71 out of 103 people found the following comment useful :- Too much gloss can't hide a middling action thriller, 9 March 2005
Author:
Mr Ben from Hampshire, England
There are, in my mind, two things that the film "Swordfish" is famous
for. The first is the fact that it features what I think is the most
beautiful car ever produced - the British-made TVR Tuscan. It's the
sort of car you'd like to see parked in your drive every morning, even
if you weren't going to drive it. The second is that it's the first
film that Halle Berry decided to get her baps out in and unnecessarily
so, as it turns out. While I debated with myself which one of the two
I'd rather look at, the film continued on it's crash-bang-wallop course
of international computer hackery and stylish but maniacal villains.
In "Swordfish", we enter the world of Gabriel Shear (John Travolta,
looking all the world like a 21st century Dracula) - renowned playboy,
super-fly criminal genius and determined to pull off the heist of the
century. He's James Bond, Shaft and Austin Powers in one, if you can
imagine so much ego fitting into an Armani suit. He recruits washed-up
former hacker Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman) to provide various worm
programs and hacking expertise to steal 9.5 billion dollars from under
the US Government's nose. As you do. For Stanley, it's a no-win
situation. Enticed by the prospect of a major pay-off and custody of
his daughter from his ex-wife, Jobson would tell Gabriel to shove his
job if it wasn't for the mysterious but sexy Ginger (Halle Berry)
egging him on. And jitters are the last thing the ruthless Gabriel
needs.
Despite his enthusiasm for the picture, producer Joel Silver has gone
down a notch on my list of favourite people in Hollywood. This is as
disposable action as you can get, almost as if he's trying to out-do
Jerry Bruckheimer. The explosions are bigger, the stakes are higher
(nine and a half billion, for God's sake!) and the characters are
cooler. Or so he thinks. Truth is, the near-constant kaboom of special
effects and pyrotechnics drown out what might have been an intelligent
thriller. By the time of the ridiculous finale (which makes no sense at
all), you've already forgotten everything else. And aside from Jackman
and Travolta who have most of the dialogue, Berry and Gabriel's
henchman Marco (Vinnie Jones, bizarrely if your name's Marco) have next
to nothing to do. Berry strips and Jones grimaces like their lives
depended on it. Berry should know better but for the inexperienced
former soccer thug, this should be a lesson well learnt. But then
again, this didn't stop him from remaking "The Mean Machine".
As action films go, it is undeniably entertaining. The plot twists its
way around the action, revealing more about Gabriel and why he's such a
sanctimonious prat. And the set-pieces are also very impressive, if
slightly over the top. Simply by shooting a SUV can one cause the
vehicle not only to explode like the Manhatten project but also make
the now flaming wreckage flip through the sky like a Romanian gymnast.
Physics clearly don't apply in LA, like the strange time-bubble
surrounding the city which allows Gabriel to fly to Oregan and back in
less than an afternoon. Hmmm, says I. Clearly, the film-makers were
trying to make as entertaining a piece as possible but they over-did
it. Less is more, or so they say and it is advice Silver and director
Dominic Sena would be wise to listen to. Shame, really. That TVR is
just gorgeous...
43 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :- Cool, Slick and Sexy, 4 February 2005
Author:
mjw2305 from England
What is the highest pressure job interview you've ever had?
Well, Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman) a convicted Hacker, fresh out of
prison and desperate to see his daughter again, can beat you, i'll bet
on it. He has to hack into the FBI Computers in a fairly public place,
with a gun to his head and a beautiful woman performing an act of
Felacio on him, and he has just one minute to do it. (A Great Scene,
Not Explict, just cool)
Anyway, he is recruited by John Travolta to hack into a dormant DEA
Fund worth 9.5 Billion Dollars to finance his terrorist activities.
Full of Slick Dialogue, cool Direction and the simply gorgeous Halle
Berry, this turns out to be a very enjoyable Thriller, with some clever
twists (some of which don't quite work) but are forgivable anyway.
Not a classic, but a good film none the less. 8/10
35 out of 49 people found the following comment useful :- A good time with this film., 10 November 2001
Author:
The Flickster from TN
SWORDFISH (2001) Rating: 7/10
Hell, I liked this movie. It's been a while since I've seen an enjoyable,
mature action movie. With the slew of PG-13 action movies of recent years,
it's refreshing to see one that at least acknowledges that many intense
situations do involve language, sex, and mixed character reactions -- it
wasn't just another black and white, good and bad movie where the good guy
does only good things and the bad guy has only evil intentions. The good guy
didn't always do the right thing, and the bad guy could hardly be accused of
sinister motives.
I loved the three leads in this film. Hugh Jackman is officially a star
with this movie. Hugh has proven himself once before in X-Men as a worthy
actor, and he does it again in this film. He's the one that basically pulls
you into this movie from the get-go and you actually feel for the poor guy.
John Travolta, obviously, has a blast with yet another solid "bad guy"
showing, redeeming himself after the lacklustre results of Battlefield Earth
and Halle Berry must have enjoyed making this one, since it is a departure
from her standard movie roles. Not to mention, she's sexier than ever.
There actually isn't as much action as you would expect in this film, but
the opening and closing scenes in the film are some of the best action
scenes I have ever seen and really hooks you into the film in the beginning
and leaves you thoroughly entertained at the end. It's one of the first uses
of "matrix-style camerawork" that I've seen that really adds to the film and
isn't just something that "looks cool."
Overall, if you're looking for an "action popcorn" flick with lots of bad
guys, gunplay, quick camera movements, fun action sequences and a
surprisingly decent storyline that moves along at a quick pace, I'd
recommend you rent this film.
39 out of 57 people found the following comment useful :- Just break the code: there is government money to be had., 4 January 2002
Author:
Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
Action... explosive action. Clever script. Eye popping special effects. A
strong cast, but too much confusion in following the story line. A highly
successful computer hacker(Hugh Jackman)is coerced to help a ruthless
spy(John Travolta)steal billions of unused government monies obtained in an
old DEA drug operation. Don Cheadle is the run ragged FBI agent trying to
spoil the by-computer hijacking. Sam Shepard has a small role as a corrupt
Senator. The alluring Halle Berry is supposedly an undercover DEA agent
whose purpose in the whole procedure is not clear cut.
If you are looking for a good escape from reality; this flick will give you
several big bangs for your buck. It is good to see Travolta play a clever,
bad ass thug. Some of his best work in a long time. And for the first time,
Miss Berry appears topless on screen; and in other various degrees of
undress...so nice my eyes hurt. Vinnie Jones is impressive as a strong arm
enforcer. Rough and ready entertainment worth your time.
20 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :- Good escapist entertainment, 1 November 2003
Author:
perfectbond
I think people have been a little to harsh on this movie. No it is not
revelatory but it is a nice glossy diversion. The all-star cast, especially
Hugh Jackman, is more than competent though they aren't really challenged.
There are enough special effects and stunts intermixed with a fairly
compelling narrative (it is not confusing if you just pay attention) to make
the film more than worthwhile. Overall good entertainment,
7/10.
19 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- Like a good old-fashioned action movie, but with a good plot., 9 June 2001
Author:
ragefire2000 from Sacramento, California
Swordfish was one of my anxiously awaited summer flicks. And after seeing
it a couple hours ago, I am not at all disappointed. It's been awhile
since
I've seen a truly enjoyable, mature action movie. With the slew of PG-13
action movies of recent years, it's refreshing to see one that at least
acknowledges that many intense situations do involve language, sex, and
mixed character reactions - it wasn't just another black and white, good
and
bad movie where the good guy does only good things and the bad guy has only
evil intentions. The good guy (Jackman) didn't always do the right thing,
and the bad guy (Travolta) could hardly be accused of sinister
motives.
The film starts off with a bang ... literally. A big-time action sequence
to get out attention, then a flashback to show how the climax of the film
came to pass. The out-of-order editing was actually effective and
interesting, rather than seeming like yet another failed attempt to mimic
Pulp Fiction and those other movies that brought attention to the idea of
showing a film out of chronological order.
Jackman was great as computer hacker Stanley Jobson, devoted father who
just
happened to get brought down for computer-related felonies after hacking
into and making public an FBI e-mail surveillance operation. Forbidden to
even touch a computer for the rest of his days, he is lured back into the
life by Travolta, who offers him $100,000 just to meet him (and take an
interesting version of an initiation). Jackman is quickly becoming
Hollywood A-list material, and with his performance in Swordfish, it's easy
to see why. He can keep up with the smooth-talking, fast-moving Travolta
as
well as show enough emotion to make him seem like a real person and not
just
a run-of-the-mill action hero.
The plot of the film is fantastic. It's not just a typical heist film, or
action plot where the hero has to save the hostages, blowing the hell out
of
the bad guys in the process. The plot is complex, interwoven, and has a
point. The plot was crucial to keeping interest during the slow parts of
the film. Starting out with an action sequence carries the danger of
losing
audience interest if not followed up by more and more action. Thankfully,
the plot manages to retain interest during those points in the film where
things aren't exploding and buses aren't flying through metropolitan
airspace, suspended from a heavy loading chopper.
The best part about this film was the interractions between the characters.
Stanley is a smart guy, and Gabriel's smarter. Just when Stanley (and the
audience) thinks they have Gabriel in a tight spot, he'll surprise everyone
with some improvised ingenuity. There are so many films in the action
genre
that result to dumbing down the smart villains, just so the hero of the
story will look good when he comes up with a relatively weak solution to
the
complex plot. The villains often slip up or make some kind of fatal faux
pas in judgment that allows the hero to triumph. There's none of that
here.
The hero and villain are both smart, and both stay that way until the very
end.
This is a great summer movie. See it. See it twice or three times, even.
If you're looking for high art or something that really speaks to you and
changes the way you see the world, don't see it. But if you want to see a
movie for the sake of entertainment and having a good time, Swordfish is
the
movie to go to. If Swordfish is any indication of the rest of this
summer's
big action blockbusters, we're certainly in good shape this
year.
19 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :- First Viewing Was A 'Blast', 20 August 2006
Author:
ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
Here's a film I really liked the first time, and was totally turned off
on the second viewing as the Hollywood bias machine was in high gear
again, and you can guess in what director (left or right). Anyway, two
things remained the same: John Travolta as "Gabriel Shear" was riveting
as an anti-terrorist terrorist. The explosion scene where people are
flying sideways is awesome, particularly in the sound department if you
have surround system. Oh, and yes, Halle Berry and her figure was on
display in this film and quite a sight. Wowzer!
Some of this script is a takeoff on Dog Day Afternoon, which Travolta's
character re-enacts a role from that famous '70s film. "Shear" talks
about that movie during the film.
I almost got discouraged watching this in the first half hour because
there is so much computer terminology that I was lost. However, if you
find yourself in a similar spot, take heart because that that ends
after that first 30 minutes and is no longer a problem.
Credibility and bias aside, it's still a fun movie for at least one
viewing, with that early bomb scene most memorable.
17 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :- Stupid, stupid, stupid, 4 December 2004
Author:
kai_sheffield from Canada
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
-SPOILERS-
I kind of liked Swordfish the first time I watched it, but I just saw
it again and realized how stupid it is.
Hugh Jackman plays a paroled hacker (Stan) who wants custody of his
daughter. Now, obviously he has to be portrayed as the 'good guy,' so
he explains midway through the movie that he was jailed because he
hacked into and destroyed an FBI program that was illegally gathering
info about people. But we also have to believe that the courts refused
him any access at all to his child and sent her to live with a porn
producer instead. OK... but it gets stupider. The way he can supposedly
get his daughter back is by getting tons of money to hire a better
lawyer, and that's why he works for John Travolta's terrorist
organization. What a hero. Of course, he doesn't get any punishment for
single-handedly enabling the entire bank robbery, because he did it to
get money to hire a good lawyer to overturn a court case that was ruled
repeated against him.
John Travolta's character, Gabriel, is even stupider. Gabriel runs a
radical anti-terrorist terrorist group. He wants to 'protect the
American way of life' by retaliating for terrorism with even harsher
terrorism, to make 'rogue states' stop harbouring terrorists. Gabriel
is willing to kill as many people as it takes to preserve 'the American
way of life,' including Americans. But Gabriel doesn't lead the
American way of life, he lives in a mansion full of sluts, alcohol, and
techno music. This movie came out before 9/11 so it is not clear what
Gabriel is even retaliating against. He is the biggest threat to the
American way of life. Not to mention that murdering civilians in
countries that harbor terrorists will do nothing to change the minds
of the dictators who rule those countries. Gabriel has a bone to pick
with the government (in this case the FBI) so why doesn't he realize
that all the other anti-American terrorism is caused by that same
government?
The other actors aren't very good: Halle Berry is a bimbo, Don Cheadle
is awful and so is Vinnie Jones. The plot twist at the end is poorly
explained (why is Halle Berry still alive?) and the action sequences
are dull. All in all a poor attempt to rip off Tarantino and Guy
Ritchie. John Travolta's description of bad movies at the beginning of
the film will ring true by the time you have finished watching it.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :- Dog Day Afternoon meets The Sting meets The Matrix, 19 July 2001
Author:
tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Spoilers herein.
Films transport you to a different world, so the beginning of the film, the
initiation into that world, is key.
Scriptwriters these days seem to spend much more attention on beginnings
than endings, and this film has a terrific beginning. In fact, I was so
impressed by the beginning that I will recommend this otherwise dreary film.
It is dreary indeed: Travolta cannot convince that he is as brilliant as he
plays. The girl is very pretty, but absolutely fails in convincing of guile
and intelligence. The plot doesn't play fair, and that is a must with these
types of twists. I cannot understand the hostage plan: if they could do
that, why blow that capability on simply getting access to a bank
terminal?
Otherwise, we have here a rather ordinary selfreferential device of actors
playing actors.
Back to the beginning. That beginning has two parts: Travolta's character
talks to us about "Dog Day Afternoon," and how realistic it was. That film
is notable specifically because it established a new style of
self-awareness, a specific type of theatrical reality. A very intelligent
segment -- in what is said, how it is delivered and how the camera acts. (We
are eased into this by video sputtering through the titles.) `Vertical
Limit' was another disappointing film with a slam-bang
beginning.
The second part of the opening segues to the very set of Dog Day, except the
attitude here is much more ruthless. A hostage IS killed in a spectacular
fashion. And that fashion is highly cinematic, with all sorts of post-matrix
still pans and small object tracking. The point is clear: we are here
creating a new form here by annotating the Lumet/Pacino
model.
A very clever notion. The twists are intended to be a sort of machinegun
"Usual Suspects" effect, where everything we learned is undone. Problem is
that skills of everyone involved -- actor, writer, director -- aren't
strong enough for what they intend, to the thrills stay
tepid.
Hugh Jackman could have been the key, leaving travolta to just do his
"Broken Arrow" bit but with a cigar instead of a cigarette. And Jackman has
the face, halfway between Ed Norton and Mel Gibson. He's at the level of Ms.
Berry though, and that's at the merely mugging level.
Finally, I have done some hacking in my time (not cracking as shown here),
and I can say that nothing in this film, except maybe the keyboards,
resembles either the appearance or the real mystery of the enterprise. It is
far cooler and spookier than is imagined by these kids, just hard as hell to
show on a screen with what they had to work with.
19 out of 32 people found the following comment useful :- Passable action movie, but not great., 25 May 2005
Author:
FisherMysticCom from United States
This was a decent action movie with a strong cast with the likes of
John Travolta, Don Cheadle, Halle Berry, and Hugh Jackman. Travolta
comes across as unconvincing in the role he plays, and sometimes he
rushes through important scenes in the movie. Berry is decent as
Ginger, his assistant and a secret DEA agent. Her nude scene was nice
too. Jackman gives a good performance, and had me believing that he was
a criminal hacker. Cheadle plays almost the same type of role he played
in Traffic, but this time he's an even bigger jerk. The action scenes
are good, sometimes very exciting. If you like to see an intelligent
action film, this is for you. If you like to see the beautiful Halle
Berry show off her perfect body, then this is the movie for you.
Watch it at Amazon

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71 out of 103 people found the following comment useful :-

Too much gloss can't hide a middling action thriller, 9 March 2005
Author: Mr Ben from Hampshire, England
There are, in my mind, two things that the film "Swordfish" is famous for. The first is the fact that it features what I think is the most beautiful car ever produced - the British-made TVR Tuscan. It's the sort of car you'd like to see parked in your drive every morning, even if you weren't going to drive it. The second is that it's the first film that Halle Berry decided to get her baps out in and unnecessarily so, as it turns out. While I debated with myself which one of the two I'd rather look at, the film continued on it's crash-bang-wallop course of international computer hackery and stylish but maniacal villains.
In "Swordfish", we enter the world of Gabriel Shear (John Travolta, looking all the world like a 21st century Dracula) - renowned playboy, super-fly criminal genius and determined to pull off the heist of the century. He's James Bond, Shaft and Austin Powers in one, if you can imagine so much ego fitting into an Armani suit. He recruits washed-up former hacker Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman) to provide various worm programs and hacking expertise to steal 9.5 billion dollars from under the US Government's nose. As you do. For Stanley, it's a no-win situation. Enticed by the prospect of a major pay-off and custody of his daughter from his ex-wife, Jobson would tell Gabriel to shove his job if it wasn't for the mysterious but sexy Ginger (Halle Berry) egging him on. And jitters are the last thing the ruthless Gabriel needs.
Despite his enthusiasm for the picture, producer Joel Silver has gone down a notch on my list of favourite people in Hollywood. This is as disposable action as you can get, almost as if he's trying to out-do Jerry Bruckheimer. The explosions are bigger, the stakes are higher (nine and a half billion, for God's sake!) and the characters are cooler. Or so he thinks. Truth is, the near-constant kaboom of special effects and pyrotechnics drown out what might have been an intelligent thriller. By the time of the ridiculous finale (which makes no sense at all), you've already forgotten everything else. And aside from Jackman and Travolta who have most of the dialogue, Berry and Gabriel's henchman Marco (Vinnie Jones, bizarrely if your name's Marco) have next to nothing to do. Berry strips and Jones grimaces like their lives depended on it. Berry should know better but for the inexperienced former soccer thug, this should be a lesson well learnt. But then again, this didn't stop him from remaking "The Mean Machine".
As action films go, it is undeniably entertaining. The plot twists its way around the action, revealing more about Gabriel and why he's such a sanctimonious prat. And the set-pieces are also very impressive, if slightly over the top. Simply by shooting a SUV can one cause the vehicle not only to explode like the Manhatten project but also make the now flaming wreckage flip through the sky like a Romanian gymnast. Physics clearly don't apply in LA, like the strange time-bubble surrounding the city which allows Gabriel to fly to Oregan and back in less than an afternoon. Hmmm, says I. Clearly, the film-makers were trying to make as entertaining a piece as possible but they over-did it. Less is more, or so they say and it is advice Silver and director Dominic Sena would be wise to listen to. Shame, really. That TVR is just gorgeous...
43 out of 60 people found the following comment useful :-

Cool, Slick and Sexy, 4 February 2005
Author: mjw2305 from England
What is the highest pressure job interview you've ever had?
Well, Stanley Jobson (Hugh Jackman) a convicted Hacker, fresh out of prison and desperate to see his daughter again, can beat you, i'll bet on it. He has to hack into the FBI Computers in a fairly public place, with a gun to his head and a beautiful woman performing an act of Felacio on him, and he has just one minute to do it. (A Great Scene, Not Explict, just cool)
Anyway, he is recruited by John Travolta to hack into a dormant DEA Fund worth 9.5 Billion Dollars to finance his terrorist activities.
Full of Slick Dialogue, cool Direction and the simply gorgeous Halle Berry, this turns out to be a very enjoyable Thriller, with some clever twists (some of which don't quite work) but are forgivable anyway.
Not a classic, but a good film none the less. 8/10
35 out of 49 people found the following comment useful :-

A good time with this film., 10 November 2001
Author: The Flickster from TN
SWORDFISH (2001) Rating: 7/10
Hell, I liked this movie. It's been a while since I've seen an enjoyable, mature action movie. With the slew of PG-13 action movies of recent years, it's refreshing to see one that at least acknowledges that many intense situations do involve language, sex, and mixed character reactions -- it wasn't just another black and white, good and bad movie where the good guy does only good things and the bad guy has only evil intentions. The good guy didn't always do the right thing, and the bad guy could hardly be accused of sinister motives.
I loved the three leads in this film. Hugh Jackman is officially a star with this movie. Hugh has proven himself once before in X-Men as a worthy actor, and he does it again in this film. He's the one that basically pulls you into this movie from the get-go and you actually feel for the poor guy. John Travolta, obviously, has a blast with yet another solid "bad guy" showing, redeeming himself after the lacklustre results of Battlefield Earth and Halle Berry must have enjoyed making this one, since it is a departure from her standard movie roles. Not to mention, she's sexier than ever.
There actually isn't as much action as you would expect in this film, but the opening and closing scenes in the film are some of the best action scenes I have ever seen and really hooks you into the film in the beginning and leaves you thoroughly entertained at the end. It's one of the first uses of "matrix-style camerawork" that I've seen that really adds to the film and isn't just something that "looks cool."
Overall, if you're looking for an "action popcorn" flick with lots of bad guys, gunplay, quick camera movements, fun action sequences and a surprisingly decent storyline that moves along at a quick pace, I'd recommend you rent this film.
39 out of 57 people found the following comment useful :-

Just break the code: there is government money to be had., 4 January 2002
Author: Michael O'Keefe from Muskogee OK
Action... explosive action. Clever script. Eye popping special effects. A strong cast, but too much confusion in following the story line. A highly successful computer hacker(Hugh Jackman)is coerced to help a ruthless spy(John Travolta)steal billions of unused government monies obtained in an old DEA drug operation. Don Cheadle is the run ragged FBI agent trying to spoil the by-computer hijacking. Sam Shepard has a small role as a corrupt Senator. The alluring Halle Berry is supposedly an undercover DEA agent whose purpose in the whole procedure is not clear cut.
If you are looking for a good escape from reality; this flick will give you several big bangs for your buck. It is good to see Travolta play a clever, bad ass thug. Some of his best work in a long time. And for the first time, Miss Berry appears topless on screen; and in other various degrees of undress...so nice my eyes hurt. Vinnie Jones is impressive as a strong arm enforcer. Rough and ready entertainment worth your time.
20 out of 25 people found the following comment useful :-

Good escapist entertainment, 1 November 2003
Author: perfectbond
I think people have been a little to harsh on this movie. No it is not revelatory but it is a nice glossy diversion. The all-star cast, especially Hugh Jackman, is more than competent though they aren't really challenged. There are enough special effects and stunts intermixed with a fairly compelling narrative (it is not confusing if you just pay attention) to make the film more than worthwhile. Overall good entertainment, 7/10.
19 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :-

Like a good old-fashioned action movie, but with a good plot., 9 June 2001
Author: ragefire2000 from Sacramento, California
Swordfish was one of my anxiously awaited summer flicks. And after seeing it a couple hours ago, I am not at all disappointed. It's been awhile since I've seen a truly enjoyable, mature action movie. With the slew of PG-13 action movies of recent years, it's refreshing to see one that at least acknowledges that many intense situations do involve language, sex, and mixed character reactions - it wasn't just another black and white, good and bad movie where the good guy does only good things and the bad guy has only evil intentions. The good guy (Jackman) didn't always do the right thing, and the bad guy (Travolta) could hardly be accused of sinister motives.
The film starts off with a bang ... literally. A big-time action sequence to get out attention, then a flashback to show how the climax of the film came to pass. The out-of-order editing was actually effective and interesting, rather than seeming like yet another failed attempt to mimic Pulp Fiction and those other movies that brought attention to the idea of showing a film out of chronological order.
Jackman was great as computer hacker Stanley Jobson, devoted father who just happened to get brought down for computer-related felonies after hacking into and making public an FBI e-mail surveillance operation. Forbidden to even touch a computer for the rest of his days, he is lured back into the life by Travolta, who offers him $100,000 just to meet him (and take an interesting version of an initiation). Jackman is quickly becoming Hollywood A-list material, and with his performance in Swordfish, it's easy to see why. He can keep up with the smooth-talking, fast-moving Travolta as well as show enough emotion to make him seem like a real person and not just a run-of-the-mill action hero.
The plot of the film is fantastic. It's not just a typical heist film, or action plot where the hero has to save the hostages, blowing the hell out of the bad guys in the process. The plot is complex, interwoven, and has a point. The plot was crucial to keeping interest during the slow parts of the film. Starting out with an action sequence carries the danger of losing audience interest if not followed up by more and more action. Thankfully, the plot manages to retain interest during those points in the film where things aren't exploding and buses aren't flying through metropolitan airspace, suspended from a heavy loading chopper.
The best part about this film was the interractions between the characters. Stanley is a smart guy, and Gabriel's smarter. Just when Stanley (and the audience) thinks they have Gabriel in a tight spot, he'll surprise everyone with some improvised ingenuity. There are so many films in the action genre that result to dumbing down the smart villains, just so the hero of the story will look good when he comes up with a relatively weak solution to the complex plot. The villains often slip up or make some kind of fatal faux pas in judgment that allows the hero to triumph. There's none of that here. The hero and villain are both smart, and both stay that way until the very end.
This is a great summer movie. See it. See it twice or three times, even. If you're looking for high art or something that really speaks to you and changes the way you see the world, don't see it. But if you want to see a movie for the sake of entertainment and having a good time, Swordfish is the movie to go to. If Swordfish is any indication of the rest of this summer's big action blockbusters, we're certainly in good shape this year.
19 out of 28 people found the following comment useful :-

First Viewing Was A 'Blast', 20 August 2006
Author: ccthemovieman-1 from Lockport, NY, United States
Here's a film I really liked the first time, and was totally turned off on the second viewing as the Hollywood bias machine was in high gear again, and you can guess in what director (left or right). Anyway, two things remained the same: John Travolta as "Gabriel Shear" was riveting as an anti-terrorist terrorist. The explosion scene where people are flying sideways is awesome, particularly in the sound department if you have surround system. Oh, and yes, Halle Berry and her figure was on display in this film and quite a sight. Wowzer!
Some of this script is a takeoff on Dog Day Afternoon, which Travolta's character re-enacts a role from that famous '70s film. "Shear" talks about that movie during the film.
I almost got discouraged watching this in the first half hour because there is so much computer terminology that I was lost. However, if you find yourself in a similar spot, take heart because that that ends after that first 30 minutes and is no longer a problem.
Credibility and bias aside, it's still a fun movie for at least one viewing, with that early bomb scene most memorable.
17 out of 26 people found the following comment useful :-

Stupid, stupid, stupid, 4 December 2004
Author: kai_sheffield from Canada
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
-SPOILERS-
I kind of liked Swordfish the first time I watched it, but I just saw it again and realized how stupid it is.
Hugh Jackman plays a paroled hacker (Stan) who wants custody of his daughter. Now, obviously he has to be portrayed as the 'good guy,' so he explains midway through the movie that he was jailed because he hacked into and destroyed an FBI program that was illegally gathering info about people. But we also have to believe that the courts refused him any access at all to his child and sent her to live with a porn producer instead. OK... but it gets stupider. The way he can supposedly get his daughter back is by getting tons of money to hire a better lawyer, and that's why he works for John Travolta's terrorist organization. What a hero. Of course, he doesn't get any punishment for single-handedly enabling the entire bank robbery, because he did it to get money to hire a good lawyer to overturn a court case that was ruled repeated against him.
John Travolta's character, Gabriel, is even stupider. Gabriel runs a radical anti-terrorist terrorist group. He wants to 'protect the American way of life' by retaliating for terrorism with even harsher terrorism, to make 'rogue states' stop harbouring terrorists. Gabriel is willing to kill as many people as it takes to preserve 'the American way of life,' including Americans. But Gabriel doesn't lead the American way of life, he lives in a mansion full of sluts, alcohol, and techno music. This movie came out before 9/11 so it is not clear what Gabriel is even retaliating against. He is the biggest threat to the American way of life. Not to mention that murdering civilians in countries that harbor terrorists will do nothing to change the minds of the dictators who rule those countries. Gabriel has a bone to pick with the government (in this case the FBI) so why doesn't he realize that all the other anti-American terrorism is caused by that same government?
The other actors aren't very good: Halle Berry is a bimbo, Don Cheadle is awful and so is Vinnie Jones. The plot twist at the end is poorly explained (why is Halle Berry still alive?) and the action sequences are dull. All in all a poor attempt to rip off Tarantino and Guy Ritchie. John Travolta's description of bad movies at the beginning of the film will ring true by the time you have finished watching it.
9 out of 11 people found the following comment useful :-
Dog Day Afternoon meets The Sting meets The Matrix, 19 July 2001
Author: tedg (tedg@FilmsFolded.com) from Virginia Beach
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Spoilers herein.
Films transport you to a different world, so the beginning of the film, the initiation into that world, is key.
Scriptwriters these days seem to spend much more attention on beginnings than endings, and this film has a terrific beginning. In fact, I was so impressed by the beginning that I will recommend this otherwise dreary film.
It is dreary indeed: Travolta cannot convince that he is as brilliant as he plays. The girl is very pretty, but absolutely fails in convincing of guile and intelligence. The plot doesn't play fair, and that is a must with these types of twists. I cannot understand the hostage plan: if they could do that, why blow that capability on simply getting access to a bank terminal?
Otherwise, we have here a rather ordinary selfreferential device of actors playing actors.
Back to the beginning. That beginning has two parts: Travolta's character talks to us about "Dog Day Afternoon," and how realistic it was. That film is notable specifically because it established a new style of self-awareness, a specific type of theatrical reality. A very intelligent segment -- in what is said, how it is delivered and how the camera acts. (We are eased into this by video sputtering through the titles.) `Vertical Limit' was another disappointing film with a slam-bang beginning.
The second part of the opening segues to the very set of Dog Day, except the attitude here is much more ruthless. A hostage IS killed in a spectacular fashion. And that fashion is highly cinematic, with all sorts of post-matrix still pans and small object tracking. The point is clear: we are here creating a new form here by annotating the Lumet/Pacino model.
A very clever notion. The twists are intended to be a sort of machinegun "Usual Suspects" effect, where everything we learned is undone. Problem is that skills of everyone involved -- actor, writer, director -- aren't strong enough for what they intend, to the thrills stay tepid.
Hugh Jackman could have been the key, leaving travolta to just do his "Broken Arrow" bit but with a cigar instead of a cigarette. And Jackman has the face, halfway between Ed Norton and Mel Gibson. He's at the level of Ms. Berry though, and that's at the merely mugging level.
Finally, I have done some hacking in my time (not cracking as shown here), and I can say that nothing in this film, except maybe the keyboards, resembles either the appearance or the real mystery of the enterprise. It is far cooler and spookier than is imagined by these kids, just hard as hell to show on a screen with what they had to work with.
19 out of 32 people found the following comment useful :-

Passable action movie, but not great., 25 May 2005
Author: FisherMysticCom from United States
This was a decent action movie with a strong cast with the likes of John Travolta, Don Cheadle, Halle Berry, and Hugh Jackman. Travolta comes across as unconvincing in the role he plays, and sometimes he rushes through important scenes in the movie. Berry is decent as Ginger, his assistant and a secret DEA agent. Her nude scene was nice too. Jackman gives a good performance, and had me believing that he was a criminal hacker. Cheadle plays almost the same type of role he played in Traffic, but this time he's an even bigger jerk. The action scenes are good, sometimes very exciting. If you like to see an intelligent action film, this is for you. If you like to see the beautiful Halle Berry show off her perfect body, then this is the movie for you.
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