Jobs

    Jobs
    2013

    Synopsis

    The story of Steve Jobs' ascension from college dropout into one of the most revered creative entrepreneurs of the 20th century.

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    Cast

    • Ashton KutcherSteve Jobs
    • Josh GadSteve Wozniak
    • Lukas HaasDaniel Kottke
    • Victor RasukBill Fernandez
    • Eddie HassellChris Espinosa
    • Ron EldardRod Holt
    • Nelson FranklinBill Atkinson
    • Elden HensonAndy Hertzfeld
    • Lenny JacobsonBurrell Smith
    • Giles MattheyJonathan Ive

    Recommendations

    • 63

      McClatchy-Tribune News Service

      It’s superficial, but that plays into the hands of the film’s star, Ashton Kutcher.
    • 60

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The filmmakers do fall into the trap of overly sentimentalizing a widely beloved public figure who represents an enormous cultural significance. At the same time, however, they keep the movie frequently engaging.
    • 58

      IndieWire

      The movie is constantly at war with attempts to provide an honest portrayal, almost as if its subject were reaching beyond the grave to steer any negativity back in the direction of a hagiography.
    • 50

      Variety

      Ultimately, Jobs is a prosaic but not unaffecting tribute to the virtues of defiance, nonconformity, artistry, beauty, craftsmanship, imagination and innovation, qualities it only intermittently reflects as a piece of filmmaking.
    • 50

      Arizona Republic

      If it weren’t for his voice, Kutcher would have been the ideal choice to star in Jobs, a well-meant but ultimately unsurprising biopic.
    • 50

      The A.V. Club

      For (nearly) every yin of Ashton Kutcher’s Steve Jobs flashing a moment of brilliance, there’s a yang of someone saying he’s changed or is his own worst enemy. The unwritten, but understood, full title of Joshua Michael Stern’s film is "Jobs: Brilliant Asshole."
    • 40

      The Guardian

      This is far from the bomb some would have envisaged, but neither is it the character illumination one would wish for. Jobs appears so consumed by his work here that little else mattered in his life. That may be true, but we're left none the wiser as to what made the man tick, beyond what we already know.
    • 30

      Los Angeles Times

      There was a time when the slack storytelling, stock characterizations and general by-the-numbers feeling of the film could be put into perspective by saying it seemed like a TV biopic. But even TV movies are done with more verve than this these days.

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