Vancouver Sun

Plenty to dislike about Jobs

Doc about Apple guru stops short of character assassinat­ion

- CHRIS KNIGHT

Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine

Rating: Starring: Steve Jobs and those who knew him Directed by: Alex Gibney Running time: 128 minutes

It’s high technologi­cal irony that I write this review on a Macintosh computer, an iPhone at my left hand and an iPad at my right. You may even be reading it on an Apple product. Filmmaker Alex Gibney confesses to having a complicate­d relationsh­ip with the machines, and hence with the man behind them.

Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, who died of cancer four years ago this autumn, was neither devil nor saint. In Gibney’s assessment, however, there is ultimately more to dislike about him. He committed venial sins, like flagrant use of handicappe­d parking spots. He indulged in corporate mortal sins, such as taking unethical, almost certainly illegal backdated stock options. There are even sins of omission, like not giving enough back to the community (unlike Bill Gates).

Or as Daniel Kottke, former friend of Jobs and Employee No. 12 at Apple, puts it: “How much of an a—hole do you have to be to be successful?”

Apple apologists will point out Jobs also shaped some of the technology that binds our world together — even though he didn’t see a computer until a class trip to a NASA research centre when he was 12, and he wouldn’t see another until a few years later.

Yet by 21 he started selling Apples, which required not only technologi­cal and business savvy but evangelica­l skills. No one back then even knew they needed the quaintly named “personal computer.” An early interview has Jobs calling it “a 21stcentur­y bicycle” to amplify our abilities, but in the mental rather than physical realm.

The documentar­y starts with a tone of awe, in part for Jobs but even more so for the era that gave birth to his ideas.

And yet, even as his machines endeared him to a grateful world, Jobs was sliding into moral debt. He stole from Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak after they were paid a bonus for creating the arcade game Breakout for Atari. He disavowed paternity of his daughter Lisa until DNA tests showed otherwise, and then paid a pittance in child support.

Gibney, an Oscar nominee for 2006’s Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, and winner for Taxi to the Dark Side in 2008, made his film without the co-operation of either Apple or Jobs’ family. He succeeds mightily in illustrati­ng the contradict­ions and paradoxes within the man — surely someone who loved Bob Dylan and Buddhism couldn’t be all bad.

But the film sometimes goes too far — and at 128 minutes it could easily be a bit shorter — in conflating Jobs with the wrongdoing­s of the company and even the industry at large. Dodging taxes is hardly something Apple invented — it’s just that, as with the mouse and the graphical user interface, Apple made better use of it than most.

The film stops short of character assassinat­ion, though others have levelled that charge. What emerges is a complex individual, already the subject of numerous books and two biopics — the lacklustre Jobs with Ashton Kutcher from 2013, and this fall’s Steve Jobs, with a pedigree that includes director Danny Boyle, writer Aaron Sorkin (working from Walter Isaacson’s biography), and star Michael Fassbender.

Until that one opens, Gibney’s is just the latest presentati­on — one facet of a man who clearly had many.

 ??  ?? Steve Jobs is neither devil nor saint but does qualify as a man worth disliking, according to the documentar­y, Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine.
Steve Jobs is neither devil nor saint but does qualify as a man worth disliking, according to the documentar­y, Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine.
 ?? ANDREW BRUCKER/JIGSAW PRODUCTION­S ?? Director Alex Gibney shot his documentar­y on Steve Jobs without the co-operation of Apple or the Jobs family.
ANDREW BRUCKER/JIGSAW PRODUCTION­S Director Alex Gibney shot his documentar­y on Steve Jobs without the co-operation of Apple or the Jobs family.

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