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¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ recommends the cult film Hackers – 30 years late

The books, TV, games and more that ¿ìè¶ÌÊÓÆµ staff have enjoyed this week
2JHKP8X LAURENCE MASON, MATTHEW LILLARD, ANGELINA JOLIE, JONNY LEE MILLER, JESSE BRADFORD, HACKERS, 1995
Hackers has gained a cult following in the 30 years since its debut
Maximum Film/Alamy

Tim Boddy
Picture editor, London

It is 1995. Geocities, Yahoo! and Netscape are kings of a burgeoning internet. Spending an hour by your screeching dial-up modem on the information superhighway is thrilling. And the film Hackers is released, a psychedelic celebration of a burgeoning cyber culture.

The film wasn’t a success back then, but it has gained a cult following in the 30 years since its debut. Rewatching it recently, I found it isn’t heavy on the realism (using payphones to hack supercomputers seems a shade far-fetched).

It is, however, powered by an exhilarating techno soundtrack, a stylish cast (including a frenetic and deeply entertaining Matthew Lillard), trippy colour palettes and supremely quotable one-liners. Its 105-minute running time is a joy and a beautiful time-capsule ode to the 1990s.

It is an oddly hopeful tale of misfits, tech and activism – as opposed to the arguably dystopian disinformation superhighway we find ourselves in today.

Topics: Film / Science fiction