
Ep. 5 - Hackers (1995): When Cybercrime Was Cool
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About this listen
Episode Title: Hackers (1995): When Cybercrime Was Cool
Episode Summary: In this episode of Celluloid Circuits, we jack into the neon-lit, modem-screeching world of Hackers (1995). With rollerblades on our feet and floppy disks in our backpacks, we explore how the film captures the anxieties and fantasies of a rapidly digitizing world—where teenagers wield keyboards like weapons and cyberspace is a rave of rebellion.
We'll break down the movie’s iconic (and sometimes hilariously inaccurate) portrayal of hacking, discuss its heavy dose of cyberpunk aesthetics, and consider what it got surprisingly right about tech culture, digital surveillance, and the emerging idea of the hacker as countercultural hero. From Zero Cool to Acid Burn, we’ll unpack the technobabble, the fashion, and the fantasy behind one of the most stylized depictions of computer crime in cinema.
Film Referenced: Hackers (1995), directed by Iain Softley, starring Jonny Lee Miller, Angelina Jolie, Fisher Stevens, and Matthew Lillard.
Outro: And remember—the future is only a reel away.