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WarGames

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This article is about the movie. For games which simulate battle or conflict situations see Wargaming.


This entry may contain information about the plot and ending of this film. See Wikipedia contains spoilers for more detail.

WarGames was a 1983 science fiction film written by Lawrence Lasker[?] and Walter F. Parkes[?], and directed by John Badham[?]. The film starred Matthew Broderick in his first major film role as David Lightman, Ally Sheedy[?] as Jennifer Mack, Dabney Coleman[?] as John McKittrick, and John Wood[?] as Stephen Falken. In the film Broderick, a hacker, manages to gain access to the NORAD military artificial intelligence computer system called WOPR (War Operations Plan and Response) that can control the United States' arsenal of ICBMs.

The teenager, unaware of the machine's real purpose, discovers what he believes to be a simulation game called "Global Thermonuclear War" and begins to "play." Unbeknownst to him, WOPR sets in motion preparations for a real attack against the Soviet Union. With the aid of the machine's creator (Wood), disaster is narrowly averted when the hacker manages to teach WOPR about the futility of war by getting it to play endless drawn games of tic-tac-toe against itself which segue into cycles through all the nuclear war stategies that WOPR has devised. WOPR then learns that "the only winning move is not to play."

It was in part a cautionary tale about technology and the dangers of leaving machines in control of unleashing destruction, in an echo of the Doomsday device of Dr. Strangelove. It also generalized the idea of the cold war period in the 1970s and 1980s that somewhere there was a "button" that when pressed would nuke the whole world away, and its final sequence graphically demonstrated the concept of mutual assured destruction. Also, it was one of the first movies to deal with teenage hackers and their activities.



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