In the era of Oliver Stone and among us who prefer non-fiction, a movie like this will never be great. if the goal was to capture the essence of our era of the requirements success, then the movie reached the pedestal of excellence. We have lived in the era of Jimmy Johnson, Martha Stewart and Steve Jobs where their singular and admittedly selfish focus on one aspect of a human life can lead to success and their fifteen minutes of fame. In that case, this movie does a great job showing that about Mr Jobs. He is no more cruel than any other megalomaniac. The choice to view Mr Jobs from Reed College to his return to Apple was an interesting choice, albeit limiting since it failed to document any change in the Mr Jobs as he grew older. Shortcomings in the film were perhaps intentional as an instrument to amplify the central point of his obsession. Maybe his life was a book of unrelated chapters, the assemblage of experiential learning, or maybe it was just a shoddy job of telling a rich, complicated life. Maybe Hulme, Whiteley and Stern gave up due to weariness just like Jobs’ peers and competitors did. Tough to say.
The 1970’s were just a weird time and now that we are all connected and cool, there are moments when this era is just as unfamiliar to us as any Revolutionary War movie would be. But you do get the sense that Ashton Kutcher has finally stopped wanting to marry his mother and put down silly things to test his talents as an actor. And the efforts of the cast from the garage was memorable, and Lenny Jacobson as Burrell Smith was a great choice. Otherwise, the cast mailed it in.
So I am thinking the troubles I have with the movie itself is more about how incomplete my memories of the 1970’s are and how I disdain how stale the cliches of that era feel now. The early scene of the Jobs and cohorts laying around in a field on an acid trip was as cliche as staring at a lava lamp. The trip to India was a filler. Yet conversely, the scene when Jobs and Woz make their pitch at Stanford was exactly what Washington and Reagan had in mind, front to back the best scene in the movie if you really want to see the first sounds of a successful tomorrow story. Double Bonus Brownie Points for the road scenes in California. Ya know, someday somebody smart is going to write about kids jumping in a car and driving around, going mobile, as a major feature in American culture.
We could have had more tirades from Jobs. I was expecting more tirades. Don’t forget the tirades.
Regarding Tripod’s Review
Excellent review Tripod. Helpful too, as I’m now going to wait and view Jobs when it comes on-demand.
Your review has several enjoyable points and lines, none more so than “Ya know, someday somebody smart is going to write about kids jumping in a car and driving around, going mobile, as a major feature in American culture.” Indeed.