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Film review: Steve Jobs biopic is hard work to watch

Richard James Havis

2-MIN READ2-MIN
Ashton Kutcher plays Steve Jobs in a scene from Jobs.
Richard James Havis
Jobs
Starring: Ashton Kutcher, Dermot Mulroney, Josh Gad, Matthew Modine
Directed by: Joshua Michael Stern
Category: IIA

 

This biopic of Apple co-founder Steve Jobs veers between an advertisement for the company and a hagiography of its subject. Although the actors give their all, there simply isn't enough of a story in this version of Jobs' rise, fall and rise to make for an engaging film.

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In reality Jobs changed the way that we use computers and phones and that, in turn, changed the way we live. His personal and family life was not without drama, and his Machiavellian nature and corporate battles could, in the hands of a better behind-the-camera team, have ignited some fiery drama. But Jobs displays the man's life as a tale of mundane personal flaws and endless boardroom scenes that, unthinkably, make the viewer yearn for a dose of Donald Trump's hilarious bad taste to liven things up.

The film starts with a moment of triumphant expectation - Jobs (Ashton Kutcher) presenting the first iPod to Apple employees who whoop and almost weep when he does so. It then flashes back to show him walking out of college, working at Atari and then co-founding Apple with tech genius Steve "Woz" Wozniak (Josh Gad).

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The filmmakers take the easy angle with the story: Jobs has a vision which no one else can understand, and if only those guys in suits would get out of the way and let him carry out his idea the world would benefit from using his revolutionary personal computers. The film pursues this line for slightly over two hours, with little humour, nuance or deviation. Yes, Jobs is a bit odd and has a mean streak, yes, he has good business sense and, yes, he knows that damn computer should be selling better than it is. But other than that, there is little in the way of character development.

Short scenes make the early days move along quickly in an impressionistic style. But after Apple becomes more successful, Jobs gets bogged down in boardroom escapades which show Jobs ousted from his own company before he is finally recalled to save it.

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