jOBS – Dir. Joshua
Michael Stern (2013)
Here's to the crazy
ones…because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the
world, are the ones who do.
In some small way, Steve Jobs has touched the lives of just
about everyone on this planet. Even if you've never owned an Apple product,
you've probably, at the very least, taken a call from someone on an iPhone or
seen someone walking down the street with those recognizable white earbuds. I
must admit to drinking the Apple Kool-Aid as I own an iPod Classic, an iPhone
5S, an iPad2, an iPad Air, and a MacBook Pro.
Billions around the world mourned when Jobs died of
complications caused by pancreatic cancer in 2011. Of course, the Hollywood
studios were itching to tell his story, part of which was previously depicted
in the made-for-TV movie Pirates of
Silicon Valley with Noah Wylie as Jobs and Anthony Michael Hall as Bill
Gates. Still in development is a script by Aaron Sorkin, which will focus on
three pivotal moments in the Jobs' life. Meanwhile, the first to hit the
screens is Open Road Films' Jobs,
based on a screenplay by newcomer Matt Whiteley with the handsome Ashton
Kutcher in the title role.
The film begins in 2001 with Steve Jobs introducing the
first-ever iPod at an Apple Town Hall. The story shifts back to 1974 where Jobs
has dropped out of Reed College in Portland because he was unable to afford
tuition. A kindly professor (James Woods in a throwaway cameo) allows him to
audit classes, but Jobs doesn't have a clear cut idea of where his life is
headed. After dropping LSD and going on a sojourn to India, Jobs gets a gig
working at Atari where he helped to build Breakout,
a video game inspired by Pong. Jobs
also infuriated colleagues with his overbearing demeanor and poor hygiene (he
never wore shoes). While working on the project, Jobs turned to his friend
Steve Wozniak (Josh Gad) and was amazed at his pal's new invention, a
motherboard that could interface with a television monitor. Wozniak saw it as a
cool gadget, Jobs saw the future.
Together, they formed Apple Computer and worked out of the
garage of Jobs' parents (John Getz & Lesley Ann Warren). Angel investor
Mike Markkula (Dermot Mulroney) was instrumental in providing the startup money
the company needed to create the Apple II. At the forefront of the blossoming home
computer market, Apple was quickly becoming a superpower and made a lot of
people millions when it went public in 1980. Unfortunately, the company's
success was also instrumental in Jobs' downfall. The fiercely independent Jobs
now had to answer to shareholders and board members. Soon, Jobs finds himself
ousted from the company he created. Don't worry, he finds his way back. No
spoiler alert necessary.
Jobs never
attempts to canonize its subject nor does it try to tear him down. The biopic
never strays far from the middle of the road when depicting Jobs' life. He was
a bold thinker and created a market for technology people didn't even know they
needed. At the same time, he was temperamental and ruthless. Jobs denied stock
options for friends like Daniel Kottke (Lukas Haas), who started right there
with him in his parents' garage. He even screwed his best pal Wozniak out of a
couple thousand dollars. Perhaps, the worst moment comes when Jobs callously dumps
his girlfriend after learning she is pregnant. He continued to deny the baby
was his for years. Sometime after leaving Apple, Jobs is shown living in a
beautiful mansion with a wife, a son, and that very same daughter he ignored.
His change of heart is never shown or explained.
That sums up the major problem with Jobs, the film never shows any desire to dig deeper. The sun always
shines brightly while director Joshua Michael Stern is content with shooting a
young Steve Jobs spinning in a wheat field and glossing over chunks of the
story through montages. The soundtrack is littered with gentle pop classics by
Cat Stevens and Joe Walsh, which sets the tone for the safe route Jobs takes. Those seeking an edgier
alternative will have to wait for Sorkin's version.
Though Kutcher bears a resemblance to the real Steve Jobs
and captures the man's physicality, he doesn't have the acting chops to
believably deliver the movie's more intense moments. At least, Kutcher has a
stacked supporting cast to play off of with character actors such as James
Woods, Kevin Dunn, Dermot Mulroney, Ron Eldard, J.K. Simmons as board member
Arthur Rock, and Matthew Modine as John Sculley, former CEO of Apple and
Pepsi-Cola. Undoubtedly, the best performance belongs to Josh Gad's Steve
Wozniak, portrayed as a kind-hearted teddy bear uncomfortable the cutthroat
corporate world.
It's ironic that someone who was considered so daring and
innovative could have inspired such a bland, innocuous biopic. What a shame
that the filmmakers didn't follow Steve Jobs' lead and take a few risks.
Rating: ** (*****)
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