| Release Date | 16 April 1999 |
| Budget | $16,000,000 |
| US Box Office | $16,000,000 |
| Tagline | Question reality. You can go there even though it doesn't exist. |
| Genre | Fantasy, Mystery, Romance, Sci-Fi, Thriller |
| Country | GermanyUSA |
| Filming Locations | 777 S. Figueroa Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA |
| Language | English |
| Sound Mix | DTS, Dolby Digital, SDDS |
| Color | Color |
| Film Type | Feature |
| Film Class | Tech Noir |
| Mood | Other Dimensions, Spellbinders |
| Themes | Virtual Reality, Time Travel, Murder Investigations |
| Tones | Stylized, Ominous, Eerie, Slick |
| Tags | Accusation, Investigation, Murder, Reality, Time Travel, Vindication, Virtual Reality |
The Thirteenth Floor is a 1999 science fiction film directed by Josef Rusnak and loosely based upon Simulacron-3 (1964), a novel by Daniel F. Galouye, and Welt am Draht (1973) (World on a Wire), a German two-part television film by Rainer Werner Fassbinder. The featured players are Craig Bierko, Gretchen Mol, Armin Mueller-Stahl, Vincent D'Onofrio, and Dennis Haysbert. In 2000, The Thirteenth Floor was nominated for the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film, but The Matrix won the award.