War Games Cracks Me the Hell Up

So I'm read­ing an inter­view on Wired with a bunch of the peo­ple behind the 1983 hit WarGames, and I stum­ble across what I think may be the fun­ni­est sub-interview ever to grace a sidebar.

wargames.jpg

It's with Ally Sheedy, the then 20 year old love inter­est of the movie (who set many a heart pat­ter­ing in her day, I can tell you)

Wired: So it wasn't a love for micro­proces­sors that drew you to this role.

Sheedy: I couldn't make heads or tails of the script. It was easy for me to do the part where she's ask­ing questions.

Wired: What about now?

Sheedy: To be hon­est, I haven't seen the movie since it came out. It's prob­a­bly kind of quaint.

Wired: Nowa­days, cyber­crime might out­rank nuclear war­fare as a source of col­lec­tive anx­i­ety. I some­times feel really at sea with tech­nol­ogy. I love email.

Sheedy: All this com­mu­ni­cat­ing has cre­ated a world where no one's account­able. And I have a 14-year-old daugh­ter, so I worry.

Wired: Wow. You have a 14-year-old daugh­ter. That just set off a wave of cog­ni­tive dis­so­nance among the hack­ers who'd like to hit on you … Do hack­ers hit on you?

Sheedy: No, I don't hear so much from hack­ers. No. No, no, no. I don't. Thank­fully. No.

Wired: Just one no would've been fine.

The rest of the Wired piece is actu­ally kind of fas­ci­nat­ing too. Those guys really did their research.

ok, ok, one more funny quote, from the direc­tor (they had a stack of geeks on set the whole time)

You could get all the hacker geek­i­ness you wanted just by stand­ing on the set. We were deal­ing with things like when Matthew sits at the com­puter, we've got an actor who can't even type. I'd say, "No, I just really want him to type in 'David' and have him get on." They said, "No! You can't do that! You have to go through all these elab­o­rate sequences!" I said, "No, we're not doing that. Audi­ences will have left the the­ater by the time he logs into the com­puter one time."