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Takedown (2000)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
15 March 2000 (France) moreTagline:
The world has a right to know.Plot:
This film is based on the story of the capture of computer hacker "Kevin Mitnick". full summary | add synopsisUser Comments:
Much better than it was planned to be. moreCast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Skeet Ulrich | ... | Kevin Mitnick | |
| Russell Wong | ... | Tsutomu Shimomura | |
| Angela Featherstone | ... | Julia | |
| Donal Logue | ... | Alex Lowe | |
| Christopher McDonald | ... | Mitch Gibson | |
| Master P | ... | Brad | |
| Tom Berenger | ... | McCoy Rollins | |
| Jeremy Sisto | ... | Lance 'Icebreaker' Petersen | |
| Amanda Peet | ... | Karen | |
| Ethan Suplee | ... | Dan Bradley | |
| Dorit Sauer | ... | Shelley | |
| Mark Joy | ... | Committee Chairman | |
| Scott Cooper | ... | Jake Cronin | |
| Ned Bellamy | ... | Tom Fiori | |
| Sara Melson | ... | Rachel |
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Additional Details
Also Known As:
Hackers 2: Takedown (USA) (informal title)Takedown: The Pursuit and Capture of Kevin Mitnick, America's Most Wanted Computer Outlaw (USA) (working title)
Track Down (USA) (DVD box title)
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MPAA:
Rated R for language and some sexual content.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
Germany:92 min | USA:96 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
1.85 : 1 moreSound Mix:
Dolby DigitalFilming Locations:
Wilmington, North Carolina, USAMOVIEmeter: 
Fun Stuff
Trivia:
Kevin Mitnick uses Martin Brice as one of his aliases, which is an alias used by Robert Redford in Sneakers (1992). Donal Logue (Alex Lowe) played Dr. Gunter Janek in 'Sneakers'. moreSoundtrack:
Soul Speaks moreFAQ
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I believe many people started watching this movie expecting it to be very bad - and I hope many will be as pleasantly surprised as I was. It isn't bad. In fact, it's quite good. Yes, it oversimplifies a lot (though compared with "Hackers", it seems ultrarealistic...) and, as far as Kevin's real story goes, it makes up some things that never happened (for instance, Kevin and Shimomura did not meet in life) - but overall, it's definitely worth watching. Those who followed the way its script had been changing over the years, certainly remember how bad and unfair it was in the beginning - it portrayed Kevin as a criminal of no feelings, and was extremely one-sided, based only on Shimomura's and Markoff's book and relations, and shown from their point of view. Hiring a new writer and looking for sources in a book other than that by M&S helped, however, and the result is a pretty fair, objective movie that shows Kevin as a human, not as a monster. The only thing that should be severely criticized is throwing in the scene with Kevin attempting to distribute Shimomura's nonexistent S.A.T.A.N.-like utility, but other than that, the script treats things fair. See this movie... and while watching it, remember that although at this moment Kevin is already free, he is not allowed to access any kind of computer - which means that he cannot even use a cell phone or a cash register... Perhaps a new movie, "Kevin Free", might portrait his life nowadays.