I.T. (film)

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Directed byJohn Moore
Screenplay by
Story by
Produced by
I.T.
Theatrical release poster
Directed byJohn Moore
Screenplay by
Story by
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyEkkehart Pollack
Edited byIvan Andrijanic
Music byTimothy Williams[1]
Production
companies
Distributed byRLJ Entertainment
Release date
  • September 23, 2016 (2016-09-23) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
Countries
  • United States
  • Ireland
  • France
  • Denmark
LanguageEnglish
Budget€11.2 million
Box office$2.1 million[2]

I.T. is a 2016 thriller film directed by John Moore and written by Dan Kay and William Wisher. It stars Pierce Brosnan, James Frecheville, Anna Friel, Stefanie Scott, and Michael Nyqvist and was produced by David T. Friendly and Beau St. Clair, who was Brosnan's producing partner at the production company Irish DreamTime before her death. The film was released in theaters and via video on demand in the United States on September 23, 2016, by RLJ Entertainment.

Mike Regan is a self-made aviation tycoon who lives in a state-of-the-art smart house full of modern technology with his wife Rose and 17-year-old daughter Kaitlyn. Mike's company is developing an app called "Omni Jet" which will increase business while the company raises much-needed financial capital with a stock offering. However, it requires U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) approval.

At the company, Mike meets Ed Porter, a 28-year-old information technology (I.T.) consultant and calls him to fix his home's Wi-Fi signal, which his daughter complains is slow. Porter also upgrades the Global Positioning System (GPS) in Mike's car and claims that he also worked at the National Security Agency (NSA) and had taken part in a military exercise in Kandahar.

Porter meets Kaitlyn and starts a relationship with her through social media, but Mike fires him after Kaitlyn invites Porter into the house; this ends his promising career at the company. Devastated, Porter begins to remotely access Mike's private data and his house as he covertly monitors them through the security cameras and devices all over the smart house. He also spies on Kaitlyn and secretly records her masturbating in the shower.

Porter sends fake emails to Mike's clients and the SEC, threatening the company's survival. He also takes full control of the house's technology, which leaves the family terrified. He uses a spoof email to send Rose fake mammogram results, saying that she tested positive for breast cancer. Rose is extremely distressed, but her attending physician test confirms that she is actually tested negative. Aware that Porter has done this, Mike attacks and threatens to kill him if he does not stay away from his family.

Porter then uploads the video of Kaitlyn masturbating online, earning a humiliation from her schoolmates; she is mortified and blames her father for installing the technology in their house. Angered, Mike drives to see Porter but on the way Peter mockingly calls him through the car's navigation system and sends him his daughter's video. Porter then remotely deactivates the brake system, wrecking his car.

Mike requests help from Henrik, an I.T. expert, who says that Mike must destroy all the smart technology in the house and delete all of their data from the computer, including bank accounts. Henrik explains that Porter's real name is Richard Edward Portman and that his father committed suicide when he was six years old. He also reveals that he never worked for the NSA, as he claimed, and the photograph of him with soldiers in Kandahar is fake.

To allow Mike to obtain evidence from Porter's apartment, Henrik creates a diversion to lure Porter out. While Porter is gone, Mike manages to get in his apartment and steal several thumb drives containing evidence, escaping just as Porter returns to his apartment after realising a ruse. When Porter realises the masked man he saw in his apartment was Mike, he hits himself in the head and frames him for assault. The police arrests Mike, who provides the evidence from the thumb drives to the police.

After being released, Mike returns home to find Kaitlyn and Rose tied and gagged by Porter, who holds them at gunpoint. A struggle ensues until Mike mercilessly beats Porter and holds the gun to his chest, but Rose gets her gag off and begs Mike not to kill him.

Some time later, the company's employees applaud Mike and his family for successfully developing the app and their house has been restored.

Cast

Production

The film was first announced in October 2013 as a revenge thriller with Pierce Brosnan headlining the project. It was set to be financed by Voltage Pictures and directed by Stefano Sollima.[5] In August 2014, it was revealed that John Moore had replaced Sollima as the film's director, and commissioned a complete rewrite of the script by William Wisher.[6] Stefanie Scott was cast in April 2015 as the daughter of Brosnan's character,[7] and that the film was to start shooting in June later that year, in Ireland.[8] A month later (in May), it was reported that Anna Friel had joined the cast as the wife of Brosnan's character and that James Frecheville would play the young antagonist.[9] Michael Nyqvist joined the project a few days later.[10] It is the last film produced by Beau St. Clair before she died from cancer.[11][12] Principal photography began on June 25, 2015, and concluded on July 29, 2015.[13]

Release

I.T. was first released theatrically in Bulgaria and Romania on September 9, 2016.[2] RLJ Entertainment released the film in theaters and via video on demand in the United States on September 23, 2016.[14] The theatrical trailer for the film debuted in August 2016.[15]

Reception

References

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