The Guardian (USA)

Blackberry review – souped-up account of the rise and fall of ‘Crackberry’

- Peter Bradshaw

Here is a punchy Canadian comedydram­a in that burgeoning true-life genre which could loosely be called Tech Startup Hubris; we’ve seen Dumb Money (about GameStop), WeCrashed (about WeWork), and The Beanie Bubble (about the bizarre 90s webdriven tulip-style craze for Beanie Babies). The great ancestor of them all is naturally David Fincher’s The Social Network, about Facebook, with its propulsive script by Aaron Sorkin. This film is a fictionall­y souped-up account of the steep rise and sudden fall of the BlackBerry, the handset device that towards the end of the 00s was so ubiquitous and addictive among the white-collar classes it was known as the “Crackberry”.

But then Steve Jobs unveiled his iPhone, and the BlackBerry executives suddenly looked like a bunch of brontosaur­uses that had been hit in the face by a meteor.

Jay Baruchel plays BlackBerry’s greying co-founder Mike Lazaridis; a shy, nerdy, brilliant innovator who is details-obsessive. Matt Johnson, who is the film’s director and co-writer, plays Mike’s goofball partner Doug Fregin, and Johnson’s directing duties perhaps meant he’d taken the eye off his own performanc­e a little, as he does little other than stare with sweaty, slackjawed and horrified incredulit­y at his buddy Mike selling out to the Man.

This latter is represente­d by gimleteyed investor Jim Balsillie, played by Glenn Howerton, almost unrecognis­able from his role on TV’s It’s Always Sunny in Philadelph­ia; Balsillie is the uptight suit-wearing guy who gets these nerdy Star Wars-loving dopes and slackers into financial shape (while of course betraying their creative, foolingaro­und ethos). These three cartoony personae loosely correspond to Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin and Sean Parker as portrayed in The Social Network; none of them, however, have a family or romantic life away from the office, an important part of how Sorkin conceived his characters.

Well, this is a watchable enough film; there is hilarious delusion in Balsillie’s fanatical desire to buy up hockey teams with his new superwealt­h, and pure pathos when the BlackBerry team watch Jobs demonstrat­ing the iPhone, like silent movie veterans witnessing the new talkies, speaking out loud their own imminent demise.

• Blackberry is released on 6 October in UK and Irish cinemas.

 ?? ?? Innovators … Jay Baruchel, left, and Matt Johnson, centre, play the co-founders. Photograph: Courtesy of IFC Films/AP
Innovators … Jay Baruchel, left, and Matt Johnson, centre, play the co-founders. Photograph: Courtesy of IFC Films/AP

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