Matrix Triology

A computer hacker learns from mysterious rebels about the true nature of his reality and his role in the war against its controllers.

The girl with the dragon tatoo

A journalist is aided in his search for a woman who has been missing -- or dead -- for forty years by a young female hacker...

Mission Impossible 4 - Ghost Protocol

The IMF is shut down when it's implicated in the bombing of the Kremlin, causing Ethan Hunt and his new team to go rogue to clear their organization's name...

Pirates of Silicon Valley

This is the flawed storytelling of how Apple and Microsoft came to be.

Tron Legacy

The son of a virtual world designer goes looking for his father and ends up inside the digital world that his father designed..

Freedom Downtime (2001)


Freedom Downtime is a 2001 documentary film sympathetic to the convicted computer hacker Kevin Mitnick, directed by Emmanuel Goldstein and produced by 2600 Films.

The documentary centers on the fate of Mitnick, who is claimed to have been misrepresented in the feature film Takedown (2000) produced by Miramax and adapted from the book by the same name by Tsutomu Shimomura and John Markoff, which is based on disputed events.

In June 2004 a DVD was released, including three hours of extra footage, an interview with Kevin Mitnick in January 2003 (shortly after his supervised release ended), and various DVD eggs. It also includes subtitles in 20 languages, provided by volunteers.



Swordfish (2001)

Swordfish is a 2001 crime-thriller film, directed by Dominic Sena and starring John Travolta, Hugh Jackman, Halle Berry, Don Cheadle and Vinnie Jones. The film is an action thriller that was also notable for Halle Berry's first topless scene.[2] The film centers around Stanley Jobson, a ex-con computer hacker who is targeted for recruitment into a bank robbery conspiracy because of his formidable hacking skills.



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Antitrust (2001)

Antitrust (also titled Conspiracy.com[4] and Startup[5]) is a 2001 thriller film written by Howard Franklin and directed by Peter Howitt.[1][2]
Antitrust portrays young idealistic programmers and a large corporation (NURV) that offers significant money, a low-keyed working environment, and creative opportunities for those talented programmers willing to work for them. The charismatic CEO of NURV (Robbins) seems to be good natured, but recent employee and protagonist Milo Hoffman (Phillippe) begins to unravel the terrible hidden truth of NURV's operation



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