2012年12月3日星期一

“jOBS” biopic starring Ashton Kutcher premiering at Sundance Film Festival Jan. 27


"jOBS" biopic starring Ashton Kutcher premiering at Sundance Film Festival Jan. 27

Screen Shot 2012-12-03 at 9.25.23 PM

Sundance Film Festival announced this afternoon that the Steve Jobs biopic titled "jOBS", starring famed-actor Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs, will be premiered at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival this January.

As we've previously covered, the biopic will take a look at the early founding and thirty years of Apple, centered around the late co-founder Steve Jobs. Co-founder Steve Wozniak will make an appearance in the film played by Josh Gad and former CEO and co-founder John Sculley will also make an appearance, played by Matthew Modine. Scenes in the movie were filmed in the "historic garage" where Jobs and Steve Wozniak founded Apple. The film's early scenes will even feature Jobs' Los Altos home where he grew up to maintain "accuracy and authenticity" during the movie-making process, the film makers revealed in the summer.

The 2013 Sundance Film Festival will be running from January 17 – 27, and jOBS will get the honor of being the festival's closing film on the 27th, Hollywood Reporter first noted. It is not clear will it will air thus-after. Some have noted that the portrayal of Steve Jobs we should really be waiting for is Aaron Sorkin's version backed by Sony. With rights to the official Steve Jobs biography written by Walter Isaacson, Sorkin's movie will only consist of  three scenes. Each scene will be  30 minutes long and will follow Jobs backstage just before the unveiling of the Mac, NeXT, and the original iPod. Not much else about the film is known.

cn_image.size.ashton-kutcher-steve-jobs-movie.
Ashton Kutcher as Steve Jobs in iconic early pose -  Press Shot

Ken Segall, the author of "Insanely Simple," took to his blog in May to discuss the biopic starring Kutcher. "Apparently, there are two ways to make a Steve Jobs movie," explained Segall. "You can do a low-budget indie film using director Joshua Michael Stern (who?) and first-time screenwriter Matt Whitely, and give it an appropriately cheesy name like [original name was 'Steve Jobs: Get Inspired', but it is now  'jOBS']. Or you can pay Isaacson a million bucks for the rights to his book, and prepare to pay far bigger bucks for everything that follows. Which is what Sony Pictures has done, bless their little hearts."

Top image source:

Eerie. Jobs & Kutcher. http://t.co/9mjWDkVN


Lidija Davis (@MadLid) December 04, 2012

Via: The Verge, Hollywood Reporter
Source: Sundance Film Festival



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