Blackhat
After a sudden electronic breakthrough of the Hong Kong nuclear plant and commercial groups in Mercantile, Chicago, by unknown men, a young man named Nick Hathaway, a very talented inventor, was recruited. The young man was released after 15 years in prison and was recruited by the FBI and the CIA to apprehend those pirates known for their skill in the electronic piracy of many major international institutions that caused the cyber attacks. This young man lives a global adventure from Chicago to Los Angeles to Hong Kong to Jakarta to carry out that mission.
4 February 1963, Hong Kong
23 May 1968, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
17 April 1965, Louisville, Kentucky, USA
1966, Singapore
17 May 1976, Rochester, New York, USA
11 May 1977, Providence, Rhode Island, USA
9 October 1970, Elmira, New York, USA
16 April 1964, Baarn, Utrecht, Netherlands
1 July 1967, London, England, UK
June 11, 2016
It should have been a Jason Bourne flick. Instead, it's sort of a poor man's version, so try not to think too hard about that, or the whole thing will turn mildly ridiculous.
January 23, 2015
Nobody can top Mann's urban night scenes, with their oily neon and skyscraper light grids, but for the most part this plays like Heat without the heat.
January 16, 2015
Given our brave new cyber world, someone in Hollywood is going to have to come up with a better way to do it. Watching actors tap out code as big buzzing screens of digital data flash on the screen just doesn't cut it.
May 30, 2016
This is not a film about tight plotting or slam-bang action, but about style. Pure, hypnotic, mesmerizing style.
September 13, 2016
The trailer had promised a fast-paced thriller. It lied.
February 02, 2015
Hints of a quasi-apocalyptic chill seem arbitrary-neither symbolic nor dramatic. The effect is like watching software run itself.
January 17, 2015
Let's start with the fact that Hemsworth stars as the world's most brilliant hacker. Let that sink in for a moment.
July 14, 2016
Mann's preference for digital film is not well served by some of Blackhat's more frenetic sequences.
January 16, 2015
It has a decent ludicrousness and Mann's one-of-a-kind talent for using digital photography and naturalistic light to complicate and invigorate anonymous spaces.
April 09, 2016
[Hemsworth] spends much of the film tapping away on keyboards, frequently looking down at his hands - no, really, the expert computer hacker looks at his hands to type.
January 16, 2015
The movie's most depressing feature is its naked pandering for overseas box office. If there's one thing worse than appealing to the lowest common American denominator, it's appealing to the lowest common global denominator.

