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La verdad puede ser peligrosa... La confianza puede ser mortal.
Milo (Ryan Phillippe), un joven genio, está dotado para convertirse en uno de los mejores informáticos del mundo. En el garaje de su casa, desarrolla la tecnología que ambicionan las mayores empresas del mundo: un revolucionario software que permite el enlace de todas las formas de comunicación digital, a través de una sola fuente de alimentación. Cuando Milo está a punto de conseguir su sueño, recibe una tentadora oferta: dinero, recursos y un sinfin de posibilidades que Gary Winston (Tim Robbins), el director de N.U.R.V., una millonaria y poderosa empresa de software, le ofrece en bandeja.
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It about everything love, deviousness, confidence,intrique no just never know your own strength.
When Tim Robbins is the head of IT, you should expect the worst. What applies to the series “Silo” today also applied to “Antitrust” back in 2001. In the techno-thriller, Robbins plays a character inspired by Bill Gates or Steve Jobs who is obviously up to his tricks. Ryan Phillippe, on the other hand, plays a young, naive programmer who would prefer to make his software available to everyone for free but then switches to the side of the big company, at least for a while. To put it bluntly, “Antitrust” is definitely not a good movie. There are plenty of leaps in logic, and the characters are very stereotypical. You shouldn't expect good acting either; Phillippe, in particular, is pretty weak. And yet, I did enjoy the movie. It's ultimately stupid in an entertaining way. And the structure of the movie works solidly. If you fancy a trip back in time to the early 2000s, you can definitely watch “Antitrust”—just with the right expectations.
I enjoyed this movie. Definitely watching this again, when I feel like indulging in some Hollywood tech drama.
>"It's just a matter of time before someone borrows your technology, improves it and makes a billion dollars on it." Was this really more of a premonition of what was to come over a decade later? Or is this a cheesy nerds-are-good-with-computers movie? I think it meets somewhere in the middle of those 2 options.
Movie is pretty good but I was never a great Ryan Phillippe fan, I don't think he is a good actor. He has a pretty baby-face but his emotions doesn't show on his face really well.