This idea seems to be the standard hacker scam anyone who writes a script will go with. I think I remember it used on an episode of the wonderfully creepy but short-lived FOX show “Profit” a few years back.
(paraphrased) I’ve got eight different bosses. Eight bosses. That means, when I make a mistake, I’ve got eight different people coming by to tell me about it. That’s my only ambition is not to get hassled. Well, that and not losing my job.
Though IMDB does list Austin as well as Dallas as filming locations, I’m pcertain the opening highway section was filmed on I-635, probably somewhere between 75 and the tollway.
The first time I saw it I didn’t really laugh too much because I was vaguely disturbed by the similarities between the movie and my life, it wasn’t until repeat viewings that the actual humor really struck home.
I’m so happy. I feel like Seven who finally figured out where the other Eight were hiding. “Peek-a-boo!”
I stumbled across it by accident on the Two-Fer-A-Dollar Seven-Night Shelves at Family Video, their “oh, yeah, by the way, we’ve got one copy each of these dorky videos, you can take a look, we’ll basically pay you to watch them” shelves.
So I’m thankful for the experience, but it means that ever since then, I’ve been working my way through Family Video’s “dorky” stock, hoping to stumble upon yet another gem. It’s been pretty slow going. Did you know there’s an original early 1970s version of Gone in 60 Seconds that makes the Nicholas Cage remake look like a Francis Ford Coppola director’s cut?
[hijack] Hey, Duckie, you know what else? The original version is an independant film, made by a guy who owned either a used car lot or a scrap yard. He was killed making the sequel, Another 60 Seconds, in '82, I think. Evidently, the original film’s a big influence in car chase sequences.[/hijack]
And Lawrence mentions that he’s working on a McDonalds in Las Colinas (I think), which is a Dallas suburb. Seems to mean the movie takes place in Dallas.
Another fan of the movie chiming in. When Mr. Throatshot and I watched the movie, we were laughing so hard that people were looking at us. It was just so much like our corporate world.
Pucette, I thought it was “I could watch the squirrels, and they were married*, and then they weren’t anymore.”
I liked all the great sound effects and mock-Tarantino still shots when the virus was being copied and installed. The mock-Goodfellas sequence when they’re beating up the printer-fax is great, too. DIEM-fer, Die M-fer, DIE!
–Scribble, who is a geek enough that she would probably look up “money laundering” in the dictionary.
*Whether or not they were merry, I have absolutely no idea.