As a film, Hackers is far from perfect. Extended techno cut scenes that go no further than being painfully melodramatic, unrealistic computer graphics and annoying side-kick characters such as Cereal Killer who, though he has his moments, badly lets down his more adept counterparts. So why do we like the film as much as we do? A whole generation of kids were spawned from this film that who suddenly decided hacking was cool and dismissed their preconceptions about seeing nerdy people mumbling incoherently from behind a C++ manual. Instead, they remember a bunch of attractive teenagers who loved good music, dressed in technicolour and effortlessly negotiated NYC in rollerblades. We're drawn to the film's main characters - Jonny Lee Miller and Angelina Jolie. Both highly acclaimed actors, who enjoyed excellent on-screen chemistry, which continued after filming and eventually resulted in their well-documented marriage. Both make the most of an uneven script, creating an exciting relationship involving power-struggles, confusion and uncertainty. Jolie, especially, translates her own traits very effectively into the drama - outspoken about everything (including her bisexuality and love of S&M), energetic and angry. Miller and Jolie carry the film, and transform it into something you love, but never quite know why, especially given that its flaws so often hinder the action. There is the soundtrack as well, of course. Widely considered to be amongst the best ever released, the tunes match the vitality of the two main protagonists, and manage to obscure, at least temporarily, Cereal Killer's hyperactivity, or The Plague's melodrama and uninspired performance. We remember Hackers as something great, inexplicably, and just a little reluctantly.