
|
|
The Net:
The Unabomber, LSD and the Internet
Ultimately stunning in its revelations, Lutz Dammbeck's The
Net explores the incredibly complex backstory of Ted Kaczynski,
the infamous Unabomber. This exquisitely crafted inquiry into
the rationale of this mythic figure situates him within a
late 20th Century web of technology - a system that he grew
to oppose.
A marvelously subversive approach to the history of the Internet,
this insightful documentary combines speculative travelogue
and investigative journalism to trace contrasting countercultural
responses to the cybernetic revolution.
For those who resist these intrusive systems of technological
control, the Unabomber has come to symbolize an ultimate figure
of Refusal. For those that embrace it, as did and do the early
champions of media art like Marshall McLuhan, Nam June Paik,
and Stewart Brand, the promises of worldwide networking and
instantaneous communication outweighed the perils.
Dammbeck's conceptual quest links these multiple nodes of
cultural and political thought like the Internet itself. Circling
through themes of utopianism, anarchism, terrorism, CIA, LSD,
MK-ULTRA, Tim Leary, Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters, The
Net exposes conspiracies and upheavals, secrets and cover-ups
along the way.
115 mins
Rental - 7
Days $5.00 + tax Purchase
- $29.99 + tax

|