Antitrust (2001)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Ryan Phillippe, Tim Robbins, et al.
Director: Peter Howitt (II)
Edition Details:
Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Color, Closed-captioned, Widescreen, Dolby
Commentary by director Peter Howitt and editor Zach Staenberg
Antitrust: Cracking the Code An exclusive documentary
Deleted scenes with director's commentary
Music video "When It All Goes Wrong" by Everclear
Widescreen anamorphic format
ASIN: B00005AUDW
Editorial
Reviews
The term suspension of
disbelief was invented for the idea that Ryan Phillippe could be a computer
genius. As Milo, a slacker brainiac recruited by smilingly ominous software
giant Gary Winston (Tim Robbins) to help build a global communications system,
Phillippe still looks like a million bucks. He is also still doing the
clenched, pouty grown-up voice that he always uses to show that he means
business in this acting stuff (he's nothing if not earnest), and a pair of
designer glasses completes the transformation. He's well matched in Antitrust
by Claire Forlani, who, in turn, spends time pursing her lips and squinting her
dewy eyes as Milo's troubled girlfriend, an artist who proves to be a liability
when Milo discovers that Winston is killing off clever competitors like a
dot-com fόhrer. Robbins, looking like David Letterman, seems willing to either
take his role dead seriously or goof around a bit, but director Peter Howitt
doesn't know how to play any of it (the actor was better used as a grinning
madman in another flawed paranoid thriller, the underseen Arlington Road).
Without any underlying menace or enough satirical bite to keep it interesting,
the whole thing slips by passively in a mindless matinee kind of way until the
over-the-top finale. Production designer Catherine Hardwicke has had some big,
glossy fun creating Winston's campus and ornate private kingdom, and there's
the cheapest of kicks in seeing Robbins's Bill Gates taken down publicly, but
the film is definitely junior league. --Steve Wiecking