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Sneakers (1992 film)

Sneakers is a 1992 American thriller film[1] directed by Phil Alden Robinson, written by Robinson, Walter Parkes, and Lawrence Lasker, and starring Robert Redford, Dan Aykroyd, Ben Kingsley, Mary McDonnell, River Phoenix, Sidney Poitier, and David Strathairn; the film was released by Universal Pictures.

Sneakers
Theatrical release poster
Directed byPhil Alden Robinson
Written by
Produced by
  • Lawrence Lasker
  • Walter Parkes
Starring
CinematographyJohn Lindley
Edited byTom Rolf
Music byJames Horner
Production
company
Distributed byUniversal Studios[1]
Release date
  • September 11, 1992 (1992-09-11) (US)
Running time
126 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$23 million[1]
Box office$105.2 million[2]

Plot

In 1969, students Martin Brice and Cosmo are computer hackers who use their skills to finance left wing organizations. When Martin leaves for a pizza, Cosmo gets arrested, forcing Martin to become a fugitive.

In present-day San Francisco, Martin, now called Martin Bishop, heads a security specialists team undertaking penetration testing. The team includes Donald Crease, a former CIA officer and family man; Darren "Mother" Roskow, a conspiracy theorist and electronics technician; Carl Arbogast, a young hacking genius; and Irwin "Whistler" Emery, a blind phone phreak.

After performing their services for a bank, Martin is approached by NSA officers Dick Gordon and Buddy Wallace. He is asked to recover a "black box" from mathematician Dr. Gunter Janek, developed under the name "Setec Astronomy" supposedly for the Russian government. Martin is hesitant but agrees when the agents reveal that they are aware of his true identity and offer to clear his past in exchange. With help from his former girlfriend, Liz, Martin and his team secure the box, which is disguised as a telephone answering machine. During their subsequent celebration party, Whistler, Mother, and Carl investigate the box, finding it capable of breaking the encryption of nearly every computer system. Martin works out that "Setec Astronomy" is an anagram of "too many secrets", and issues a lockdown until they can deliver the box the next day.

Martin hands the box to Gordon and Wallace but barely escapes being killed by them after Crease discovers that Janek was killed the night before. His friend, Gregor in the Russian consulate, confirms that the officers were rogue agents and that Janek was working for the NSA. Before Gregor can elaborate further, fake FBI agents kill him and kidnap Martin, taking him to a remote location where he is reunited with Cosmo, who Martin thought had died in prison. While imprisoned, Cosmo developed ties with organized crime, who recognized his talents and later installed him as their money launderer and paymaster. Cosmo plans to use Janek's box to destabilize the world economy and offers Martin the chance to join him. Martin refuses, whereupon Cosmo uses the box to break into the FBI's mainframe and connect Martin's current identity with his former name. Cosmo has Martin knocked out and taken back to the city.

Martin, now a fugitive from the law again, relocates his team to Liz's apartment. They contact NSA agent Abbott, who wants the box but cannot offer safety until it is in Martin's possession. Whistler analyzes the sounds that Martin heard during his kidnapping and can identify the geographic area where Martin was taken, a toy company acting as a front for Cosmo's operation. They research the building's security systems and identify Werner Brandes, an employee whose office is next to Cosmo's. They set Liz up on a fake computer date with Brandes to obtain his keycard and vocal recognition codes, which Martin and the other team members use to initiate the recovery of the box.

Brandes begins to suspect Liz during the date and brings her to Cosmo at his office. Nothing appears amiss, and Cosmo lets Liz go, but when she comments on this being a computer date, Cosmo recognizes Martin's handiwork, and locks down the facility. Martin is apprehended and Cosmo once again tries to convince him to join him. Martin refuses and instead turns over the box. The team escapes before Cosmo realizes that he is holding an empty duplicate.

Back at their own offices, Martin's team is surrounded by Abbott and his agents. After Martin points out how important the secrecy of the box is to the NSA, who could use it to spy on other agencies, Abbott agrees to clear Martin's record and grant the requests of the rest of his team. After Abbott and the agents leave with the box, Martin shows he has rendered the box useless by removing the main processor.

In a postscript, a news report describes the sudden bankruptcy of the Republican National Committee, and the simultaneous receipt of large anonymous donations to Amnesty International, Greenpeace, and the United Negro College Fund.

Cast

Production

Lawrence Lasker and Walter F. Parkes first conceived the idea for Sneakers in 1981, while doing research for WarGames.[3] In early drafts, the character of Liz was a bank employee, rather than Martin's ex-girlfriend. The role was changed because Lasker and Parkes believed that it took too long for her character to develop.[3]

Once Robert Redford was attached to the picture, his name was used to recruit other members of the cast and crew, including the director Robinson, who had little initial interest in the project but had always wanted to work with Redford.[3]

At one point during the project, Robinson received a visit from men claiming to be representatives of the Office of Naval Intelligence, who indicated that for reasons of national security, the film could not include any references to "a hand-held device that can decode codes". Robinson was highly concerned, as such a device was a key to the film's plot, but after consulting with a lawyer from the film studio he realized that the "visit" had been a prank instigated by a member of the cast, possibly Aykroyd or Redford.[3]

"I can't remember having so much fun on a movie," Stephen Tobolowsky recalled in 2012 for a 20th-anniversary piece about the film for Slate. He had initially scoffed at the script based on its title alone, but his agent persuaded him to read it, and he reconsidered. Afterward, he told his agent, "Now I know what a hundred million dollars at the box office reads like."[4] "It was one of the most spectacular casts I've ever been lucky enough to be a part of," Tobolowsky wrote. When he was shooting the scene where he and McDonnell eat at a Chinese restaurant, Robinson told him he could do anything he wanted to make her laugh. "Dangerous words. It set the tone for the rest of the shoot," he recalls. "I played with my food. I made up lines (including one about pounding chicken breasts in the kitchen during our second date)." The rest of the cast and crew felt similarly. Near the end of the shoot, Robinson said the only way it could have been better would have been if the lab lost the film, so they would have had to do it all over again.[4]

Leonard Adleman was the mathematical consultant on this movie.[5]

Release

The film's press kit was accompanied by a floppy disk containing a custom program explaining the movie. Parts of the program were quasi-encrypted, requiring the user to enter an easily guessable password to proceed.[6] It was one of the first electronic press kits by a film studio.[7]

Reception

The film received positive reviews from critics upon its release. Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Kenneth Turan called Sneakers "[a] caper movie with a most pleasant sense of humor," a "twisting plot," and a "witty, hang-loose tone." Turan went on to praise the ensemble cast and director Robinson, who is "surprisingly adept at creating tension at appropriate moments" and "makes good use of the script's air of clever cheerfulness".[8] Roger Ebert, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times, was less impressed, giving the film two-and-a-half stars out of four, calling it "a sometimes entertaining movie, but thin." He went on to point out numerous cliches and tired plot devices recycled in the film.[9] Vincent Canby, in a negative review for The New York Times, said the film looked like it had "just surfaced after being buried alive for 20 years," calling it "an atrophied version of a kind of caper movie that was so beloved in the early 1970's". He singled out Redford and Poitier as looking and acting too old to be in this kind of film now. He calls the plot "feeble," resulting in a film that is "jokey without being funny, breathless without creating suspense". He calls the ensemble an "all-star gang," but says the "performances are generally quite bad."[10]

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 80% based on reviews from 55 critics. The website's consensus states: "There isn't much to Sneakers' plot and that's more than made up for with the film's breezy panache and hi-tech lingo."[11] On Metacritic the film has a score of 65 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[12] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A− on scale of A to F.[13]

The film was a box office success, grossing over $105.2 million worldwide.[2]

Novelization

A novelization of the film written by Dewey Gram was published in English (Signet, 1992, ISBN 0451174704) and translated into German (Droemer Knaur, 1993, ISBN 3-426-60177-X).

TV series

In October 2016, NBC was developing a TV series based on the film. Writer Walter Parkes was brought on as an executive producer.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com.
  2. ^ a b "Sneakers Races to the Top Spot". Los Angeles Times. 1992-09-15. from the original on 2013-11-06. Retrieved 2012-06-03.
  3. ^ a b c d Weidman, Sara (October 8, 1992). "A Decade Later, 'Sneakers' is Complete". The Michigan Daily. p. 8.
  4. ^ a b Tobolowsky, Stephen (September 10, 2012). "Memories of the Sneakers Shoot". Slate. from the original on September 11, 2012. Retrieved September 11, 2012.
  5. ^ . www.usc.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-11-01. Retrieved 2015-11-24.
  6. ^ "Sneakers Computer Press Kit". Internet Archive. July 12, 2017. Retrieved July 17, 2017.
  7. ^ O'Steen, Kathleen (November 15, 1994). "WB goes interactive for 'Disclosure' push". Daily Variety. p. 5.
  8. ^ "MOVIE REVIEW : 'Sneakers': A Caper With Lots of Twists". Los Angeles Times. 1992-09-09. from the original on 2013-04-24. Retrieved 2012-06-03.
  9. ^ Roger Ebert (September 9, 1992). "Sneakers". RogerEbert.com. Ebert Digital LLC. from the original on September 23, 2017. Retrieved September 22, 2017.
  10. ^ "Reviews/Film; A 1970's Caper Movie With Heroes of the Time". The New York Times. 1992-09-09. from the original on 2012-09-10. Retrieved 2012-06-03.
  11. ^ "Sneakers (1992)". Rotten Tomatoes. from the original on 2020-08-07. Retrieved 2023-01-23.
  12. ^ "Sneakers". Metacritic. from the original on 2020-08-15. Retrieved 2020-07-10.
  13. ^ . CinemaScore. Archived from the original on February 6, 2018.
  14. ^ "'Sneaker' Hacker Drama Based On Movie in Works at NBC From Walter Parkes, Laurie Macdonald & Tom Szentgyorgyi". Deadline Hollywood. 2016-10-23. from the original on 2016-10-23. Retrieved 2016-10-23.

External links

sneakers, 1992, film, sneakers, 1992, american, thriller, film, directed, phil, alden, robinson, written, robinson, walter, parkes, lawrence, lasker, starring, robert, redford, aykroyd, kingsley, mary, mcdonnell, river, phoenix, sidney, poitier, david, stratha. Sneakers is a 1992 American thriller film 1 directed by Phil Alden Robinson written by Robinson Walter Parkes and Lawrence Lasker and starring Robert Redford Dan Aykroyd Ben Kingsley Mary McDonnell River Phoenix Sidney Poitier and David Strathairn the film was released by Universal Pictures SneakersTheatrical release posterDirected byPhil Alden RobinsonWritten byPhil Alden RobinsonLawrence LaskerWalter ParkesProduced byLawrence LaskerWalter ParkesStarringRobert Redford Dan Aykroyd Ben Kingsley Mary McDonnell River Phoenix Sidney Poitier David StrathairnCinematographyJohn LindleyEdited byTom RolfMusic byJames HornerProductioncompanyUniversal Studios 1 Distributed byUniversal Studios 1 Release dateSeptember 11 1992 1992 09 11 US Running time126 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 23 million 1 Box office 105 2 million 2 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Release 5 Reception 6 Novelization 7 TV series 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditIn 1969 students Martin Brice and Cosmo are computer hackers who use their skills to finance left wing organizations When Martin leaves for a pizza Cosmo gets arrested forcing Martin to become a fugitive In present day San Francisco Martin now called Martin Bishop heads a security specialists team undertaking penetration testing The team includes Donald Crease a former CIA officer and family man Darren Mother Roskow a conspiracy theorist and electronics technician Carl Arbogast a young hacking genius and Irwin Whistler Emery a blind phone phreak After performing their services for a bank Martin is approached by NSA officers Dick Gordon and Buddy Wallace He is asked to recover a black box from mathematician Dr Gunter Janek developed under the name Setec Astronomy supposedly for the Russian government Martin is hesitant but agrees when the agents reveal that they are aware of his true identity and offer to clear his past in exchange With help from his former girlfriend Liz Martin and his team secure the box which is disguised as a telephone answering machine During their subsequent celebration party Whistler Mother and Carl investigate the box finding it capable of breaking the encryption of nearly every computer system Martin works out that Setec Astronomy is an anagram of too many secrets and issues a lockdown until they can deliver the box the next day Martin hands the box to Gordon and Wallace but barely escapes being killed by them after Crease discovers that Janek was killed the night before His friend Gregor in the Russian consulate confirms that the officers were rogue agents and that Janek was working for the NSA Before Gregor can elaborate further fake FBI agents kill him and kidnap Martin taking him to a remote location where he is reunited with Cosmo who Martin thought had died in prison While imprisoned Cosmo developed ties with organized crime who recognized his talents and later installed him as their money launderer and paymaster Cosmo plans to use Janek s box to destabilize the world economy and offers Martin the chance to join him Martin refuses whereupon Cosmo uses the box to break into the FBI s mainframe and connect Martin s current identity with his former name Cosmo has Martin knocked out and taken back to the city Martin now a fugitive from the law again relocates his team to Liz s apartment They contact NSA agent Abbott who wants the box but cannot offer safety until it is in Martin s possession Whistler analyzes the sounds that Martin heard during his kidnapping and can identify the geographic area where Martin was taken a toy company acting as a front for Cosmo s operation They research the building s security systems and identify Werner Brandes an employee whose office is next to Cosmo s They set Liz up on a fake computer date with Brandes to obtain his keycard and vocal recognition codes which Martin and the other team members use to initiate the recovery of the box Brandes begins to suspect Liz during the date and brings her to Cosmo at his office Nothing appears amiss and Cosmo lets Liz go but when she comments on this being a computer date Cosmo recognizes Martin s handiwork and locks down the facility Martin is apprehended and Cosmo once again tries to convince him to join him Martin refuses and instead turns over the box The team escapes before Cosmo realizes that he is holding an empty duplicate Back at their own offices Martin s team is surrounded by Abbott and his agents After Martin points out how important the secrecy of the box is to the NSA who could use it to spy on other agencies Abbott agrees to clear Martin s record and grant the requests of the rest of his team After Abbott and the agents leave with the box Martin shows he has rendered the box useless by removing the main processor In a postscript a news report describes the sudden bankruptcy of the Republican National Committee and the simultaneous receipt of large anonymous donations to Amnesty International Greenpeace and the United Negro College Fund Cast EditRobert Redford as Martin Bishop Martin Brice Ben Kingsley as Cosmo Sidney Poitier as Donald Crease David Strathairn as Irwin Whistler Emery Dan Aykroyd as Darren Mother Roskow River Phoenix as Carl Arbogast Mary McDonnell as Liz Ogilvy Stephen Tobolowsky as Werner Brandes Timothy Busfield as Dick Gordon Eddie Jones as Buddy Wallace George Hearn as Gregor Greg Ivanovich Donal Logue as Dr Gunter Janek Lee Garlington as Dr Elena Rhyzkov James Earl Jones as NSA Agent Bernard AbbottProduction EditLawrence Lasker and Walter F Parkes first conceived the idea for Sneakers in 1981 while doing research for WarGames 3 In early drafts the character of Liz was a bank employee rather than Martin s ex girlfriend The role was changed because Lasker and Parkes believed that it took too long for her character to develop 3 Once Robert Redford was attached to the picture his name was used to recruit other members of the cast and crew including the director Robinson who had little initial interest in the project but had always wanted to work with Redford 3 At one point during the project Robinson received a visit from men claiming to be representatives of the Office of Naval Intelligence who indicated that for reasons of national security the film could not include any references to a hand held device that can decode codes Robinson was highly concerned as such a device was a key to the film s plot but after consulting with a lawyer from the film studio he realized that the visit had been a prank instigated by a member of the cast possibly Aykroyd or Redford 3 I can t remember having so much fun on a movie Stephen Tobolowsky recalled in 2012 for a 20th anniversary piece about the film for Slate He had initially scoffed at the script based on its title alone but his agent persuaded him to read it and he reconsidered Afterward he told his agent Now I know what a hundred million dollars at the box office reads like 4 It was one of the most spectacular casts I ve ever been lucky enough to be a part of Tobolowsky wrote When he was shooting the scene where he and McDonnell eat at a Chinese restaurant Robinson told him he could do anything he wanted to make her laugh Dangerous words It set the tone for the rest of the shoot he recalls I played with my food I made up lines including one about pounding chicken breasts in the kitchen during our second date The rest of the cast and crew felt similarly Near the end of the shoot Robinson said the only way it could have been better would have been if the lab lost the film so they would have had to do it all over again 4 Leonard Adleman was the mathematical consultant on this movie 5 Release EditThe film s press kit was accompanied by a floppy disk containing a custom program explaining the movie Parts of the program were quasi encrypted requiring the user to enter an easily guessable password to proceed 6 It was one of the first electronic press kits by a film studio 7 Reception EditThe film received positive reviews from critics upon its release Writing for the Los Angeles Times Kenneth Turan called Sneakers a caper movie with a most pleasant sense of humor a twisting plot and a witty hang loose tone Turan went on to praise the ensemble cast and director Robinson who is surprisingly adept at creating tension at appropriate moments and makes good use of the script s air of clever cheerfulness 8 Roger Ebert writing for the Chicago Sun Times was less impressed giving the film two and a half stars out of four calling it a sometimes entertaining movie but thin He went on to point out numerous cliches and tired plot devices recycled in the film 9 Vincent Canby in a negative review for The New York Times said the film looked like it had just surfaced after being buried alive for 20 years calling it an atrophied version of a kind of caper movie that was so beloved in the early 1970 s He singled out Redford and Poitier as looking and acting too old to be in this kind of film now He calls the plot feeble resulting in a film that is jokey without being funny breathless without creating suspense He calls the ensemble an all star gang but says the performances are generally quite bad 10 On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 80 based on reviews from 55 critics The website s consensus states There isn t much to Sneakers plot and that s more than made up for with the film s breezy panache and hi tech lingo 11 On Metacritic the film has a score of 65 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics indicating generally favorable reviews 12 Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A on scale of A to F 13 The film was a box office success grossing over 105 2 million worldwide 2 Novelization EditA novelization of the film written by Dewey Gram was published in English Signet 1992 ISBN 0451174704 and translated into German Droemer Knaur 1993 ISBN 3 426 60177 X TV series EditIn October 2016 NBC was developing a TV series based on the film Writer Walter Parkes was brought on as an executive producer 14 See also EditList of films about mathematicians List of films featuring surveillanceReferences Edit a b c d AFI Catalog catalog afi com a b Sneakers Races to the Top Spot Los Angeles Times 1992 09 15 Archived from the original on 2013 11 06 Retrieved 2012 06 03 a b c d Weidman Sara October 8 1992 A Decade Later Sneakers is Complete The Michigan Daily p 8 a b Tobolowsky Stephen September 10 2012 Memories of the Sneakers Shoot Slate Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Retrieved September 11 2012 Sneakers www usc edu Archived from the original on 2015 11 01 Retrieved 2015 11 24 Sneakers Computer Press Kit Internet Archive July 12 2017 Retrieved July 17 2017 O Steen Kathleen November 15 1994 WB goes interactive for Disclosure push Daily Variety p 5 MOVIE REVIEW Sneakers A Caper With Lots of Twists Los Angeles Times 1992 09 09 Archived from the original on 2013 04 24 Retrieved 2012 06 03 Roger Ebert September 9 1992 Sneakers RogerEbert com Ebert Digital LLC Archived from the original on September 23 2017 Retrieved September 22 2017 Reviews Film A 1970 s Caper Movie With Heroes of the Time The New York Times 1992 09 09 Archived from the original on 2012 09 10 Retrieved 2012 06 03 Sneakers 1992 Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on 2020 08 07 Retrieved 2023 01 23 Sneakers Metacritic Archived from the original on 2020 08 15 Retrieved 2020 07 10 SNEAKERS 1992 A CinemaScore Archived from the original on February 6 2018 Sneaker Hacker Drama Based On Movie in Works at NBC From Walter Parkes Laurie Macdonald amp Tom Szentgyorgyi Deadline Hollywood 2016 10 23 Archived from the original on 2016 10 23 Retrieved 2016 10 23 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Sneakers Sneakers at IMDb Sneakers at the TCM Movie Database Sneakers at Box Office Mojo Sneakers at AllMovie Leonard Adleman s recollections of Sneakers Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sneakers 1992 film amp 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