
WarGames
High school student David Lightman has a talent for hacking. But while trying to hack into a computer system to play unreleased video games, he unwittingly taps into the Department of Defense's war computer and initiates a confrontation of global proportions. Together with his friend and a wizardly computer genius, David must race against time to outwit his opponent and prevent a nuclear Armageddon.
Director(s)
John Badham
Robert J. Doherty
Newt Arnold
Harold Michelson
Martin Brest
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Cast & crew

William H. Macy
NORAD Officer (uncredited)
Gary Bisig
Deputy

Michael Madsen
Steve

Matthew Broderick
David Lightman

Ally Sheedy
Jennifer

Dennis Lipscomb
Watson

Maury Chaykin
Jim Sting

Art LaFleur
Guard
Joe Dorsey
Conley

Dabney Coleman
McKittrick
Newt Arnold
-

Michael Ensign
Beringer's Aide
John Garber
Corporal in the Infirmary

Drew Snyder
Ayers

Michael Adams
Travis

John Spencer
Jerry

Alan Blumenfeld
Mr. Liggett

Martin Brest
-
Frankie Hill
Airman Fields

Barry Corbin
General Beringer

Eddie Deezen
Malvin
Frances E. Nealy
Visitor

John Wood
Stephen Falken

Jesse D. Goins
Sergeant

Stephen Lee
Sgt. Schneider

Jason Bernard
Captain Knewt

Len Lawson
Boys Vice Principal
Robert J. Doherty
-

John Badham
-
Charles Akins
Major Ford

James Tolkan
Wigan
Tom Lawrence
Sgt. Sims

Irving Metzman
Richter

Billy Ray Sharkey
Radar Analyst

Juanin Clay
Pat Healy

Kent Williams
Cabot

William Bogert
Mr. Lightman
Susan Davis
Mrs. Lightman
David Clover
Stockman
Duncan Wilmore
Major Lem
James Lemp
Commander
Gary Sexton
Technician
Lucinda Crosby
Nurse in Infirmary

Stack Pierce
Airman
Brad David
Flight Pilot Leader
Martha Shaw
Vice Principal's Secretary
Howie Allen
Boy in Arcade
James Ackerman
Joshua
Jim Harriott
Newscaster
Glenn Standifer
Major Wenstin
Edward Jahnke
NORAD Officer
Paul V. Picerni Jr.
Technician
Harold Michelson
-
Details
Reviews
John Chard
Wanna play Global Thermonuclear War? It was with much interest to me to revisit this early 80s hacker piece armed with the knowledge of just how the advent of change in the computer world had evolved. With that in mind the film could quite easily be classed as a bit clunky due to the now almost Neanderthal toys, games and computers used in the movie, but casting aside the nostalgia feelings I had with it, it still hits the spot as both a poignant piece of interest, and a damn good thriller as well. Matthew Broderick is David Lightman, a young computer gamer geek who is something of a whizz kid on the PC. He can change his school grades and hack into various sites he shouldn't be even looking at. During one eventful sitting he hacks into a computer called Joshua and plays a game called Global Thermonuclear War, he harmlessly chooses to be The Soviet Union and proceeds to launch a nuclear attack on his own country, the U.S.A. Trouble is, is that the game is for real and the wheels are in motion for World War III!. It helps to remember the time this film was made (for those old enough of course), for it was the time of the ever worrying cloud of the Cold War, a time when nuclear war was more than a hearsay threat. I really think that in this day and age where computers literally do run our lives, this film stands up really well not only as a warning piece about messing with technology, but also as a gentle poke in the ribs about defence systems and the people we trust to run them. Though the film is a kind of watered down and accessible 2001: A Space Odyssey for the 80s set, it impacts well and only really suffers from a pointless romantic plot strand involving the sprightly Ally Sheedy (could they not just have been pals?) and the aforementioned dated gadgets. The ending to the film is excellent as the tension builds up nicely and we are left chewing our nails watching a game of Tic-Tac-Toe, sounds simple doesn't it? Not so. Good honest and intelligent entertainment. 7.5/10
GenerationofSwine
Ally Sheedy, whatever happened to her. When I was a little kid, I mean REALLY little she was one of the few stars I could name...and then she disappeared save for a couple memorable appearances in Psych. It's a shame. Anyway, my fiance is a Millennial and I've been trying to introduce her and her friends to some classic films. This one was a fail. They sat through it, but really only to mock the technology. Mocking things that are old for being old is kind of one of their favorite things. So, despite that, the film made ripples in congress and the only other film that I recall doing that was JFK. It rewrote laws. And, it was extremely entertaining in the process, despite the fact that Matthew looked like more of a push-over than a computer geek. Not that it matters, he still played the part of a teen pretty well.
CinemaSerf
When the young computer whizz-kid “David” (Matthew Broderick) is showing off to his girlfriend “Jennifer” (Ally Sheedy) about how he can improve her grades and book them on a first class trip to Paris, he inadvertently dials a telephone number that wants to play a game. A game of thermonuclear war! Next day, the news is full of stories about the mobilisation of American defence capabilities and his phone rings again. It’s the computer, it wants to play and he’s just a little terrified. Not so afraid as he is about to get, though, when the FBI turn up and next thing he is in a top secret facility trying to explain to boffin “McKittrick” just how he accidentally tapped into a computer system that now seems to be trying to start WWIII - and nobody knows how to stop it. Can he come up with a solution before the increasingly exasperated “Gen. Beringer” (Barry Corbin) goes to DEFCON 1 and obliterates the globe? It’s a good, solid, sci-fi entertainment this film with Broderick, Sheedy and Corbin on good form, but it also serves as quite a potent reminder that, just as with “The Forbin Project” (1970), the whole idea of automating our defences and letting computers do our thinking for us is fraught with danger. Logic is the ultimate in two-dimensional thinking for a machine. For anything more nuanced, balanced or sophisticated then believe it or not, you need a hormonal teenage boy and some very basic rational thinking.



