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#STEVE JOBS 2015 DVD MOVIE#
Each act is filmed (literally, mechanically shot) and scored to meld form and content.Ĭomposer Daniel Pemberton wrote three entirely separate movie scores. Jobs is backstage, preparing for three product launches: the Macintosh in 1984, the Next computer in 1988, and the iMac in 1998, after Jobs had been fired from Apple and then brought back in utter vindication to the company he co-founded. The movie takes place in three acts, three moments in real time, as Jobs (Michael Fassbender, capturing the fury, magnetism, brilliance, and shocking selfishness of the man). This is pure cinema, and it is thrilling to watch. Or, it is not Julie Andrews singing “My Favorite Things ” it is John Coltrane’s 14-minute meditation on the Richard Rodgers tune. It is not a photograph of Steve Jobs it is an abstract painting. This movie respects its audience enough to assume that either we already know the parameters of Jobs’ life or that if we do not know the details, we are more interested in the essence. This is not a “and then this happened, and then there was this revelation, and then there was this setback, and then there was this triumph” sort of movie. And no one in history, even Aaron Sorkin, can snap out dialog as dazzlingly crafted as this in normal conversation. A lot of stuff in this movie didn’t happen or didn’t happen when and where it is shown here or between the characters who appear in the film. So, let’s get it straight from the outset. A lot of people won’t like that, but for me, after years of diligent, comprehensive and increasingly formulaic biographical films, my view is that of Patrick Henry (who might have been considered a candidate for Jobs’ “Think Different” ad campaign) - If this be revolution, make the most of it. This film, directed by Danny Boyle and written by Aaron Sorkin, does to the traditional biographical movie what Jobs himself did to traditional ideas about computers. You can read the meticulously researched biography biography by Walter Isaacson. If you want a straightforward, fact-checked biography of Apple visionary Steve Jobs, watch Alex Gibney’s documentary, Steve Jobs: The Man In the Machine, or the Ashton Kutcher biopic (better than its reputation), simply titled Jobs.