Netforce

1999

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1
5| NA| en| More Info
Released: 01 February 1999 Ended
Producted By: Greengrass Productions
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Set in the year 2005, a division of the FBI, called "NetForce" has been initiated to investigate Internet crime. A Bill Gates-type character finds a loophole in his new web browser which enables him to gain control of the Internet. Net-Force, headed by Kristofferson and Bakula's characters set out to stop him.

Watch Online

Netforce (1999) is currently not available on any services.

Director

Rob Lieberman

Production Companies

Greengrass Productions

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime.
Watch Now
Netforce Videos and Images

Netforce Audience Reviews

Matialth Good concept, poorly executed.
Kailansorac Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.
Lidia Draper Great example of an old-fashioned, pure-at-heart escapist event movie that doesn't pretend to be anything that it's not and has boat loads of fun being its own ludicrous self.
Cristal The movie really just wants to entertain people.
tle_mgr I actually found the movie on the web. I thought it was just a one off TV show, but apparently there was at least two episodes. It is worth a watch if you are bored and nothing else is on. It's kind of funny watching head honchos in their 30s and 40s talking hitech gibberish about cyber security and what not. Stuff usually taken on by the younger folks
Desertman84 Best-selling author Tom Clancy was executive producer of this made-for- TV spy thriller entitled Netforce was shown on ABC back in 1999.It stars Scott Bakula and Joanna Going together with Xander Berkeley,Anjul Nigam and Judge Reinhold.The supporting cast includes Brian Dennehy, Joanna Going,C.C.H. Pounder and Kris Kristofferson.In the year 2005, the FBI has established a special division called "Netforce".It is responsible to investigate crimes committed using the Internet. Agents Alex Michaels and Steve Day are put on the case when software genius Will Stiles designs a Web browser that allows him to hack into Netforce's computer system and take control of the entire Internet for his own purposes.It is a TV movie that is essentially a cautionary tale of futuristic cyberterrorism. Unfortunately,it is a blunt and somewhat rushed thriller with little time for character or relationship development. What it does offer is a scenario for the prospect of organized crime uniting with computer geeks and malevolent industrialists to sabotage national security through attacks on the Internet.The action bounces around from good guys to sundry bad guys, but there's no question that a creeping paranoia about Net vulnerability and its disastrous implications grows on the viewers especially of what could possibly happen in the future.
iwantgizmos "NetForce" has some okay shoot-em-up action scenes although otherwise it is a long "movie" at 160 minutes. If you know the typical pacing for episodic TV shows, and if you knew that this was originally an ABC TV mini-series that was first broadcast as a two-part mini-series in February 1999, then you can easily calculate that this movie was originally a two-part mini-series where each part is about 80 minutes for each part without the commercials (each part would be about 80 minutes plus 40 minutes of commercials...which would be about 40 minutes of story per hour plus the 20 minutes of commercials for each broadcast hour) and when put all together for videotape sales/rentals then you have this 160-minute movie without the commercials. (If ABC picked up "NetForce" as a regular series, each of the two parts could have been cut into two episodes each for a total of four episodes -- watch the pacing of this movie and you can guess where the commercials would go in and where each part/episode ends at each 40-minute mark and 80-minute or thereabouts.) Anyways, this 160-minute movie is the whole mini-series without the commercials.In comparison to other more recent ABC TV shows, the fictitious "NetForce" division depicted in this 1999 ABC TV mini-series is a pre-9/11 production that is suppose to be depicting what is happening in 2005 and you may find "NetForce" could be lacking in comparison to what you would find in the 2003 ABC TV regular series "The Threat Matrix" or in the current ABC TV regular series "Alias". Although "NetForce" uses the internet as a major story angle, "NetForce" is more akin to being a like an early stumbling version of "The Threat Matrix" -- but in the pre-9/11 days you would not know any better. So it's not bad for 1999, but you would expect more today. Okay to watch, but perhaps not as good as what you may find in "The Threat Matrix" or "Alias". "NetForce" is a pre-9/11 show and so there are no "terrorists" in this movie unless if you want to say the greedy billionaire in this movie is a terrorist or if you want to say that the trigger-happy convicts he hires are terrorists or if you want to say that the genius computer programmer (who I think is suppose to be from India) is a terrorist. They actually seem to be more like a bunch of greedy crooks in this movie.I bought this videotape for 99 cents at a local supermarket where it was in the bargain bin shelves. Since Scott Bakula was in it, then I thought why not watch it to see some of the stuff he did in the years between his work on "Quantum Leap" and "Star Trek: Enterprise". Also, I didn't watch this when this was first broadcast, so it was a good opportunity to catch on what I missed watching on the TV.The ending of this "NetForce" movie is good for episodic television where the TV viewer is strung along to keep watching the next show to find out what happens next, but I got a little antsy having to wait through whole thing to get to the end. Maybe if they put the commercials in then I probably wouldn't have been so antsy.
j'hannes This movie got a lot of bad reviews, especially from so-called "techies". I think the fact that the movie used ridiculusly wrong terms for it's technical effects had a lot to do with it's low reception. Substitute "thingie" for every reference to "website" and so on, and it won't be very painful at all.The plot was all right, I liked the allusion to the Windows lawsuit and the treatment of the real danger of homogenization of the 'net. At 2 hours 40 minutes, it was way too long, though.All in all, it was bearable. 5 out of 10.