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Steve jobs 2015 review
Steve jobs 2015 review





steve jobs 2015 review

How Jobs reacts to this makes it seem like his daughter is never mentioned in his life, nor ever present until moments before he steps on stage to try and change the world with tech accessibility. There are 15 years, three products, and seven main characters in Steve Jobs, but they can all be written about similarly because each time a character appears in Steve Jobs-after they dance about everything that might go wrong with each product demo- they then step back into an echo chamber of grievances.įor example, marketing expert Joanna Hoffman ( Kate Winslet) steadfastly sticks by Jobs' side throughout the entire film, and she and Jobs do have a great rapport-but every time the doomsday dialogue about the product launch wraps up, she only has one thing on her mind: she wants Jobs to mend things with his daughter. However, there is a letdown when you begin to realize the repetition of the story arc of the characters. Sorkin's decision to center a huge story into a compact space of a single day in each year of those launches is certainly an intriguing approach to reshaping the biopic structure. And eventually, time does catch up and land where it was always desired for Jobs. There is definitely something interesting that Sorkin and Boyle's film does in exploring how time passed and Jobs' innovations never pivoted and adapted to it, but instead he remained steadfast about aesthetics and accessibility. And he indeed did step out of the train and call the landscape new. So, in a way, Jobs did indeed travel around in a circle. And thus began Jobs' greatest run of innovative success.

steve jobs 2015 review

The iMac was just that, purchased by millions as many household's first computer. In 1998, when the tech rock star reunites with the band that made him famous, Apple, the world has finally caught up to Jobs: it wants a simpler computer that looks cool and simply gets them on the Internet. Jobs presents ideas and surfaces very well. This makes sense because the aesthetics and presentation are the primary concerns he has for his products.

steve jobs 2015 review

Both of these ventures fail, but they make Jobs a tech rock star. We then meet Jobs in 1988, launching his own computer company, Next, and hosting a launch demonstration at the San Francisco Orchestra-prior to even making an operating system. His idea is that it'll become more accessible to everyone through simplification. We meet Jobs ( Michael Fassbender) in 1984 before his launch of the Mac, his product that simplifies the personal computer by actually reducing what the computer can do. Steve Jobs is certainly good, but there's so much here that's great it's a little frustrating that it isn't great overall. This train makes you feel like it's covered a lot of ground, but by the end you realized we've really only traveled in circles, and stopped at the same spots multiple times. It spans 15 years, and three of Jobs' different product launches. Aaron Sorkin's script is breathless, witty, urbane, but also exhausting and painfully circular. Danny Boyle's biopic of the former Apple CEO is crisply directed, wonderfully acted, and beautifully edited. Other than that, this is a cinematic masterpiece that should be viewed by anyone who loves film or is interested in the history of Steve Jobs.Steve Jobs is a locomotive. The only little nitpick I had with Steve Jobs was the fact that between product launches, we don’t get a lot of insight into Jobs’ life outside of his work. Danny Boyle’s directorial eye is sharper than it’s ever been, and I loved that he didn’t just show a sugarcoated version of Jobs he directed Fassbender in a way that portrayed him realistically. I loved how briskly paced this film was (thanks to Aaron Sorkin’s trademark writing), and the editing was clean, crisp, and beautiful. The supporting turns by Kate Winslet, Seth Rogen,Katherine Waterston, and Jeff Daniels are brilliant as well, but Fassbender steals the entire film. Fassbender captured the many nuances of a complicated man, and made you understand why he acted the way he did. He may not resemble the icon, but from the opening scene he enraptures you. Michael Fassbender is magnetic and a force to be reckoned with as Steve Jobs. Chronicling three of Jobs’ product launches and the affect fame has on his life, this is a biopic that doesn’t shy away from showing Jobs’ uglier attributes and his flaws, but also shows the genius who revolutionized technology.







Steve jobs 2015 review