Los Angeles Times

Tech thriller stuck in an 8-bit world

- — Noel Murray

The alarmist thriller “I.T.” puts a high-tech gloss on the idea that one obsessed sicko, with the right access, can ruin someone’s life. This premise has been upgraded for the “smart house” era, but a plodding pace and a lack of tech-nological specifics make this about as state-of-the-art as a Commodore 64.

Pierce Brosnan stars as Mike Regan, a CEO trying to revive his company’s flagging fortunes with a bold new initiative. When snafus sabotage an important presentati­on, Mike calls for help from one of his I.T. guys, Ed Porter (James Frechevill­e), and inadverten­tly gives his psychopath­ic ex-NSA employee the impression they have become friends.

After Ed gets snubbed by Mike one too many times, he takes advantage of all the software and hardware he’s installed for his boss to hack his very existence. Ed stalks the Regan family via security cameras, messes up their various online accounts and plants false informatio­n that threatens Mike’s livelihood.

In this age of terrorist hackers and anonymous action against the superwealt­hy, “I.T.” should feel more timely and terrifying. But perhaps because we’ve heard so much about cybercrime— as well as on savvy TV shows like “Mr. Robot” — the generic references here to “defragging” and “firewalls” don’t impress.

Director John Moore doesn’t help matters with his slow-drip plot delivery and overheated tone. Ultimately, there’s just nothing here that’s snappy or relevant. In tech-speak, this film is bricked.

“I.T.” Not rated. Running time: 1 hour, 35 minutes. Playing: Laemmle Playhouse 7, Pasadena.

 ?? Jonathan Hession ?? BAD THINGS happen when tech guy Ed Porter (James Frechevill­e) gets mad. Don’t let that happen.
Jonathan Hession BAD THINGS happen when tech guy Ed Porter (James Frechevill­e) gets mad. Don’t let that happen.

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