Jobs (PG-13) ★★½
Open Road Films
What separates a biopic from any other character piece is that a ''true story'' isn't necessarily expected to resolve or redeem its central characters. Unlike their fictional counterparts, real people often stay bastards throughout adulthood, submitting in the end to the same fatal flaws that carried with them through their earlier acts. It is the charge of the filmmaker, as such, to extrapolate some meaning from the heap of misanthropy that is, in essence, his or her subject. Be it the wonder, the progress, or even the horror of the featured individual's journey, something must be pinpointed as a reason to remember the biographical story in question. What Jobs does, instead of working toward a reason for us to be enamored with or at least intrigued by the fascinating character that Steve Jobs was, is bank on the simple likelihood that we already know that.
Anyone going into a Jobs biopic has, presumably, an established interest in and familiarity with the founder of Apple, who died of cancer in 2011. But that shouldn't absolve the movie of its duty to prove to its audiences that Steve Jobs is a subject matter worth their while. It doesn't absolve Ashton Kutcher of his responsibility to build a real character, as opposed to just yelling when he's in an angry scene and sobbing when he's in a sad scene. But Jobs seemes unconcerned with its own obligations toward this story. It just wants to tell it.
As such, what we have is two hours of a Steve Jobs seminar. Director Joshua Michael Stern and star Kutcher chatting about Jobs' life and career, joking about his off-putting quirks and offensive hygiene, pulling no punches in discussing his less admirable choices (like abandoning his baby daughter, and firing Apple employees for voicing disagreement). Lucky for Stern, the story Is an interesting one. Jobs, for all his flaws, is a guy you'll enjoy hearing about. But all that is accomplished by JOBS could have been earned by picking up a textbook about his life. And those who have already done so, those who know Jobs' story well enough (those who are the most likely to check out this movie, in fact), will find themselves experiencing nothing new.
Open Road Films
But an even better problem with this method is that it results in an incomplete film. Some of the better biopics that do handle flawed characters like Steve Jobs manage to pull some sense of significance from their tales, affirming that we didn't just spend two hours watching some son of a bitch get away with being just that. Even in the darkest, saddest, most unsettling stories, it is necessary to leave the viewer with something. Something learned, changed, accomplished, earned. The director cannot help if it if the Jobs of the 2000s was the same self-driven man who used people and dismissed ideas in the '70s and '80s. But he can and must do something to work around that. To turn this collection of anecdotes into a comprehensive account, which warrants an ending that is different from its beginning. That's not just cinema, it's storytelling.
And without this effort put in to conform Jobs' life to the demands of the narrative medium, nor the effort to build him into an independently interesting character by Kutcher, we're left with a moreover dull time at the theater. Steve Jobs might be an interesting guy, and his story might be worth telling - that benefit of the doubt is probably the only thing keeping this movie afloat. In company with an external fixation on the man at its center, Jobs might work just around sea level as a piece of entertainment. But what we're looking at, here, is a standalone movie, and one that hasn't put in quite enough work to pay tribute to the man in question.
2.5/5
Follow Michael Arbeiter on Twitter @MichaelArbeiter
To get the full Quicklook Films experience, uncheck "Enable on this Site" from Adblock Plus
box office top 10
Ghostbusters : Frozen Empire Released: March 22, 2024 Cast: Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon 45.2M
Dune: Part Two Released: March 1, 2024 Cast: Timothée Chalamet, Rebecca Ferguson 17.6M
Kung Fu Panda 4 Released: March 8, 2024 Cast: Jack Black, Viola Davis 16.8M
Immaculate Released: March 22, 2024 Cast: Sydney Sweeney, Álvaro Morte 5.4M
Arthur the King Released: March 15, 2024 Cast: Mark Wahlberg, Simu Liu 4.4M
Late Night with the Devil Released: March 22, 2024 Cast: David Dastmalchian, Laura Gordon 2.8M
Imaginary Released: March 8, 2024 Cast: DeWanda Wise, Tom Payne (II) 2.8M
Love Lies Bleeding Released: March 8, 2024 Cast: Kristen Stewart, Katy O'Brian 1.6M
Cabrini Released: March 8, 2024 Cast: Cristiana Dell'Anna, John Lithgow 1.4M
Bob Marley: One Love Released: February 14, 2024 Cast: Kingsley Ben-Adir, Lashana Lynch 1.1M