The Net (2003)
More of a film essay - of the type pioneered by Orson Welles and Chris Marker - than a standard documentary, German filmmaker Lutz Dammbeck's The Net: The Unabomber, the LSD and the Internet begins with the typical format and structure of a nonfiction film, and a single subject (the life and times of mail bomber Ted Kaczynski). From that thematic springboard, Dammbeck branches out omnidirectionally, segueing into a series of thematic riffs and variants on such marginally-related subjects as: the history of cyberspace, terrorism, utopian ideals, LSD, the Central Intelligence Agency, and Cuckoo's Nest author Ken Kesey and his Merry Pranksters.
Release : 2003
Runtime : 121 minutes
Genre : Documentary
Cast : Eva Mattes, Tom Vogt, Lutz Dammbeck, Stewart Brand, John Brockman, Butch Gehring
Crew : Lutz Dammbeck (Director), J.U. Lensing (Music), Margot Neubert-Maric (Editor), Lutz Dammbeck (Writer), Dietmar Post (Assistant Director)
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