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Wendell 2021-12-18 08:01:11

It is a miracle that a movie like "Jobs" can be made well. But I still have hope for the movie itself. Ashton Kutcher's performance was on the pass line, but Jobs became more like a static figure in a slide in the hands of the director. Starting a business in a garage with a friend, separating everyone after success, and then being expelled from the board of directors is something that doesn't have too much drama. In fact, these points of separation and recombination are easy to win. David Fincher used a "selfish" and "loneliness" to solve the character defects of successful people behind the clichéd recombination and separation. Of course, Jobs also showed loneliness and selfishness in the movie, but the level only stayed at night alone. In contrast, Zuckerberg is the one who doesn't even want to admit to being alone in the movie. Walking barefoot and not taking a bath is actually a very interesting detail. Jobs didn't show much in the Zen movies, probably because of religious beliefs. The movie has always emphasized the process of Steve Jobs's life and career, never presenting it three-dimensionally, but just flattening it out. As a biographical film, "Jobs" is really not worthy of the genius of Jobs. Such indiscriminate use can only be done quickly and grab a freshness that only lasts for more than an hour. In addition, not filming the story of Jobs starting to enter the mobile phone industry also made Jobs's life in the movie stop inexplicably.

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Extended Reading

Jobs quotes

  • Steve Jobs: [pointing the chips on the Apple I board] It's got to be straight, and those more symmetric.

  • Paul Terrell: All right, Steve. I'll try to sell. But if I don't, I'm not making another order.

    Steve Jobs: Okay, that's fine... But I think you might be really interested in our second model.

    Paul Terrell: What's the second model?

    Steve Wozniak: What are you talking about?

    Steve Jobs: [in an undertone] All-in-one.