Just watched a lot of people comparing "Jobs" to "The Social Network," mostly praising David Fincher and bashing Joshua Michael Stein. Yes, from a cinematic and artistic point of view, this film has very few merits, too much light, shadow and music in the title, I don't know why Ashton Kutcher, too fast and become a simple and crude climax And the troughs, too many as if they were magnified character flaws, and a huge flaw, a sense of the gap with reality created by focusing on the early Jobs.
Many people sigh that this is not Jobs at all. That domineering, funny, and graceful Jobs would definitely want to fall to his death if he saw this so-called Jobs who looked very handsome.
As the brick house said, "there are a thousand Hamlets in a thousand readers", in my opinion, the flaws of this film are justified. Existence is truth.
"Using psychedelics has been an extraordinary experience and one of the most important things in my life. Psychedelics show you the other side of the coin and when the effect wears off you can't remember, but you know there are Such a thing. It made me more aware of what is important - to create great inventions, not to make money. I should do my best to put my life back into history and the long stream of human thought."
These are the words of Steve Jobs in Walter's book . The self-narrative of psychedelics also explains why Ashton will be self-healing for so long, because it is a process of Jobs' spiritual beliefs and goals. Companions at hand thought Jobs' insistence on selling the Macintosh at a low price was comical, when in fact he was holding on to his weak but firm beliefs.
What makes me dissatisfied, however, is that there are too few manifestations of Zen. For Jobs, Zen Buddhism was another major contributor to his spiritual understanding. Zen, calming his mind and extending his horizons, was necessary for the grumpy Jobs.
Many people feel that the flaws in Jobs' character are magnified. He doesn't like wearing shoes, he doesn't like bathing, and most importantly, he is too egotistical, that is, the dictator Dictator.
If he doesn't like wearing shoes, it's just a reflection of his approach to Zen Buddhism. He doesn't like taking a bath because he doesn't have time, and most entrepreneurs have gone through a similar entrepreneurial process. Then he completely violated Jobs and violated all the dogma in the management manual, and how to praise him for becoming a dictator?
In other words, how can we recognize the ruthless Steve Jobs in the movie?
I thought, maybe everyone was stunned at his abandonment of Mike, but how many people in the world would really forgive a friend who completely betrayed them.
After all, the charisma of Jobs was that he was a dictator.
A monarch who has a rare sense of visionary, scientist, and artist among entrepreneurs, and who can keenly translate these foresight into company strategies, directions, and products, and who has charisma and executive drive.
Information on Zhihu: Glassdoor.com surveys show that Apple employees have a 97% approval rating for Jobs, which could never be seen in a democratic leader. Not because people are afraid of him, but because the dictator can fully display his personality, insight, wisdom and ability.
Then the Jobs we see is actually just an early, young tyrant. It is Jobs who is hard but not tough, not Jobs who is tough and tough. It's like the vast majority of youth in society. So those freshman who want to see how IPONE, IPAD, and MACBOOK are developed, please take a break. If you are not satisfied, please watch the high-definition videos of several conferences. It is true that this film was originally intended for young people in their twenties and thirties and middle-aged people, and middle-aged and elderly people don't need to watch it.
Quote again in the film.
Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They're not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.
(For the crazy, the misfits, the rebels, the troublemakers, the round pegs in the square holes...those who see things differently, they don't like rules, They hate conformity. You can quote them, against them, myth or demonize them, but you just can't ignore them, because they can change things, they push humanity forward. Even if people think of them as lunatics, we see genius ...because only people who are crazy enough to believe they can change the world are the ones who actually change the world.)
I don't use Apple phones and computers, and I'm not a fan or a believer. But the belief and spirit of Jobs, I think all entrepreneurs need to learn. He's an imperfect perfectionist, a sensible dictator, and a driver who makes me willing to consider the word "dictatorship" neutral.
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