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Really Stupid Computer-Related Movie Mistakes

One thing I really really hate while watching movies as geek is the factually incorrect sequences related to computers in most movies. After all, do they think that NOBODY in the movie going public is going to notice anything? :p Here are some really pathetic computer-related movie mistakes:

  • I’ve got conclusive and solid proof that the reason why iPods are so popular is the fact that it’s based on alien technology. No, I’m not kidding. There’s a chance that Steve Jobs is an alien too, and might turn green and bleeping one day if he gets too angry. After all, in the movie Independence Day, Jeff Goldblum’s character creates a virus on his faithful old Mac, goes to those alien baddies’ mother ship, and infects their computers, thus bringing their defences down and leading to a human victory. My only problem is, how on EARTH (pun intended) can a bloody Mac virus affect an alien operating system! After all, even on earth we’ve hardly had more than concept viruses which are multi-OS. It’s only Microsucks that gets targetted, and those viruses are useless on other platforms. But since Hollywood is SO truthful about everything, I must say that even though Mac OS doesn’t have more than 2% market share on Earth, naturally it’s so much better than Microsucks Windows that it’s the operating system of choice even for aliens. Which brings up a very bright possibility that maybe the aliens gave Apple Inc the ‘revolutionary’ ideas and technologies behind the iPod in return for seem free / discounted CDs of Mac OS.
  • I’ve pointed this out in my review of the movie The Departed, and I repeat it here again – doughnut dunking Boston Police cops working on Dell PCs don’t have enough brains to install Mac OS on them. In multiple scenes, Matt Damon is shown working on a Dell PC, but the interface is that of Mac OS.
  • Here’s another Warner Bros movie apart from The Departed that’s guilty – one of the most boring, mind-numbing and senseless movies ever made on this planet, The Constant Gardener (apart from the pathetic name), has scenes were non-Mac laptops are shown running Mac OS. What’s the problem with Warner Bros! What’s next – Harry Potter using Mac OS?
  • Lots of talk about Mac, let’s switch over to something else. For example, in my most favorite movie The Italian Job, notice carefully the scene where Shawn Fanning (the actual creator of Napster) makes a cameo appearance to steal the Napster program while Lyle (Seth Green) is sleeping. Just look at the screen then, it’s running Windows XP!!! That too in 1999, while XP was launched sometime in 2003! It’s a really small thing, and not many would notice it, but still, it mars an otherwise amazing plot. I just can’t wait for The Brazilian Job!
  • What’s it with on-screen hackers and telephone companies. I mean, Lyle in The Italian Job, and that chap in The Core, both claim to have hacked into their phone companies.
  • I hate most movies which show an unrealistic representation of how easy hacking is – it’s not. And also for movie writers, who when referring to a computer related topic throw in some nonsense hi-fi sounding mumbo-jumbo terms thinking audiences won’t notice it. THAT really puts me off. However, The Italian Job gets real high scores here, because they actually show Lyle failing to gain access to computer systems before succeeding. It’s much more realistic.
  • As for my favorite movie related to computers, it’s The Net. For a movie made in 1995, showing use of cellphones, laptop toting computer professionals, online shopping et al, it was really really far ahead of its time. Again, it scores for realistic representation of computing scenarios, that too in a world when UNIX was the prevalent OS, not Windows. This movie is a must watch, and really thought-provoking, as to the sway computers hold in our lives, and how with sufficient planning, our identities could be stolen. It also warns us not to give up computer systems to a monopoly (you know which direction I’m pointing at here, and it includes more than just Microsoft), because that weakens us more. Really, you don’t need to be a geek to watch this, there are no techno babble dialogues.

And I know it doesn’t fit in here, but there’s one more MAJOR mistake I’d like to point out from another one of my all time favorite movies, Armageddon. In the scene where we see Ben Affleck’s space shuttle crash on the doomsday asteroid, you’ll see fire burning at the debris site! Now any person with an elementary knowledge of science knows you require oxygen for a fire, and there’s none in outer space, which is why they need to go around in goofy spacesuits. Since it’s shown in the movie that the spaceship is hit by space debris and depressurises, it’s a real big mistake, really really stupid to show fires at the crash site.

Categories
Personal Reflections Reviews

The Eagles: My New Official Favorite Band

The Eagles bandIt’s officially official now the my most favoriter than favoritestestestest band now is (are?) The Eagles (official site). And why, you may ask is that so?

I just came to know that Journey of the Sorcerer, the official theme of the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Thus, it automatically becomes my most favoriter than favoritestestestest band now. Here’s what the Wikipedia page on the Eagles had to say:

The album One of These Nights also contains the futuristic sounding instrumental Journey of the Sorcerer, which is known to many as the theme to The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy (often surprising Hitchhiker’s fans when told that it is an Eagles song).

And I WAS shocked. Then, there was more on the specific album page:

“Journey of the Sorcerer” was used as the theme music for Douglas Adams‘s The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy radio series produced by the BBC in 1978 and 1979 (and its sequel series, produced by Above the Title Productions for the BBC in 2003 and 2004), for the television series in 1981, and for the film produced by Disney/Touchstone in 2005. While the original version from One of These Nights was used for the original transmissions of all five radio series, various “soundalike covers” were used for other formats. The LP and TV adaptations of the series used an arrangement by Tim Souster, the CD releases of the radio series transmitted in 2004 and 2005 used one by Philip Pope, and the 2005 film used one by Joby Talbot.

Shit. I didn’t know that it was the Eagles all the time! Now they’d been on my list of faves for long, but I’d NO IDEA they made the H2G2 theme! I had a few songs from them, like Tequila Sunrise, Hotel California, Witchy Woman etc and I liked them, but now in a very Pony-sorta way I can claim I had some sort of ‘intuituition’ that they were more important in some way all along. For those who didn’t get the connection, Pony my quiz pal always used to say, AFTER a question had been asked on stage (and after we didn’t get it right), that he had an intuition all along that this question was gonna come, and THAT very morning he’d flipped the page in his archives skipping that question. After EVERY wrong answer.

Sigh. Lots of work to do now, like trying to get each and every Eagles song I can lay my hands on. I’m trying to track down the original album in which the theme was released, and the full length version of Journey of the Sorcerer too.

So please please please dear readers, if you’ve ANY Eagles songs with you then please please please tell me! I want them so badly. And check out my Blogger profile now, that too shows the change in position.