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AntiTrust
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Release
Date: 4th May 2001
Distributor: Twentieth
Century Fox
Certificate: 12
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Rachael Leigh Cook, Claire Forlani, Tim Robbins,
Douglas McFerran
Director: Peter
Howitt
Running Time:
108
mins
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In
the most revolutionary, globally impacting and cutthroat business the world
has yet encountered - the high-speed, high-stakes computer industry - the
powerful come to play, and play to win. Welcome to the dark heart of the
digital age, to a place where millionaires are made in nanoseconds, where
fortunes are won and lost in just a single line of code, and where private
wars are being waged right now to decide who will control the future.
Antitrust is a relentless suspense thriller that enters this hidden world
where the rich and the brilliant collide, where a handful of bright, driven
young men and women have the means to make or break the technology that
will dominate the global economy. Here in an atmosphere of secrecy, fierce
competition and accusations of monopoly, the real fear for a rising young
programmer caught up in the frenzy isn't just antitrust actions but whether,
when things turn dangerous, anybody can be trusted at all. |
Milo
(Ryan Phillipe) has the stuff it takes to make it to the top of the computer
world. He's a master of the digital domain who's about to do what every
young computer genius wants most: launch a high-tech start-up. It's not
just any start-up either. Milo's garage-based company is devoted to the
technology major corporations across the globe are currently chasing: the
technology of digital convergence, or the linking of all forms of digital
communications such as telephone, television, computers and wireless from
one super-powerful feed. Milo wants to be a part of history, to build the
technology that will change how people live a few years from now.
But just as Milo is headed for a breakthrough, he gets an offer he can't
refuse. It comes from the renowned Gary Winston (Tim Robbins), head of the
multi-billion dollar software corporation N.U.R.V. (which stands for "Never
Underestimate Radical Vision"), and Milo's professional hero. The supremely
rich and powerful Winston wants to recruit Milo for his top-echelon digital
convergence team - and despite having to leave behind his anti-corporate
best friend and business partner, Teddy, Milo feels he has no choice. The
money, the resources, the opportunity Winston offers can't be, had anywhere
else. Even more exciting, Winston has taken a personal interest in Milo
and it seems like he will finally get the chance to truly make his mark. |
So Milo
and his artsy girlfriend Alice (Claire Forlani) head off for the land of
the superachievers, where fast thinking can make very fast money. Milo is
quickly introduced to high-security, pressure-cooker atmosphere of N.U.R.V.
Assigned a talented, and intellectually tempting, colleague named Lisa (Rachel
Leigh Cook) to assist him, Milo gets intensely caught up in the race to
achieve Winston's vision. Winston inspires Milo to new levels of brilliance
by refusing to let any problem go unsolved for long. But as new developments
are brought to Milo with astonishing speed and accuracy, he begins to doubt
their source.
Then tragedy strikes at Milo's personal life in the form of a vicious crime,
and his suspicions turn to terror. Is Milo a merely a pawn in Winston's
games of surveillance and intimidation? Is Winston willing to go to any
extreme to win? As further hints of secret undertakings emerge, Milo begins
to unearth a plot so vast and so brilliantly designed, it might be foolproof.
The more Milo learns, the more he himself becomes a target. Now it is Milo
whose survival is at stake, unless he can outwit the very heart of N.U.R.V.,
a corporate behemoth whose power, greed and paranoia know no bounds. |
| In this
gripping drama from director Peter Howitt, a young computer programming
expert takes a job with a big technology company. He quickly learns that
the firm has some fishy policies and a shady way of dealing with its antitrust
issues, and realizes that he is trapped in a deceptive, double-crossing
business world. |