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Interface
(1984)
Director: Andy Anderson
Cast: John Davies, Laura Lane, Matthew Sacks
There is a problem in movie making when it comes to
filming a screenplay that is mostly or completely centered
around a current fad or one aspect of modern technology.
It's pretty obvious - in just a short while, the fad or that
technology will be obsolete, and not only will that thing
have been replaced with some other gimmick or scientific
breakthrough, society's viewpoint on everything will have
changed as well. As a result, we look back on those two
Lambada movies as if they were made by madmen, and we giggle
at how the high tech weaponry in Megaforce looks
so goofy, as if those so-called professional soldiers were
playing with children's toys in a sandbox the size of a
desert. I don't think there is any method to make sure
(unless maybe if you are making a period piece) every little
thing in the movie you're making won't look quaint (or
worse) to future audiences, but I think there are ways to at
least minimize the dated feel. The most important, I think,
is attitude. What you have to do is take the topic
with just the right amount of seriousness. Look at Saturday
Night Fever and WarGames; though disco
dancing and 1983 computer technology have long disappeared
from the real world, people still watch these movies today.
The approach to these movies was neither campy nor
ultra-serious
- any of those approaches would have resulted in the movies
today being unwatchable to the point of embarrassment. Those
previous two paragraphs are more or less the
Cliff Notes for this review, boiling down all
the reasons why I despised the computer thriller
Interface into one basic
explanation. It's not really the fact that the
technology in the movie is of the TRS-80 level
that bothered me so much, but the lame
presentation of this now clunky equipment - as
well as the lame presentation of everything
else. This movie is such a mess, it doesn't even
seem to know what kind of movie it is supposed
to be. Is it about students taking their
cyber-oriented Dungeons & Dragons games
way beyond simple fun and games? It is an action
thriller centered around a secret society
composed of computer vigilantes? Is it a comic
mystery about a couple investigating a murder in
the vein of The Thin Man's Nick
and Nora? (That is, if Nick and Nora were
constantly pissed and bickering at each other.)
Well, it's all of that, and quite a bit more. No
wonder the manager at my local video store
didn't seem to know where to shelve it, since I
found it in the horror section. Though
considering the ghastly results of this
mish-mash of genres, maybe it was in the correct
place after all. All the events of the movie
center around some college campus in Texas. (And
yes, this was indeed made in Texas - has this
state ever made any decent movies?) The opening
sequence - a drug deal interrupted by a masked
paint-throwing prankster that has inadvertently
tragic results - serves no foreseeable
consequence in the future, except maybe to give
Lou Diamond Phillips (in his first role,
credited as "Punk #1) his S.A.G. card. The
next day, we meet Rex Hobson (Davies), a
computer professor at said college, trying to
keep order in his classroom. He asks the
late-arriving George if he's seen Sidney. He
doesn't know; in fact, I don't think we ever
meet Sidney. Meanwhile, elsewhere in the
college, some fellow named Bobby is making some
money by changing grades etc. with his hacking.
His friend Teresa is concerned about his
hacking, but leaves it at that. Meanwhile, a
friend of Bobby is cornered by one of the
campus' football players (whose advanced age has
left him with a severe case of receding hair),
who wants his grades changed. Bobby's friend is
saved by a passing female student, who gets her
ass grabbed for her efforts. Later, Hobson chews
out Bobby for not grading some papers - though
why Hobsen would want one of his students to do
that is not answered. Then later, the dean of
the college uses his helium voice to call Hobsen
into his office. The first thing the dean says
is, "I just want to know what the hell is
going on here!" Hobsen, speaking for the
audience, answers, "You and everyone
else!" Fortunately, we start to get an
idea of the plot (finally) at this point, though
strangely, the explanation is provided by the
supposedly clueless dean. Seems there might be
some secret society on campus that's messing
with the administration's computers. Though
before he can explain further, he's called out
of his office, and we are left somewhat hanging
still. Later (a lot much later than you'd both
think and want), more pieces of the plot puzzle
start falling into place. Seems that there is
indeed a secret computer society on campus after
all. Meeting in a disused campus basement room,
the members of the society give themselves hip
nicknames like "Manborn", "Olympius",
and "Modem". They also disguise
themselves with outlandish masks and costumes (a
knight's full chain mail and a plastic mask, a
dirty cloak and a mask completely made out of
discarded crumpled pieces of tin foil, etc.),
and their masks have electronic equipment that
not only disguises their voices, but removes any
possible emotion and acting ability these actors
might have had ordinarily. Anyway, this
society has just recently implemented a
vigilante agenda, and they commence doing things
like blowing up a prostitute in her hotel room
(kind of overreacting, don't you think?) and
killing that aforementioned football jock by
electrocuting him over the phone lines when he
takes a call (which may be ridiculous, but it
provides a good unintentional laugh.) Not long
afterwards, Hobsen finds out Bobby died in a car
accident, and later in the day Bobby's widow Amy
(Lane) storms into Hobsen's office and flat out
accuses him of Bobby's murder. Why? Well... it's
never actually said why, but I think she
suspects Hobsen because they happened to spend
each day in the same location. Though before she
can explain why she isn't accusing any of the
other several hundred people at the campus, she
hears a cop coming to talk to Hobsen, so she
escapes through the ceiling. Yes. Later, she
drops by Hobsen's home to accuse him some more,
but before she can begin to explain her deranged
actions, she hears the cop coming to visit
Hobsen again. So without another word, she
escapes again. If you're wondering if she ever
gets around to explaining herself to Hobsen
and then teaming up with him to solve her
husband's murder, the answer is yes....
eventually, though. But since the plotting of
that subsequent section is just as badly done as
what preceded it, I won't be surprised if you
don't care for any explanation. There are so many places where
Interface goes wrong - in fact, I can't
recall anything of real significance done with a minimum amount of
competence. Actually, it's possible that we might have been able to swallow
a lot of these mistakes had just one key ingredient - which carries most of
that previously mentioned attitude - been worked on, and that ingredient is
the movie's characters. To put it quite bluntly, they are dumb. Really dumb.
They never asking the glaringly appropriate questions for whatever situation
they may be in at the time, which, if answered, would speed the
investigation up quite a bit. Plus, they seem trapped in stereotypical
clichés, like the detective who appears later in the movie (always wearing a
trenchcoat) and constantly acts like an asshole for no appropriate reason.
To make matters worse, none of the actors seem to be even trying to inject
some intelligence with their acting; Davies, for one, gives such an
incompetent performance, he can't even gesture or touch his face while
talking in a convincing manner. The only thing he seems to be trying to put
in his performance is some "gay" and a little
Michael J. Fox, with bizarre
results.
It's hard to believe this movie was directed by the same guy who
subsequently made the critically acclaimed Positive
I.D. The movie's tone is a complete mess. I think it's supposed to be a light-hearted mystery, but
why are there several violent murder sequences, including some stomachs shot
with gory shotgun blasts? It's just as bad when the movie goes for laughs;
this is the kind of movie where the humor is at the level of showing
students in class asleep or reading books entitled "Sexual Deviates". I
won't bother to go into detail about the lengthy urination sequence, as well
as not one but several instances of accidentally
discharged firearms. But it's not just with failing to competently establish one kind of tone
where Anderson fails in his direction. Every scene seems to be shot either in one of Texas' seedier neighborhoods,
or in quickly set-dressed interiors of abandoned buildings, resulting in
every shot looking absolutely hideous to the eye. It also makes the
high-tech computer sequences look cheaper than they are, though they were
not much to begin with. In almost every scene involving a computer, you
never actually see what the character is doing. The character behind the
keyboard actually says out loud as to what he or she is doing with the
computer. The complexity of hacking or computers in general is never even
implied; these skills come across in this movie as
simplistic and something that anyone could do, so there's no suspense,
excitement, or even plain interest in these scenes. The best way Anderson
could have portrayed the power of computers using this screenplay would have
been to delete the word file the screenplay was typed up in.
UPDATE: Paul Becka sent this along: "I Enjoyed your
review of the truly awful film Interface.
Some facts about the film: Interface was
produced entirely by the film program headed by
Andy Anderson at the University of Texas at
Arlington art department. I was a student there
at the time, but was uninvolved (I auditioned
for the role of 'Nerd' or something but was
turned down). The film was scripted, acted and
initially directed entirely by UTA students --
essentially a school project. When the student
director apparently couldn't see it through Andy
(who as you know later directed the well
received Positive I.D.) took over the
job. The film is notable not only for the cameo
performance of Lou Diamond Philips, but also for
being the first film of the successful TV
actress Lauren Lane ('The Nanny') -- credited
here as Laura Lane, a name already taken when
she joined SAG."
Check for availability on Videoflicks (VHS)
See also: Robotrix,
Terminal Justice, Year
Of The Comet
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