The legend of Steve Jobs
Rebecca 2022-04-22 07:01:20
In fact, this film has been criticized from the very beginning, because Jobs here is arrogant and unreasonable to his subordinates, and he is mean and ruthless to his daughter. In the first half, it can be said to be downright asshole. This may not be what some die-hard Apple fans might expect, but you have to admit that Joe's has an imperfect perfection. In his world, there are only winners and losers, and losers don't deserve to be mentioned at press conferences. He is stubborn, abandons all inferior products, and wants the best in everything, so that the price of the product is too high and is despised by others. He is a firm believer in getting everything ready before the customer thinks about what he wants, because actors don't rush off the stage in the middle of a show and ask the audience what they want to see. His character created him when it destroyed him. The first half of the film is like an intense symphony, with Jobs running backstage, arguing and arguing with different people, often ending in failure. The director ended with an unexpectedly warm ending. All those who supported him and overpowered him in the past passed by, standing in the audience or looking up or admiring his success. Under the interpretation of the French shark, I saw the most real and possibly the saddest transformation of Jobs.
When people mention Jobs, they say he is a genius, but few people ask him why he is a genius. Woz, who created Apple in the garage with him, is rarely mentioned now and is completely shrouded in the shadow of Jobs. The film gives an answer, woz is a serious person, but Jobs is more insightful in the market and understands what customers need. He is the conductor in the band. Other great musicians can only sit in their chairs and do what they're supposed to do, and it's always Steve Jobs who swings the bat. We always mention Jobs, but it's possible that we don't even know what we're talking about when we mention him. This was probably the biggest feeling I had when watching this movie.
"I like to think that something is still there after a person dies. If you have all this experience, maybe a little bit of wisdom, and then it just goes away, it's kind of weird. So I really like to believe that, There will be something left, maybe your consciousness will be immortal." At least Jobs left Apple and his consciousness. This may also be comforting.
I've mourned so many people who have died of cancer these days, watching their greatness and accomplishments vanish in an instant, and I'm apparently healthy, presumably just as dead compared to them. Some people say that I watch movies just as a bystander to watch life, but a waste of time. But I think even if it is someone else's story, you will always learn something after watching it. Watching a movie is not to escape reality, but to face reality from the perspective of others.
I am now using the macbook of gang master Joe, listening to the grew up at midnight at the end of the movie and writing this sentence, it can be regarded as a kind of memory. Perhaps one day in a long time, no one will mention Jobs again, just as few people know Alan Turing now. But he once left a trace in the universe, and all mankind should thank him for it.
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Andy Hertzfeld: We're not a pit crew at Daytona. This can't be fixed in seconds.
Steve Jobs: You didn't have seconds, you had three weeks. The universe was created in a third of that time.
Andy Hertzfeld: Well, someday you'll have to tell us how you did it.
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Steve Jobs: If a fire causes a stampede to the unmarked exits, it'll have been well worth it for those who survive.