Access Code (1984) Poster

(1984)

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3/10
Access Code was weak and unimpressive.
tarbosh2200018 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Apparently somebody, somewhere has stolen some nukes and a secret government agency is trying to get them back before they blow up the earth. Meanwhile a journalist named Ben Marcus (the Dustin Hoffman-like Michael Napoli, in his only screen credit) is also attempting to get to the truth. Along with him on this adventure are Julie Barnes (Walter) and a man named William (Woods). They're all on the run and there's a bunch of talky "intrigue", meanwhile no one, including the audience, has a very clear picture of what's going on. On the side of the government is a man named Agency Head (Landau). It may seem like a strange name, but maybe he's related to Murray Head of One Night in Bangkok fame. Or, the writers were too lazy to come up with a name for the most respected actor on the project. Will we ever find out the super-secret ACCESS CODE? The only people likely to wring any enjoyment out of Access Code are fans of "80's tech", as there are plenty of single-color computers and reel-to-reel tape machines, not to mention microwaves with dials. Thankfully, and unnecessarily, the computers talk to the people tapping away on them, of course in that typical monotonous robot voice. That was amusing, but maybe it is necessary after all, because there were some misspellings on the screen (we spend a lot of time looking at computer screens in this flick), including "multi-faceted". All that aside, Access Code has a slow/weird pace, and seemed destined to be video store shelf-filler from moment one.

Director Mark Sobel also directed Sweet Revenge (1987), and wrote the similarly-themed, but much more coherent and entertaining Terminal Entry (1988). Both 'Entry and 'Code were produced by Sandy Cobe, the man behind the legendary Revolt (1986). So there's a nice 80's pedigree here, and Sobel was obviously influenced by 1984 (probably the novel, because the movie with John Hurt came out the same year as Access Code - unsurprisingly, 1984), as well as The Conversation (1974), among other paranoid thrillers. Unfortunately, his attempt does not thrill. But he tried to marry those ideas with the then-current obsession with access codes and all things computer and nuclear. Sadly, the results are lackluster and mediocre, but he did get a second try with Terminal Entry and he made the best of it.

There are, of course, some noteworthy clichés here, such as a computer expert being called "The Best" by a government guy, and the fact that very important information is on a much sought-after disc (in this case, of the black and floppy variety). Let's not forget Martin Landau is on board for some reason, and most of his scenes appear on a totally black set that would later appear in The Killing Man (1994), and The Charlie Rose show. It's amazing any dialogue gets said at all, because the people we see on screen commit the un-PC act of smoking many, many cigarettes. But at least we get the priceless line readings of one Bill Woods as William. He was our favorite character. An interesting connection occurs in the casting of Gyl Roland as Kathy, who also was in Black Gunn (1972) with Martin Landau. Michael Ansara makes a notable appearance here as a Senator, mainly because he looks a lot like Edward James Olmos. We called him Senator Olmos.

The whole outing has a TV movie vibe and after it's all over, you sit there wondering "what happened?" - none of it really sticks with you. Despite the deliveries of William, on the whole we thought Access Code was unimpressive.
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2/10
What was Martin thinking?!?!
Sorsimus31 March 2002
the great Martin Landau, of Ed Wood fame, in a hapless eighties turkey? Yes! This one is a weak "sci- fi" drama/ thriller about a mysterious organisation that actually runs the USA behind the government.

A solitary journalist tries to uncover the plot, but finds out that resistance is futile...

Some spectacularly weak directing and acting combined with a plot more or less directly stolen from Alan J. Pakula's Parallax View make this one the one to miss. Luckily it's actually a rather hard film to find.

One highpoint: for some mysterious reason the screenwriter has decided to use a VERY stereotypical African- American male as a comic relief in one sequence. Result is hilarious but quite what they had intended...
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2/10
So secret even the viewers don't get to know
dustinclousher-160029 August 2021
Warning: Spoilers
It was hard to tell whose side everyone was on, I know it was trying to give the viewer awareness of 1984 surveillance technology and how it was intrusive to the country and that it is possible for some one to hack and run our country but how they stopped it I couldn't figure out, maybe it was meant to be a cliff hanger. Best part of the movie is the cover art which has nothing to do with the movie.
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War Games without Matthew Broderick
marktalkdotcom2 April 2017
but with what appears to be dialogue from the 1930s filtered through the Pepsi Generation and married with every movie cliché that they could cough up.

I appreciate especially the opportunity that it afforded an aspiring director from the special needs class.

Even my weird affection for Roger Corman's later work and MST3K quality flicks couldn't hold up past the first 20 minutes
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1/10
Great 80s Movie for Product Placements
MiketheWhistle31 August 2018
Forgot about the movies where literally everyone smoked cigarettes, I think even infants. Then there was all the beer placements. This is a poor Wargames movie with the great Martin Landau. What a shame.
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Sci-fi mishmash
lor_23 March 2023
My review was written in December 1987 after watching the movie on Prism video cassette.

"Access Code" is an unsatisfactory pasteup job in which one waits in vain for the explanatory exposition to end and the real film to begin. Pic was shown as a work-in-progress at the 1983 American Independent Film Market's video sidebar in Gotham and now has been released direct-to-video.

Feature's key action scene is omitted, namely the U. S. on the brink of launching its nuclear weapons when some unknown organization has infiltrated our computer system. Instead, we get guest stars Martin Landau (who later was featured in filmmaker Mark Sobel's "Sweet Revenge"), Michael Ansara and MacDonald Carey sitting around in front of a black background discussing the film's events.

Actual footage is very dull indeed, as former CIA agent Barnes (Michael Durrell) is tapped to save the nation, and he fortuitously is contacted by the baddies who use ordinary tv sets as surveillance monitors (a la "1984"). He disappears halfway through the film (in an idiotic "simulated" scene of driving into the desert in which the actor does not appear) and his sister takes over the investigation (she happens to be a computer expert), teaming up with new characters.

This hodgepodge involves frequent discussions of surveillance and two evil groups out to get us in a needlessly complicated script. As sci-fi, the matter was handled in classic fashion almost 20 years ago in "Colossus: The Forbin Project".
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