So I went to see Jobs yesterday, because I was in the mood to see a movie in theatres (I like going to see movies in theatres; some people whine incessantly about other people making noise and disturbing their precious experience, but I like the communal aspect of moviegoing) and it was either Jobs or The Wolverine and I think Marvel has found my limit because I simply do not want to see that movie even a little. At this point if you want me to watch another film in the X-franchise, you’d better be promising to bring back Alan Cumming as Nightcrawler, and then maybe we can talk.
So, it was Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs, and I freely admit I went mostly because I wanted to be ready for the inevitable Rifftrax release, because the trailer for Jobs is cheesy and awful – every line is predictable and it features both “Can’t Hold Us” by Macklemore and “Baba O’Reilly” by the Who, which is a one-two punch of “trailer cliche songs” (and yes, the Macklemore song is already a trailer cliche after less than four months, that is how fast it became one; it basically arrived pre-cliched). And it’s got blurbs, most of which are pointless (oh, Gizmodo said not to miss it, well then).
Now that I have seen it, I can say that Ashton Kutcher is going to get most of the blame for this thing flopping, because he is front and center and it is the predictable and easy narrative to say “ha ha Kelso from That 70s Show as Steve Jobs” but really, it’s not his fault. Kutcher does a good job with what he’s given: he does his best to inhabit the Jobs character in this, doesn’t shy away from giving an unsympathetic performance (because, let’s be honest, Steve Jobs was a dickhead) and delivers a performance that is overall quite solid. Really, there’s a number of great character actors in this – JK Simmons, Dermot Mulroney, Matthew Modine, Josh Gad – and they all deliver rock-solid work with what they’re given.
Here is the problem: they are given mostly crap. To its credit, Jobs doesn’t shy away from Steve Jobs being a dickhead: many of the deplorable and awful things he did during his life (blackballing fellow Apple founders because he could, refusing to acknowledge his daughter because he wanted to pretend he wasn’t the father, cheating on his girlfriend – hell, literally the first appearance of Steve Wozniak in the film is when Jobs fucks over Wozniak for a couple thousand bucks without Woz’s knowledge). But the film has no greater narrative arc than “Steve Jobs was a shithead and also a genius” and doesn’t back it up: Wozniak rather than Jobs is the brains behind the Apple II, Jobs royally screws up the Macintosh by making it too costly to sell cheap, and then BAM iPod and iMac and all that sort of thing. In this movie, Steve Jobs isn’t a tempestuous genius; he’s a child who keeps repeating a mantra and getting other people to do the work for him, which ironically comes off unfair to him. We’re talking about his supposedly hagiographic biopic here! (I mean, I am hardly an Apple fanboy, but come on, credit where credit is due.)
Worse, because Jobs’ bad behaviour is not given proper context (any number of personal traumas in his life, remember), the movie is aimless. It drifts about from incident to incident rather than having a narrative heft. This is intensified when you consider how much the movie leaves out: after a brief prelude where he’s bragging about the iPod to Apple employees, it begins with Jobs in 1974, bumming around in college, goes through the founding of Apple through to Jobs’ ouster from the company in 1985, and then eleven years pass. No discussion of Jobs’ early life (which is interesting) other than a token mention of his adoption during an unintentionally-hilarious LSD trip early on. The time away from Apple, where he founded NeXT and co-founded Pixar, is literally covered in fifteen seconds, and then we spend the last fifteen percent of the movie covering Jobs being put back in charge at Apple and that’s the ballgame.
Aaron Sorkin is writing a Jobs movie right now, and he’s going minimalist – apparently his movie is three half-hour setpieces, each one taking place immediately before a major Apple product launch. That’s a really interesting way of approaching Jobs, because the product launches were his greatest moments of influence (at a guess, they’ll be Apple II, Macintosh and iPhone) and it plays to Sorkin’s strengths, because if you’re gonna write three bottle episodes and call it a movie, you can do much worse than to hire Sorkin. The other way you could go for Jobs is to do an HBO-style miniseries, a technocratic version of John Adams. But Jobs tries to cover everything and fails miserably. It simply leaves out too much, and tries to cover that with brief asides and single sentences, and the cheats don’t work.
Oh, and did I mention the dialogue yet? Because it’s so bad, guys. Putting aside the numerous standing ovations Jobs gets during this movie (which are just an opportunity to repackage Jobs-speak and Apple marketing talk as dialogue), if you listen to the dialogue in that trailer, you have to understand it gets worse than that. No cliche is spared, no predictable line avoided. You will be able to quote this movie in advance of seeing it. Which makes it so deliciously awful that really, I have to recommend the experience. Although you may wish to get stoned first. I am sure Steve Jobs would approve of that.
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At least there’s still Pirates of Silicon Valley: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lEyrivrjAuU
My advice: wait for the DVD release with the deleted scenes of Jon Cryer as Tim Cook.
(Note: there are almost certainly no scenes of Jon Cryer playing Tim Cook)
@El Goro: And iSteve, starring Justin Long and James Urbaniak. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0yMZCaB-FE
…that Sorkin movie sounds fantastic, though.
They had Pirates of Silicon Valley. There was no need to make another Steve Jobs movie.
Bill Gates: Get real, would ya? You and I are both like guys who had this rich neighbor – Xerox – who left the door open all the time. And you go sneakin’ in to steal a TV set. Only when you get there, you realize that I got there first. I GOT THE LOOT STEVE! And you’re yellin’? “That’s not fair. I wanted to try to steal it first.” You’re too late.
Why didn’t you go see THE WORLD’S END?!??!!?
(Or did you already see The World’s End?)
P.S. bobs fobs Hobbes mobs
The Wolverine was actually surprisingly not terrible. It’s not X-Men 2 good, but it’s a solid watch all the way through. They seem to have learned something from the last one.
I’d have based the entire movie around the “interregnum”; basically make the start of the movie his construction of apple, just enough to make it clear that Apple was a Big Deal to Jobs and also something that totally BELONGED to him, then have the first act end with him being ousted – then the narrative arc of the movie is him becoming more likable (with the help of his wife, who’d be a manic pixie dream girl) and proving himself again via Pixar and NeXt and reclaiming his rightful place as King of Apple as the denouement.
And the final shot would be zoom in as he’s talking on the phone with some big business guy, with the camera coming in over his shoulder to see him idley sketching out a picture of the first iPhone on a pad in front of him.
THEN SLAM! To blackness with the worlds “the end” appearing then fading out, followed by a question mark, and then the credits roll in as the question mark fades.
They should’ve had a movie focused on Steve’s return to Apple up through the iPhone making Apple the most valuable company in the world.
It ends with Steve shouting at Bill I STOLE THE LOOT BACK, BILL! I STOLE IT AND MADE IT GLOSSY WHITE!
The Jobs/Gates relationship is apparently kind of interesting. According to Wozniak, Gates worked out how to manipulate Jobs into doing whatever he wanted fairly early on and he’d been doing it consistently ever since.
As mentioned, The Wolverine is all around decent and solid. Nothing to get excited about, but it could have been a hell of a lot worse.
This makes it sound like a very bad biopic on Thomas Edison. He’s the guy who first came to mind.
The movie that would be interesting, and is not ever going to be made, is a movie covering his time at NeXT.
That is, I think, the period when he matured a great deal, and learned a lot about the technology business. He wasn’t able to coast on the Apple II and Macintosh. He was trying to sell into crowded markets. He didn’t try to have NeXT build everything themselves from scratch; they adopted quality technology from elsewhere. SCSI, Ethernet, NuBus, and Mac-compatible RAM in the hardware, BSD UNIX, MACH from CMU, Display Postscript from Adobe, Objective-C from Stepstone, the GNU compiler toolchain, etc.
And he faced and accepted a number of setbacks. They stopped making hardware and changed to making their OS and development tools for PCs and Sun and HP workstations. Later, they ported the development tools to Windows, and pretty much stopped work on the OS. Then they shifted focus to applying the development tools for web development. Then Apple bought them, for the OS and the development tools and Steve.
I’m certain that Jobs wouldn’t have done nearly as well had he stayed at Apple all along. I think he needed his time in the wilderness to experience the struggles of an industry underdog.
He wasn’t even respected that much in the industry. To some extent I think he was seen as sort of a has-been, trying to keep his weird little computer company going. His reputation got a huge boost from Pixar, with the release of Toy Story and the IPO, but his reputation took a big hit from the perceived failure of NeXT. Then NeXT took over Apple, and now the wildly successful iPhone and iPad, along with the Mac and Apple TV, run software and an OS that is a very direct descendant of the NeXT OS.
I did see The Wolverine, and liked it.
Kutcher is like fingernails on a blackboard to me. Anytime I see him, I feel compelled to smack him upside the head. Why that dolt got famous is beyond me.
Wolverine was OK but I couldn’t entirely stop wishing that I was watching a straight-up translation of the miniseries.
I didn’t think there was anything that matched the best “cinematic” moments of the source material. No “Shingen! Am I worthy now?” moment, for example.
I liked making Mariko and Yukio sisters so they could interact with people other than Wolverine. But that’s about it.
Ultimately, Steve Jobs’s really amazing accomplishment was convincing music companies to allow digital sales only two years after Napster had got shut down.
Steve Jobs was exactly Edison. A marketing genius and a tech also-ran. In fifty years, no one will know his name.
And Bill Gates will be the man who killed polio and malaria. Neither of them were saints, but one did something.
Uh…
Yeah, try household-name-recognition of Edison vs. Tesla, or even George Westinghouse. My response to the usual Jobs-ripped-off-Woz-and-everybody-else party line is that, if Jobs and Woz had never met or become business partners, Jobs probably would have joined another computer company and done similar things for them (if he’d been at Commodore, the Amiga would have probably reached the prominence in the computer world that its diehard fans insisted that it always deserved), and Woz would be known to a handful of graying computer hobbyists as a talented flake who put out a decent homebrewed motherboard that one time.
As for the gossipy, how-was-Jobs-an-asshole-let-me-count-the-ways stories, lots of these have been known for literally a quarter of a century, since the publication of Steve Jobs: The Journey Is the Reward, a tell-all book that was written shortly after he was ousted from Apple. Of course, it also doesn’t have the NeXT/Pixar years or the comeback, but it does a decent analysis of his character, warts and all.