-
Advertorial
-
FOCUS
-
Guide
-
Lifestyle
-
Tech and Vogue
-
TechandScience
-
CHTF Special
-
Nanshan
-
Futian Today
-
Hit Bravo
-
Special Report
-
Junior Journalist Program
-
World Economy
-
Opinion
-
Diversions
-
Hotels
-
Movies
-
People
-
Person of the week
-
Weekend
-
Photo Highlights
-
Currency Focus
-
Kaleidoscope
-
Tech and Science
-
News Picks
-
Yes Teens
-
Budding Writers
-
Fun
-
Campus
-
Glamour
-
News
-
Digital Paper
-
Food drink
-
Majors_Forum
-
Speak Shenzhen
-
Shopping
-
Business_Markets
-
Restaurants
-
Travel
-
Investment
-
Hotels
-
Yearend Review
-
World
-
Sports
-
Entertainment
-
QINGDAO TODAY
-
In depth
-
Leisure Highlights
-
Markets
-
Business
-
Culture
-
China
-
Shenzhen
-
Important news
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Movies -> 
Jobs
    2013-09-27  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    《乔布斯》

    Starring: Ashton Kutcher, Dermot Mulroney, Josh Gad, Lukas Haas, J. K. Simmons, Matthew Modine

    Director: Joshua Michael Stern

    APPLE founder Steve Jobs (1955-2011), already the subject of a huge bestselling biography, now gets his screen testimonial. Other heroes would envy such adulation. “Jobs” the movie is more worship than auteurship and while it won’t bring Apple’s sagging stock price back up, director Joshua Michael Stern (“Neverwas,” “Swing Vote”) can rely on an instant consumer base for his longwinded contribution to the Steve Jobs mythology.

    The script by Matt Whitely, a marketing executive employed by producer Mark Hulme, follows Steve Jobs through life-defining encounters with barefoot college LSD trips and Apple boardrooms of stiff-suited execs. The scenario draws in part on interviews with many Jobs acquaintances, but not on Walter Isaacson’s best-selling Jobs biography, a competing work of admiration.

    On the road to Apple (in a garage) and during the brand’s ascent, the precociously brilliant Jobs (Ashton Kutcher) insults disbelievers, fires loyal staff and heaps outright abuse in all directions. Once the firm is formed, office politics are merciless — executives (including Jobs) are lured in and tossed out in corporate purges. Matthew Modine is effectively bland as the Pepsico marketing “whiz,” recruited by Jobs, who almost takes Apple down.

    Stern mixes in plenty of Jobs’ ugliness and pettiness, but the film anoints him as a prophet with an urgent vision. Mistreatment of others is tolerated as necessary collateral damage on a visionary’s way to a greater good.

    We watch Jobs resurrect his mission from a near-fatal failure when a corporate Apple unravels, ending as Jobs regains control in his late 30s and points the firm toward a bigger, better Apple. The youth who once rejected the baby whom he fathered even becomes an improbable family man. The canonization avoids being a martyrology by ending long before Jobs’s death in 2011.

    In the photo-shopping of the Jobs character, crucial details are lost — his adoption and the psychological scars left from being given away by his birth parents; the striking aesthetic refinement of recent Apple products, beginning with the iPod; a grim losing battle with cancer, which humanized an arrogant enfant terrible.

    Bio-pics always tailor memories. Yet the welcome surprise here is Kutcher, as the barefoot rebel who brought the spirit of psychedelia to technology. Kutcher overplays Jobs’ signature bouncy walk as a leitmotif, but his bullying and his flares of temper and mercurial insight are surprisingly credible.

    Josh Gad as Steve Wozniak — or Woz — Jobs’ nerdy tech-wizard collaborator, has a shy warm wit and a touching softness, which explains why the cut-throat Jobs was the one who led the company.

    The landscape that Jobs helped define is mostly generic here. Stern filmed in the San Fernando Valley near Los Angeles for Silicon Valley south of San Francisco. In a nod to historical exactitude, scenes of early computer creation were shot — in a glow of wonder, Bethlehem-style — in the same garage at Jobs’ parents’ home in Mountain View where that work was done.

    Apple raised the bar on the design of consumer products by U.S. corporations — Jobs and his chief designer claim as much in a scene in the film. Yet characters, rather than places or beautiful objects are this film’s priority.

    The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen.

    (SD-Agencies)

深圳报业集团版权所有, 未经授权禁止复制; Copyright 2010, All Rights Reserved.
Shenzhen Daily E-mail:szdaily@szszd.com.cn