Friday, October 7, 2011

This movie out takes place in the present, and we learn early on that a computer named R.I.P.L.E.Y. is used to track down international terrorisms through what appears to be a harmless online game called The Dead Code. The theory goes rather preposterously, I have to say that if a player is good enough at The Dead Code, it involves wagering real money and then flying a plane through city streets, deploying biochemical poisons to kill off the citizens, then he must be a real terrorist.

Naturally, our hero Will Farmer(Matt Lanter) plays the game, wins, and R.I.P.L.E.Y. decides that Farmer is a threat. Ultimately the computer decides, on its own, to neutralize that threat by nuking the city of Philadelphia. Wonder who'll have to put a stop to it?

All the hallmarks of the original WarGames are here, but modestly updated for the '00s. Will plays World of Warcraft and gets lots done via cell phone instead of Global Thermonuclear War. But so much of The Dead Code is recycled from the original that it misses many opportunities to explore what's new in the world of computer crime and digital terrorism. Instead we get Farmer trotting around the country(and into Montreal) with a lovely and semi-clueless but earnest lass(Tina Rashe) in town. The ending, though, is what's really upsetting, offering yet another scene where Will, just like his predecessor David, is sequestered in a War Room, goading a computer into playing a game against itself so it can learn that killing people just isn't the answer.

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