Two things from a USAF veteran who saw the film in the cinema when it was released (3 years after leaving the military). First, arguably the greatest hero in history, Lt. Col. Stanislav Petrov of SOVIET Air Defense, refused orders to launch nukes as a response to a faulty report of a US first strike attack. And this was in 1983. Eerily (and perhaps meaningfully) similar to the story of Wargames. Second, when watching this in a cinema during its first release, the actual, IRL tensions inside the US were horrific. (I get emotional just remembering this.) We were watching the 'fun, fell-good, action romp' as it got closer and closer to the suspenseful ending. SPOILERS SPOILERS SPOILERS! We were on the edge of our seats, to some extent, but in the actual times, we lived in a permanent state of terrified readiness (actually, in dread because readiness could do little in an actual scenario of nuclear war, and many of us knew this). When WOPR says the game was interesting because "The only way to win is not to play," at least a quarter of the audience of 100 or so people jumped to their feet and shouted with joy and affirmation. We were wound so tight in those days, without always knowing it, that this simple, but momentous line made people jump and cheer at the message. Do not, under any circumstance, play Global Thermonuclear War. I like to think that the film may have contributed to some policy makers of the time, and decision makers in actual missile siloes, backing down from a figurative DEFCON 1. So, yes, it was a nifty little fluffy film which, in all reality, spoke of and to a time when the risk of a devastating WW III was no joke. Thanks for a great reaction, as always, Minty.
@brothergrimaldus3836 Жыл бұрын
I was born in '80. People don't realize the cloud over the world during that decade. When the wall fell in '91, the collective sigh the world took, younger people just don't understand it!!!
@taddurrenberger3672 Жыл бұрын
IRL?
@jonathanstancil8544 Жыл бұрын
@@taddurrenberger3672In Real Life
@mickeypye2593 Жыл бұрын
such a tale !!! nice one fella ;)
@johnmunro4952 Жыл бұрын
I saw Threads ( the movie) in 83 aged 7! ( Far too young) and obviously developed a dread fear of nuclear holocaust. My 8th birthday was 26/09/83. I've always been very grateful to a certain Soviet officer for not ruining my birthday.
@timrprobocom Жыл бұрын
My favorite story about War Games has to do with the NORAD Operations Center. When this movie came out, NORAD was just beginning the process of completely overhauling their operations center, but no one really knew what they wanted. The totally fictional operations center in the movie showed them what could be done by a creative team, and it actually influenced the design of the revamped NORAD.
@simonhadley8829 Жыл бұрын
I recently rewatched this after thirty years and was amazed at how well it held up, not to mention how eerily prophetic it was.
@pretikewl76 Жыл бұрын
This movie is a main reason I got my education (and later jobs) in the computer field. Very inspirational.
@kennylong653 Жыл бұрын
My secret fan theory is that WarGames and The Terminator are in the same universe. WOPR was the first failed Skynet.
@mauricemaple1430 Жыл бұрын
Thats awesome!! You should become a writer. 😊
@Aaron-lc9cx Жыл бұрын
Ripley is mentioned in the sequel
@alexhydell3608 Жыл бұрын
Well you aren't very good at keeping secrets 😊
@cincin0722 Жыл бұрын
I'm definitely picking up what you're putting down
@kateblair291 Жыл бұрын
Canon accepted
@MrSupro Жыл бұрын
When you mentioned Space Lasers I thought of Spies Like Us. Can you please do that one? It holds up surprisingly well.
@DonLekei Жыл бұрын
War Games was a pivotal piece of technology cinema. I saw it opening week with some colleagues from the computer company I worked for at the time. It showed that password aging is a severe security risk over 35 years before Microsoft (and earlier NIST and FTC) finally issued advice to avoid using password aging because it can lead to people writing down passwords. Then in the phone booth scene, we were all going... "It's a dial phone booth... find some metal. Yes! The pull-tab!" to a chorus of "Shhhh"s. The movie inspired "War Dialers" that exposed so many systems that just used unlisted "security through obscurity" numbers with guest logins, and later used to find fax lines to end spam faxes to.
@KabukiKid Жыл бұрын
This still stands as one of my favorite 80s movies. One thing that is so impressive about this film is that almost all of the tech stuff and hacking/phreaking you see in the movie was completely legit and realistic for the day. They definitely did their nerdy research for this one. ;-)
@seanryan3020 Жыл бұрын
When dial-up modems you had to plug a phone receiver into were cutting edge!
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Жыл бұрын
He did not hack anything. He set his unrealistic home pc to auto dial phone numbers. WOPR just answered.
@KabukiKid Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 He did the proper research to figure out potential passwords. Sort of social engineering without direct interaction with the subject. And what was unrealistic about his home PC setup? That was a legit PC of the day... it was an IMSAI 8080... it was even sort of old in 1983.
@christopherpetit1718 Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 I remember a general angrily yelling that "the phone company screwed up. They left a line open," which neatly explained how he got in.
@rgarito Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Back in those days, many of us actually DID do things like that. It wasn't unrealistic at all. In fact, because of the movie, it was named WarDialing. Typically we were more looking for BBS's but we did find things like banks and computer timeshare companies (Tymnet is one I remember finding). And just like wargames, once you got in, you really had no clue what to do next, so some experimented a bit.
@Mad-Bassist Жыл бұрын
Greatest line ever: "I'd piss on a spark plug if I thought it'd do any good." Saw it in the theater around age 15--classic!
@robertholtz Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: That line was ad-libbed by Barry Corbin.
@brianbaker3731 Жыл бұрын
My dad’s favorite line from the movie
@emuhill Жыл бұрын
From what I understand some people have actually peed on a spark plug for real. All while the spark plug was getting energized. Let's just say these people are clearly not all that bright to try something like that. From what I understand the shock you get from a spark plug is similar to the shock you get from an electric fence and is quite painful.
@dark14life11 ай бұрын
@@emuhill Mythbusters busted that "peeing on electric things" myth. A urine stream breaks up before it contacts the electrified object. You'd have to be inches away to get any sort of shock. Or, have the most robust stream of piss that anyone has ever had in human history.
@Starbuckin3 ай бұрын
@@dark14life Mythbusters is full of it.
@Choralone422 Жыл бұрын
Wargames has always been one of my favorite movies! Even when I was too young to fully understand it back in the 80s. It's a movie that I still go back and watch a couple of times a year. I knew about the 2008 sequel and even watched it. It's basically a made-for-TV movie in quality. Not completely terrible but doesn't hold a candle to the original!
@antdude Жыл бұрын
My colony and I saw it in the theater as a callow. I didn't understand it, but did when I was an adult since I became a computer geek/nerd. :)
@burns4246 Жыл бұрын
lol, what u said could have been my comment word for word. i also love war games, i have seen the 2nd and it was not good but not horrible as well
@edgartenbruggencate939 Жыл бұрын
don't forget the weird role W.O.P.R. had in the sequel at the end.
@domomitsune5920 Жыл бұрын
WarGames is one of my favorite movies. And the kid going up against a military super computer to decide the fate of the world, was a pretty nifty idea. And how they ultimately trick it into stalemate itself until it decided to give up, was brilliant.
@MatthewHarrold Жыл бұрын
I'm 52, saw it in a Hoyts cinema in grade 7 the same year my dad purchased a Commodore 64, acoustic coupler modem, dot matrix printer, and an amber screen (like a green screen, only orange). We were already "logging in" to the local university computer and Gopher looked exactly like the War Games interaction (without the voice). It felt real, almost as if I could hack into government computers and start Robodebt Wars. $0.02
@Aaron-lc9cx Жыл бұрын
I saw it before it was released on pirate video. Got a commodore for my next birthday. Couldn't wait to write a program that infinitely repeated a word or drew a line. Those were the days.
@crusader.survivor Жыл бұрын
Those things are built to last! My uncle still uses his Commodore 64 monitor as his tv screen!
@rolling-roadkill Жыл бұрын
@@crusader.survivorI just fired up one of my old C-64's that has been in storage for about 20 years. Started up right away as if it was brand new. I love computers from the 80's. 😄
@crusader.survivor Жыл бұрын
@@rolling-roadkill The 80's was the height of American culture! I miss those days.
@markramirez3920 Жыл бұрын
C64 ? The same computer hacktivist Julian Assagne learend computing ?
@Diggy22 Жыл бұрын
WarGames is one of my favorite tech movies. The hacking scenes are the most practical and believable for its time. Rather than just having a teenager type in random code on his computer, they have the hero using passwords carelessly laid out, and dialing up numbers to software companies. This movie had such an impact on me, when I got my first Chromebook about 5 years ago, I slapped a WarGames sticker on the back of it. One fact I'm surprised that you didn't mention was that the Galaga game that Matthew Broderick was playing was gifted to him to practice on for the movie. So yeah, Matthew Broderick had a Galaga machine in his house thanks to WarGames.😊
@specialagent4575 Жыл бұрын
This movie got me to install a war dialer back in the day and then a port scanner later on. There were (are?) a lot of vulnerable systems out there.
@futuree.d.o.podcast604 Жыл бұрын
I met the WOPR (prop) in LA on a live sound gig years ago. It was covered in dust all by itself in the corner of an empty warehouse in east LA. It was one of the most random and coolest things I'd ever seen. I was laterally star struck by a prop. It was in one of those industrial areas that had been converted to artist flats. There was a big warehouse separated from the flats, which contained the iconic WOPR. It was just this big empty dusty space. One of the tenants was kind enough to show me this hidden treasure...enticing me with something like, "you wanna see something cool?" ...Its condition was not the best of shape, but still going strong. This was 15 years ago. I wonder where or who is taking care of the WOPR now...but in retrospect, I wonder, what the hell was it doing there...like shouldn't it be in a museum?
@tammasus Жыл бұрын
Damn! Wish you had gotten pictures
@futuree.d.o.podcast604 Жыл бұрын
@@tammasus man I think I did actually. I gotta go dig in my old photos and see if i still have them. If so I'll post 'em and flag it here!
@aaronm9478 Жыл бұрын
There is an old, dusty WOPR in the "sequel"...Idk if it is the original WOPR or not, but it looks just like it. Maybe they found it and have it preserved somewhere now.
@basketvector7311 Жыл бұрын
sweet. i would be star struck.
@mattfinleylive Жыл бұрын
@@futuree.d.o.podcast604 !
@lloydmilton9808 Жыл бұрын
My wife and I still watch this movie every few years and continue to enjoy it. I absolutely loved the Wargames Defcon 1 game on the PS1. A friend and I used to play it every time he came over trying to beat each of the different scenarios and getting through to the end.
@jeffreycohn6407 Жыл бұрын
My dad’s oldest childhood friend was William “Billy” Bogart, who played Matthew Broderick’s dad. He was a well known Broadway actor, and one of the earliest spokesmen for IBMs very first personal computer in the very early 1980s. They grew up across the street from each other on Cedar Lane in Woodmere, Long Island. Billy’s wife Erin was one of the very first Muppeteers with Jim Henson on Sesame St and the Muppet Show. Billy died fairly recently, about 5 years ago.
@christophergilbert23065 ай бұрын
Didn't he also play the interviewer in Chapelle's Black Racist skit?
@trevorbrown6654 Жыл бұрын
This was a huge sleeper hit in the summer of 1983. I remember it happened to coincide with the first generation of affordable home computers that kids ( of which I was one) could get their hands on. I also recall Octopussy was it's big rival release that summer and both films were released by United Artists. Scary to think this was 40 years ago now. What you missed mentioning was that Matthew Broderick's father died towards the end of filming,. John Badham and the cast were very sympathetic towards him however he bravely soldiered on in order to get his scenes finished.
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Жыл бұрын
Fun semi-fact- that computer he was using was not something a family would purchase.
@markramirez3920 Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 I wasa lucky to get some kids computer summer camp at a collegue ...
@rgarito Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Actually the IMSAI 8080 was pretty popular but not cheap. Home computers back then were much most expensive (adjusted for inflation) than they are today. My first computer back then was a TRS-80 which cost $1000 (and the printer cost about another $1000). That was a LOT of money back in the early-mid 80's
@johnphantom Жыл бұрын
@@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Real fact: he wasn't using a PC. It was a dumb terminal.
@iamthesnowgod Жыл бұрын
Minty, your videos are amazing. You keep us entertained and informed. Hitting those 80s classics.... icing on the cake my friend. Keep it up!!!!
@LearnAboutFlow Жыл бұрын
"Shall we play a game?" was a HUGE meme/catchphrase of the time and everyone was saying it.
@donaldfleming50494 ай бұрын
It remains popular to this day. Scarlett Johansson even quoted it during a scene in 'Captain America: The Winter Soldier' back in 2014.
@Ojisan642 Жыл бұрын
Space lasers was the plot of Real Genius
@jimday7812 Жыл бұрын
I remember it being said a few times that the jeep crashing into the fence wasn't a part of the script. It just happened and when Broderick said "are you OK" to Sheedy, it was out of genuine concern and not one of his lines. It all was kept in because the director liked it.
@QBAN2010 Жыл бұрын
Aly Sheedy was textbook definition of adorable!!!
@JoeyLevenson Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite movies as a 80s kid. Ive seen it probably 30+ times.
@casinodelonge Жыл бұрын
"Id piss on a spark plug if I thought it would help". Classic line.
@cosmodigi1 Жыл бұрын
It’s hard for me to fathom this was 40 years ago n still holds up in its own way. What Minty said about current AI is also kind of alarming in how true his statement is.
@Chuck-he1jd Жыл бұрын
AI is Hollywood... not what you think it is ,,,,fake
@badkitty4922 Жыл бұрын
There's an actual computer software company in Asia (China, I think) called Cyberdine. When I heard that my first thought was Rut Roh! Shit's about to get real!
@emiespo16 күн бұрын
I rewatched this film recently, and realized that Prof. Falken uses the term “hallucination” to describe Joshua’s behaviour. Basically an AI hallucinating already 42 years ago. Second fun fact: when the team doesn’t manage to regain access to the system, they used the words “we keep hitting a firewall”. Being Italian, to me this had been literally translated into “we keep crashing into a damn wall”. It maintains the same idea, but I had to finally watch the film in English to know what happened there 😂
@gagarin777 Жыл бұрын
Wait... lasers in space you say? That's the plot of Real Genius [1985] with Val Kilmer
@grapeshot Жыл бұрын
Global thermonuclear war. I always liked that scene when all the missiles were flying out of the Soviet Union and the United States. And the computer said no winner.
@pilotman012 Жыл бұрын
Are we not going to mention the "How to butter a corn cob" scene?!! 😂
@charlesrainey1076 Жыл бұрын
Minty bro, the imagine joke /pun was A+! Truly one of you best displays of your mastery of the comedic arts. Love your work and thanks for being you. Joy, peace, and abundance upon you friend.
@sid2112 Жыл бұрын
Ally Sheedy in the jogging pants still haunts my dreams.
@Venejan Жыл бұрын
Yes, I've been in love with her character for a full forty years now! She's the very quintessence of what a young guy thinks a girlfriend should be...
@ACBMemphis Жыл бұрын
The opening credits of Edge of Tomorrow show the control room from WarGames. Also I think the idea for the movie Sneakers was discovered while making WarGames. Not to mention, the method used to find the computer's phone number was real! I had a program for my Apple II literally called the "War Games Dialer" that used the modem to find other computers by auto-dialing. Anyway, great video!
@koppadasao Жыл бұрын
- Who invented asexual reproduction? - Er... Your wife?
@GrinderCB Жыл бұрын
What really put the hook in me was the opening sequence with the Missileers in the silo control bunker who get the go-code to launch their missiles, not knowing it was a test.
@biguglyskunk1248 Жыл бұрын
And one of them being Michael Madsen...😂
@SchizoGenius Жыл бұрын
One of the crazier aspects of the timing of its release would be the whole Stanislav Petrov incident took place that same year, but it wouldn't be revealed for decades afterwards.
@GrinderCB Жыл бұрын
I loved how he dialed all the phone numbers in the Sunnyvale area to find just the computers. Just call the phone company and ask for all the prefixes in that city, then run the program to auto-dial all 10000 per prefix and save the computer toned ones. And for getting out of the big phone bill, as he said, "There's ways around that."
@Mordraneth Жыл бұрын
That's called Wardialing, and it was a genuine technique used by hackers pre-Internet.
@joshuagibson2520 Жыл бұрын
I used Terminate! V1. 4. It had a built in wardialer.
@gorillaau Жыл бұрын
@@MordranethThere is a modern spin off of that one which is Wardriving. It's where you drive around untill you find an open (passwordless) WiFi access point. Just make a note of it and move on to find others, or the same one but a stronger signal. Later you come back and explore this new system that you have found. These days, you need to crack the WEP or WPA keys which is not impossible but takes a lot of the fun out of it. Manually cracking those keys? Well there are ways around that also.
@STSWB5SG1FAN Жыл бұрын
@@gorillaau Actually the terms you used, "war-dialing" and "war-driving" owe their existence to the film.
@LOWROLLER72 Жыл бұрын
"You can go to jail for that.. only if you're 18" LOL 😁
@ndarkie Жыл бұрын
One other thing that you might not know about the movie. The hack used to make the telephone call without having any money is based on something real. While the real hack was a bit more involved, it absolutely worked if you found the proper type of pay phone back in the 80s.
@astrocohorsclub Жыл бұрын
I don't know if this already has been mentioned, but I mention it anyway: one possible translation for "hawk" in German language is "Falke". So basically "Falken" is the name "Hawking" transliterated into German.
@5roundsrapid263 Жыл бұрын
Wow. That’s why a hawk is also called a falcon in English. I never thought about that…
@AudieHolland3 ай бұрын
That's weird. Because Dutch is closely related to German, but in Dutch we have two seperate words, indicating different birds (of prey). Falcon - valk Hawk - havik Turns out both Dutch and English talk about two different birds, whereas German has one name for two different birds! Falcon - Falke Hawk - Falke.
@MMarcoux-66 Жыл бұрын
The ColecoVision game was a lot of fun back in the day for the time. We had it for our system.
@aussiepie4865 Жыл бұрын
Omg I had a huge crush on Ally Sheedy at the time. Such a beautiful young woman.
@Venejan Жыл бұрын
Agreed!!
@fathercheese01 Жыл бұрын
I played Wargames on the Coleco system, and I loved it. You could count on 1 hand how many strategy games there were on those old school systems back in the day, so I really liked this one.
@chassisskirts696710 ай бұрын
Coleco holds a special place in my cold dead heart
@vincentanzelone8705 Жыл бұрын
One of my all time favorite films. I saw this as a kid in theaters and was fascinated by the computer technology. This led me to a very successful 25+ year career in IT.
@richardnicholas2957 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite all time movies. Still holds up very well.
@jeffhulrich Жыл бұрын
I was there. I was 17 years old at the time. I was also an aspiring computer programmer and quite natural at it I must say. I was already a regular on the computer bulletin boards, using my whopping 300 baud modem. Back then, you would find text based command prompts at random phone numbers. We used dialers to hunt those numbers. When I watched this movie, I saw something quite potentially real because of my experience at the time. The movie has been remarkably memorable.
@5roundsrapid263 Жыл бұрын
My dad was drafted during Vietnam, but stationed on a Nike nuclear missile base instead of Vietnam. He loved this film, and totally agreed with “the only way to win is not to play”.
@gregpettigrew7908 Жыл бұрын
As a 12 year old in 1983 it resonated plenty. I think most kids of the early 80s figured they would all die in a nuclear war. “The Day After” was another movie that brought the point home. To make things even worse, we also lived in the Colorado Springs (home of NORAD and at the top of the Soviet target list)…
@insideoutsideupsidedown2218 Жыл бұрын
The Day After was eerie for when it was released. Watching it now as an older adult, there are a lot of things about the movie that are not that great. 1st, the launch sequence of the Minuteman Missiles from in front of the residence halls on the KU campus makes no sense because the US Air Force would never have silos in that location and 2nd, minuteman missiles were never deployed in Kansas. Also the detonation scene with the Dr. On the highway-if that were the case, him ducking down would have done no good as for the distance he was to that large MT warhead, his car would have been obliterated.
@Ozymandias1 Жыл бұрын
The hacker scare bit was why the recently departed Kevin Mitnick was punished so severely in the following decade. Abd why the judge even banned him from making phone calls because he was convinced that Mitnick could launch nuclear weapons by whistling into a phone (in the 70s it was actually possible to make free phone calls by using a whistle from Captain Crunch cereal boxes, a guy who called himself that was involved with that as were a certain Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak). When the majority of Mitnick's "hacks" involved social engineering, exploiting human weaknesses to gain access.
@Vim-Wolf Жыл бұрын
In terms of the technical side of the film, Wargames was so far ahead of its time. They spoke with actual hackers to get their info, and a lot of the methodology is still relevant now.
@trevorbrown6654 Жыл бұрын
I think that was part of the reason it was so successful. It was a totally original, entertaining and well made film. The story was, as you say, years ahead of its time.
@JoeySeverini Жыл бұрын
Minty! I love your videos. FYI, on WarGames you missed a great fact that the tunnel used in the beginning of the film (especially at the 8 minute mark of the film) is the same tunnel from BACK TO THE FUTURE 2 and for Toon Town in ROGER RABBIT.
@MrDuneedon Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite childhood movies, and I still love it today. Really struck a nerve with me all those years ago, right smack dab in the 80s Cold War era.
@davidc6032 Жыл бұрын
Great cast and writing that went beyond the main leads. Dabney Coleman and Barry Corbin as the General were fantastic. Both of those actors always delivered.
@kirbymarchbarcena Жыл бұрын
Ah, yeah, another original '80s movie that an '80s kid like me has enjoyed because of the computer games
@Booger-u6m2 ай бұрын
I saw "War Games" here in Charleston, South Carolina, when it came out in the summer of '83. I was 18 at the time. The theater was the Pinehaven Cinema and it sat across the road from the Navy base, which led to a rather surreal experience I will never forget. The movie was great! Everyone had a good time watching it. At the end, though, things got a little crazy. During the missile attack scene, where the NORAD commander is sweating bullets while the kid and the professor tried to convince him it was just a simulation, as major cities were apparently being vaporized, the audience started cheering it on. It was nuts! New York, of course, was first to go. NYC appeared on the screen, then 5 white dots where NYC used to be. Then came Chicago, L.A., Houston, etc. About half the audience cheered and jeered each one as it went up in smoke. "FUCK NEW YORK! NEW YORK SUCKS! BLOW IT UP!" and "CHICAGO SUCKS! BLOW IT UP! HA HA HA!" And so it went for L.A., Houston, Atlanta ... Then the Eastern Seaboard, from Washington, D.C., to Jacksonville, Florida, appeared on screen, including Charleston. Then white dots all along the coast, including one where Charleston, South Carolina, used to be. Things got strange! The boisterous audience which, moments before, had cheered and jeered the apparent destruction of so many major cities and the theoretical deaths of millions, suddenly got very quiet when Charleston vanished in a bloom of nuclear annihilation. It was as if someone shut off a switch. It was that completely silent, that fast.."YEAH, FUCK ATLANTA! ATLANTA SUCKS! NEW ORLEANS SUCKS! HA HA HA! YEAH, DC SUC---!!" 😱😳😬🤐 And no one said a word for the rest of the film. I think it dawned on most of them at that moment that our city was a target should Armageddon break out and we were sitting across the street from Ground Zero. In 1983, Charleston had the Navy base, Air Force Base, Naval Weapons Station and the Polaris missile base, so, yeah, we had several targets painted on our backs. The Navy base housed a surface and submarine battle group then. It closed in 1994, but the other facilities are still here. The theater is a church now, and the Pinehaven Shopping Center it was part of was torn down and redeveloped.
@Bobbyboy-i3z2 ай бұрын
My dad worked for Grumman Aircraft in Bethpage Long Island. On the security building at Nassau County Medical Central was a map of most likely nuclear targets in New York. Bethpage had a big circle on it. Grumman is out of business now. We lived about 5 miles from Grumman. But I am still 15 miles from Manhattan.
@asa-punkatsouthvinland7145 Жыл бұрын
*unofficial Terminator prequel! WOPR is the "father" of Skynet! 😂
@geoswan4984 Жыл бұрын
Lichtman's computer, in the film, is an Imsai 8080. The Altair 8080 was the first computer an individual could purchase, as a kit, and assemble at home. The Imsai was the second kit computer. Producers tried to negotiate with computer retailers, for a product placement, and product placement fee, without success. So, they decided to use the Imsai. Imsai and Altair computers had toggle switches and flashing lights, on the front panel, just like the old big iron computers. Each individual flashing light was on or off depending on the current content of the CPU's address, arithmetic and status registers. My older brother paid something like $1000, in 1976 dollars, to purchase an Imsai kit. It took him months to solder all the components on to the motherboard. When it was finally finished I thought he would be excited, trying it out, putting it through its paces, making it do interesting things. But, in fact, he was very disappointed. He found that the kit just hadn't shipped with enough memory. It shipped with a big 1 kilobyte of RAM. Not megabyte, not gigabyte. Kilobyte. For another $1000 he could unsolder and replace his 1K chips with 4K chips. Another one of my favourite KZbinrs has a couple of videos where he plays with a kit that emulates one of those 1976 computer kits... kzbin.info/www/bejne/gaCZiJKwqq2anKc
@AudieHolland3 ай бұрын
Just for anyone interested (internet archeologists?). In the early 1990s I bought a 386 SX running at 33 Mhz. It had an internal memory of 1 Mb. When I was thinking about buying more memory, I went to the PC-shop and they tried to sell me another 1 Mb for a whopping 100 Guilders. I politely declined and left the shop, thinking 'one day they'll have memory on sale in a big bucket and someone scooping them out in spades. Literally.
@notbanksy8294 Жыл бұрын
Whoppers, also a candy. Malted milk balls covered in artificially flavored chocolate. Another good one Minty, thanks.
@5roundsrapid263 Жыл бұрын
In the UK there’s a copy called Maltesers.
@DavidSmith-xr8js Жыл бұрын
I was a Senior in HS in 83. Ally Sheedy made we boys beg for buttermilk back then. Her character in this movie was what boys adored. Kind, sweet, shy, cute and most of all willing to help the boy who liked her. I liked War Games better than Farris Buehler.
@PhysicalMediaPreventsWea-bx1zm Жыл бұрын
David's Mom: "Is your little friend staying for dinner?" Jennifer is sitting in a chair. When David attempts to get past her she traps him between her legs, smiles and says: "Little friend?" 😂 One of the most innocently erotic (or erotically innocent) scenes in movie history! Ally Sheedy said that she had no idea how suggestive that scene was until she saw the completed film for the first time!
@nickadams2451 Жыл бұрын
I about died of laughter when you called him baby Matthew Broderick.
@sketcharmstrong8491 Жыл бұрын
I remember my dad renting this movie over and over back when. At the time I didn't know what it was about and thought it was supposed to be some kind of intro to Ferris Bueller or something, considering the main character fiddles around with keyboards in the beginning. Little did I know years later while watching this as an adult. But yeah, a rad trip back to the 80s....
@taliesinllanfair4338 Жыл бұрын
So glad you did this video of an almost forgotten gem of early 80s cinema.
@paradox7358 Жыл бұрын
A strange game. The only winning move is not to play.
@martinrenner2992 Жыл бұрын
I saw this at least 3 times in a theatre when it came out. Masterpiece!
@XpappaedgeX Жыл бұрын
WG2 wasn't horrible. I was living back in San Diego when it came out, and saw it in a small video store. I had to watch, loving the first one at 10 years old. I didn't hate it. Some good Easter eggs in it.
@uncleal13 Жыл бұрын
I was heavy radar tech working in a radar station on the Pinetree Line that sent data to Cheyenne Mountain when this movie came out. I really enjoyed it at time. We were kinda shocked as things that we were told to keep secret were actually in the film, such was the Defcon levels.
@jecelassumpcaojr890 Жыл бұрын
When Kevin Mitnick (who died last week) was arrested, he was kept in solitary confinement. The argument was that he could launch nuclear missiles if he had access to the phone system. Guess which movie the judge was thinking of when he agreed to this. About the sequel, I don't remember much about it but WOPR does make a short cameo as does the character of Dr. Falken with a different actor.
@Juohmaru79 Жыл бұрын
Brings back nice memories and a bit of nostalgia for an era gone for good...In my mind makes a great double feature with D.A.R.Y.L.
@kennykimbler9816 Жыл бұрын
Great movie, I remember watching this as a young kid. I loved it then and its still a good movie and thanks for the trip down memory lane. Those where the good times seting in front of HBO cable T.V.
@jamesmoss3424 Жыл бұрын
Matthew Broderick is brilliant as David Lightman and Ally Sheedy is brilliant as Jennifer Katherine Mack.😀👍
@RominaJones Жыл бұрын
100%, this is one of the best cast films!
@jamesmoss3424 Жыл бұрын
@@RominaJones I agree. 😀👍
@flipnap2112 Жыл бұрын
Crazy. I was 14 when it came out. the Arcades were the place to be. It was an amazing time and I dont think its even possible to imagine what it was like if you were born decades later. The excitement was visceral and it was an obsession. The home computer market was blossoming yet no GUI existed yet. You had to write code just to launch programs. I had an apple II and programmed in BASIC to mimic the films "Airline ticket reservation" scene. My friends would come over and they thought it was real ha ha. Imagine never even conceiving the idea of an "internet" and then seeing a kid on a movie dialing into "the internet" to "hack" games. These terms and concepts were so radical and new. I fell I love with Alley Sheedy and then began my love of girls with crooked teeth :) I remember her saying in an interview that hollywood asked her to fix them and she said "Nope!". Thats a rarity in hollywood these days.Anyway I could go on and on so ill stop here. Thanks for covering it Minty. Im so glad I was 0-10 in the 70's and 11-20 in the 80's. I won the decade jackpot!!
@heathhacker8948 Жыл бұрын
I miss BASIC !! I hate C++ although I love a SPELL CHECKER being built into the program editor new generations never have to deal with a syntax error and i still think in GOTO .
@flipnap2112 Жыл бұрын
@@heathhacker8948 ha ha yeah man, the good ol'.. 10 Print "I Am Awesome!" 20 GOTO 10 😄
@bokami3445 Жыл бұрын
There's a definite reason WarGames: The Dead Code was direct to DVD, quite frankly it should've started off in the DVD bargain bin.
@Lesley_RedRhody Жыл бұрын
I was nine and my Brother was ten when we saw _WarGames_ premiere on the big screen. As kids, we’d never previously heard of SAC or NORAD. We didn’t know what a DEFCON was. But let me tell you, we felt the weight of the World on David’s shoulders when he realized he almost started World War III! That, of course, was due in no small part to the performances given by Matthew Broderick and Ally Sheedy. John Wood was equally brilliant and tragic as Dr. Stephen Falken! I was happy to see Wood and Broderick team up again in _Ladyhawke (1985)._ Speaking of improv, which Minty mentioned was encouraged by Director John Badham, the best improv’d line, hands down, came from Barry Corbin as SAC General Jack Beringer: _”Goddamn it, I’d piss on a spark plug if I thought it’d do any good!”_
@Lesley_RedRhody Жыл бұрын
PS: As someone who only watched _The Dead Code_ because it came included with my DVD copy… It sucked! I can’t remember anything about it except what was horribly done to the only returning character: Dr. Stephen Falken. Also I was completely disinterested in the main protagonists.
@KenHoluta Жыл бұрын
As always, it's fun to learn about what went on behind the scenes of our favorite 80s and 90s movies. Back then we had to rely on movie magazines like Cinefantastique, Starlog, and others to give us the scoop on production details and gossip about the actors and directors. Now we have Minty.
@TimDaleMusic Жыл бұрын
I read the novelization of WarGames back in 83, and it's opening line was so striking that I remember it to this day "The world ended not with a bang, or even a wimper, but in complete silence". The writer had obviously followed the rule that a book needs to grab it's reader from the first line. (The line was a reference to a non-working computer game that Broderick's character was writing.)
@theelder47973 ай бұрын
Might be how it truly DID end a few centuries ago.
@TheBlindDyslexic Жыл бұрын
While investigating War Games, the idea for the 1992 movie Sneakers was created. War Games was also the name of the 1969 episode of Patrick Troughton's last adventure. Where the 2nd Doctor, Jamie, and Zoe help ferret out a fellow rogue Time Lord the War Chief, who was aiding the race the War Lords. This would also be the adventure that would give Name to the Doctor's race, and be the second time where he would encounter one of his own people (the first being the Monk from the William Hernell serial the Time Medler).
@spumoni9713 Жыл бұрын
John Wood (Falken) and Matthew Broderick went on to star in the movie "Ladyhawke" together.
@kaylacolgan Жыл бұрын
I remember I first watched this movie on The Hub channel when I was 15 almost 16 back in 2013.
@RoverIAC Жыл бұрын
Nice pick Minty. I just watched this film with my son last weekend. Last time I watched it was about 35 years ago.
@robertmcghintheorca49 Жыл бұрын
Maybe do 10 things you didn't know about "Suspiria" or "The Entity".
@mickeypye2593 Жыл бұрын
only seen suspiria in the last 6-8 months. brilliant show ... a deft hand upon its rudder :)
@Legoisjustsogood Жыл бұрын
I remember first seeing War Games in computer class in high school, and it has since then become one of my all time favorite movies
@DavidLLambertmobile Жыл бұрын
I liked Wargames as a kid: 1980s but as a older adult, 2020s there are big flaws-parts I'd change, redo.
@emiespo16 күн бұрын
@@DavidLLambertmobile as an IT engineer (this movie had no influence on me!), I agree that a lot of things make little sense, plus a few bloopers (when David dies in Galaga he’s oresented with Game Over, but you can clearly see he still had three lives left!). But in 1983 it all looked 100% realistic, and I believe tht was actually the goal of the writers: focus on delivering the main message (nuclear war is not something we can afford to “play”), keeping everything as realistic as possible but adding some hollywood stereotypes (nerds as solitary people with attitude issues, computer screens making soundsn text appears, etc.) to keep the movie running smoothly and entertaining for most of the audience of the time.
@jasonthuot Жыл бұрын
One of my personal favorites! I always look forward to your videos.
@markpjf85 Жыл бұрын
Wargames is a good film Computer hacking Computer called Joshua releasing the codes to start world War three
@JoeJr Жыл бұрын
I really really love your videos. Great job as always Minty !
@coreyhendricks9490 Жыл бұрын
Good morning Minty, cool video as always, keep up the good work, you have a nice day sir
@Slammy555 Жыл бұрын
Missile Command is the best video game based on War Games, it came out several years before the movie.
@nimblehealer199 Жыл бұрын
Fun Fact: the scene in the missile silo is dead on accurate.
@DavidLLambertmobile Жыл бұрын
As a 1980s 1990s era Army MP enlisted 🪖 I found the film Air Force, SP-MP parts a tad unrealistic. In reality, especially after 09/2001 the USAF & DoD are SUPER rigid, strict about 🛰🚀📡💻 stuff. No open tours, no buses, no pranks, no detaining trespassers(un monitored or with no restraints). I can tell you Air Force Security Forces & OSI 🚔 are no joke!
@TheAlchaemist Жыл бұрын
@@DavidLLambertmobile He is talking about the initial silo scene, the opening scene, where they were conducting a training test in a silo without knowing if it was training or not.
@AlexKasper Жыл бұрын
"Do you want to play a game Dr Bueller?" -WOPR, probably.
@wstine79 Жыл бұрын
"Shall we play a Minty game?"
@Merylstreep1949 Жыл бұрын
I still butter corn on the cob using a piece of buttered bread😂
@RonBaker456 Жыл бұрын
Fun content. The thought of Lennon playing the doc is so interesting. You should do one on Real Genius (which did use the space laser motif). Thanks for taking the time.
@DoubleDguitar Жыл бұрын
Real Genius is a classic. Pretty sure Minty did an episode on it.
@THRASHMETALFUNRIFFS Жыл бұрын
@@DoubleDguitar Yep, I think he did that classic
@justinkantner7162 Жыл бұрын
Awesome movie, and Ally Sheedy was stunning 👌🏻
@edkeaton Жыл бұрын
Very interesting video as always Minty. This was also released the same year as John Badham's other hit movie "Blue Thunder". Can you please do a segment on that film? That was an awesome film like "Wargames". Thanks always for your content. 😎👍
@n.l.4025 Жыл бұрын
I actually thought “‘War Games’ is a real “WOPR!” was one of your best ways you’ve ended your videos. I liked it. It really just fit, perfectly. I think you have good instincts. Trust them or your gut or whatever. Thanks, Minty! I always love your videos!
@dmac7128 Жыл бұрын
WarGames was a fun movie to watch and looking back it captured the zeitgeist of the early 80's perfectly. And it had something thoughtful to say. Some of the aspects of man in the loop decision making vs automation explored by the film are even more relevant today. Plus its a good spring board to studying nuclear warfare. Perhaps the one point brought up in the film is the incredibly short amount of time the President has to make a decision to launch after detecting suspected inbound warheads which could be a matter of minutes. The doctrine of launching on warning was a real thing. Its a wonder that we haven't nuked ourselves yet.
@RandallChase1 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been waiting for you to do this since the beginning!! THANK YOU!
@joshuaburba1048 Жыл бұрын
Great review as always Minty. I love this movie. Just rewatched it for free a few weeks ago on KZbin, in fact. Two more actors who deserve a mention are John Spencer, who shared the opening scene with the young Michael Madsen (some might remember him from "The Rock," when Sean Connery's character hangs him over a ledge and he says his arm is about to be broken), and the great Barry Corbin, who was always fantastic in every role he played. See ya.
@LawrenceW78 Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing WarGames: The Dead Code on like a off brand movie channel one time and only caught the back end of it, when I saw it I was like "They made a sequel, the hell???"
@jamesroseii Жыл бұрын
The hacker method that David uses to find other computers, that is, writing a program that has his computer call all possible phone numbers looking for other computers and then modifying the phone records so as to not get charged for long distance use, was a novel way to do it. In fact, it was such a good idea that actual hackers began doing just that because of this film.
@Mordraneth Жыл бұрын
Correct you are. That's why we..errm they called it Wardialing. They'd also left screen capture on because some BBS's had their security info or client type flash on screen for a single frame and was too fast to see, Screen capture allowed them to go back and see the screen grabs and glean everything from ports open, to the type of software they were using and what version. That allowed exploiting software backdoors instead of using brute force hacks. Allegedly.
@jamesroseii Жыл бұрын
@@Mordraneth Awesome! Thanks for the info!!! Also, RIP Captain Crunch.
@conrad-constantine Жыл бұрын
@@jamesroseii john draper is still very much alive
@jamesroseii Жыл бұрын
@@conrad-constantine You are right. I confused him with Kevin Mitnick.
@Jaster_Xocab Жыл бұрын
It's one of my favorite movies of all time! Thanks for covering it, Minty!
@alanmike6883 Жыл бұрын
There's something to be said about 80s movies 😊
@brendah.6366 Жыл бұрын
Minty I loved what you did with the John Lennon reference!!! And the perfect description of chapman !!!