disks which are now almost nonexistent, the graphics,
etc.
Angela Bennett has had her digital identity stolen and replaced with that of
Ruth Marx, who has a lengthy police record and who thus takes over Angela's
identity. It's pretty clever, I suppose, the way the movie presents Angela
as though she hasn't left her apartment in six years and with a mother
suffering from Alzheimer's (and thus not able to help identify the real
Angela later), but it's pretty hard to believe that not a single person in
the office where she worked noticed that Angela started being a completely
different person. She had no significant other, was not dating, and no
parents who could identify her, but was she such a recluse that even the
people in the office she worked in didn't even know what she looked
like?
At any rate, the plot of the movie is pretty smartly created, although it is
created as though it were an excuse for a lot of chase scenes, one of which
takes place on a merry-go-round in a great homage to Hitchcock's Strangers
On A Train, one of the many classic films to which the movie alludes,
several of them other Hitchcock films. Bennett has been given a disk which
contains a website, I suppose, which turns out to contain a weakness in a
security system about to be set up to protect everything from banks to Wall
Street to the CIA. By holding down Control and Shift and clicking on the
little Pi icon in the corner of the screen, you are transported from a
ludicrous page about Mozart's Ghost, apparently a god-awful metal band, and
into highly classified government documents. The disk provides the bad guys
with a reason to want to capture Bennett, and thus you have a movie.
Angela goes from a comfortable but bored computer analyst, doing a lot of
her work from home and ordering pizza on the Internet at the end of the day
(presumably one of the future possibilities of the internet which never came
to exist), to a wanted fugitive, ultimately caught and put into a jail cell
for someone else's crimes. She has lost her home, her job, her identity, her
life. Bullock actually puts in a pretty good performance in the movie. I'm
not a huge fan, but I appreciated the realness that her character had, since
she is not an over the top actor, her characters are generally very real
because she is as well.
Where the movie trips up is that it tries to suggest that such identity
theft could happen to anyone in our technological age, but given the effort
put into presenting Angela as someone with no personal contacts with just
about anyone, really it could only happen to someone like Angela, and are
there really that many people that no one can identify by looks? Even the
guy at the local video store might recognize her as the lady who rents under
her account. Oh well. There's also a glitch in the end of the movie that
Mick LaSalle points out and that only people familiar with San Francisco,
where the climax of the film takes place, will notice. As Angela rushes
through a Macintosh exhibition at the real Moscone Center, she desperately
tries to copy all the computer files before the bad guys get her. Pretty
tense, but if she had been smart, she could have gone to The San Francisco
Chronicle office, which is a block down the street from the Moscone
Center.
But hey, maybe the Chronicle doesn't have high enough walkways out
back.
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