John Cho logs on to find his missing daughter in “Searching.” (Screen Gems)

John Cho logs on to find his missing daughter in “Searching.” (Screen Gems)

Internet thriller ‘Searching’ plays out on computer screens

You can admire director Aneesh Chaganty’s ingenuity, but the gimmick wears thin after a while.

Back when Hollywood discovered the internet as a plot device — thus ushering in a period of movies about people frantically tapping on their keyboards — one major annoyance was the depiction of the internet itself.

They almost always got it wrong.

In movies like “The Net” (1995) or “Sneakers” (1992), the internet resembled a Hollywood art director’s idea of what this newfangled World Wide Web must look like. There was usually something a little bogus about it.

So I’ll give credit to “Searching,” a new suspense film told entirely on a computer screen. The sites visited during the story are the real deal: YouTube, Facebook and Gmail all flash by with believable functionality. The tech aspects of the film would’ve warmed Steve Jobs’ heart, if he had one. (Too soon?)

I wish “Searching” was believable beyond its gimmick. The story puts single dad David Kim (the reliable John Cho, from the “Star Trek” and “Harold and Kumar” worlds) in a panic, as his teenage daughter Margot (Michelle La) goes missing. By using online tools and breaking into his daughter’s laptop (a slow, patient sequence that neatly suggests how easy it would be to hack somebody), David tries to solve the mystery of Margot’s disappearance, which turns out to be the mystery of someone he didn’t really know at all.

David interacts with Margot’s schoolmates, with his herb-friendly brother (Joseph Lee), and with the detective (Debra Messing) assigned to the case. Messing deserves credit for ditching any semblance of “Will & Grace” glamour, although I’m not sure the movie’s net-based reality needed to make its actors look quite so bad.

The story isn’t much, so the film’s appeal comes from its technique. This gets overextended at 102 minutes, although you can admire director Aneesh Chaganty’s ingenuity. It’s possible this movie might work better when you’re streaming it on your own laptop, as the windows-within-windows effect gets multiplied.

A couple of late-blooming revelations are acceptably grabby, mostly because of the way they unfold — the helplessness of the web-surfer, the disconnection from being in a real space, is effective. You might be able to guess the twists, but the concept lends a bit of freshness to the process.

What’s not fresh is the movie’s concern about how the internet is changing us all — I’m sure it will shock you to learn that Facebook friends are not necessarily your actual friends. At least “Searching” lets John Cho create an overbearing character who isn’t terribly sympathetic; Cho reminds you that the fault may not be in the internet but in ourselves.

“Searching” isn’t the first movie to take the online approach; the 2014 horror film “Unfriended” and its current sequel, “Unfriended: Dark Web” unfold along similar lines. All three films were produced by Timur Bekmambetov, the Russian filmmaker who frittered away his early promise on junk like “Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter.”

He’s been touting the internet-based film as the future of film, but I wonder. If you’ve Googled and Instagrammed your way through 10 hours of your day already, aren’t you in the mood for something more expansive at the movies?

“Searching” (2 stars)

A gimmick propels this thriller: Its story of a man (John Cho) trying to find his missing teenage daughter is entirely played out on computer screens. You can admire director Aneesh Chaganty’s ingenuity, but the device wears thin after a while. With Debra Messing.

Rating: PG-13, for language, subject matter

Opening Friday: Everett Stadium, Marysville, Meridian, Thornton Place

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