Does a passable job of delivering paranoia and lightweight suspense in a fast-paced, glitzy package.
Antitrust (2001)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:102
Fresh:25
Rotten:77
Average Rating:4/10
Consensus: Due to its use of cliched and ludicrous plot devices, this thriller is more predictable than suspenseful. Also, the acting is bad.
Rated: PG-13 [See Full Rating] for some violence and brief language
Runtime: 1 hr 48 mins
Genre: Dramas
Theatrical Release:Jan 12, 2001 Wide
Box Office: $10,965,209
Synopsis: Stanford grad Milo Hoffman (Ryan Phillippe) and his equally talented friend, Teddy (Yee Jee Tso), intend to form an Internet start-up and take the world by storm. That all changes when Milo is... Stanford grad Milo Hoffman (Ryan Phillippe) and his equally talented friend, Teddy (Yee Jee Tso), intend to form an Internet start-up and take the world by storm. That all changes when Milo is courted by deceptively friendly software magnate Gary Winston (Tim Robbins), the immensely wealthy head of world-dominating, Portland-based company, NURV. Milo takes the bait, leaving Teddy behind. Arriving in Portland to a NURV-provided house and car, with his girlfriend (Claire Forlani) in tow, Milo finds himself working on Winston's masterplan--software that will link the world's communications devices together. But it's not long before Milo begins to uncover disturbing evidence of Winston's unethical--and brutal--business tactics. When Winston's web of violence touches Milo's world, he joins forces with fellow NURV programmer, Lisa (Rachael Leigh Cook), and sets out to tell the world of Winston's reprehensible practices. Though obviously influenced by the practices of a certain Pacific Northwest-based software empire and its recognizable leader, Howard Franklin's (THE NAME OF THE ROSE) script is a snappy popcorn-muncher that manages to generate suspense even though it realizes its own excesses. Robbins, as evil geek Gary Winston, is obviously having a good time. ANTITRUST takes the conventions of the conspiracy film and adds a candy-colored millennial sheen. [More]
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Tim Robbins, Rachael Leigh Cook, Claire Forlani
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Tim Robbins, Rachael Leigh Cook, Claire Forlani, Richard Roundtree, Nate Dushku, Yee Jee Tso
Director: Peter Howitt
Director: Peter Howitt
Screenwriter: Howard Franklin
Producer: Nick Wechsler, David A. Nicksay, Keith Addis
Studio: MGM/UA
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Reviews for Antitrust
A huge amount of fun -- the Showgirls of cyberthrillers -- entertaining in ways its creators never intended.
Antitrust will never go down in history as a great thriller, but nowadays, when thrillers are about as popular as whale meat, it'll suffice.
Antitrust joins Matrix and The Net as a trilogy of thought-provoking films about the dangers surrounding computer technology.
Cheap cinematic thrills interest you? Check out this sometimes-smart thriller for a fix.
It won't win any Oscars but it might make 14-year-olds wonder whether it's really worth spending life in front of a screen.
Succeeds in making its portentous meaning more than reasonably entertaining.
Howard Franklin's script has enough twists and surprises to keep us from dozing into our popcorn.
Got a by-the-numbers plot? A premise that's intriguing but also has holes in it? Dialogue that needs punching up? Hire Tim Robbins. He can save just about anything.
The music and mood work well with a pretty exciting plot to make for an enjoyable experience.
Filled with young hotties and a long streak of silliness, but is as genuinely suspenseful as any thriller since Napster crossed the Rubicon.
It's actually a surprisingly apt think piece about corporate power vs. open source.
For much of its life AntiTrust relies on unhysterical thrills that are rooted in a highly credible set-up (a psychological cat-and-mouse game) and keep the audience guessing along with Milo.
Apesar do fraco roteiro, o filme sobressai-se graças à direção de Howitt, que cria seqüências tensas que prendem o espectador à cadeira.
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