"I was so gung-ho fighting every product he introduced. I was there, I loved him, I loved the products I felt they where good because they came from Steve Jobs. I was gung-ho for them" -the real Wozniak talking about this movie th-cam.com/video/UpE1PbVWQEg/w-d-xo.html min: 2:14
When he says "I'm poorly made" sums up his past you learn about and the reason why he's obsessed over trying to make his products the best they can be so it's him living vicariously , such a great film.
Tom Miller yeah fuck telling an even somewhat reasonable and correct story, It should have ended with him giving the company away for free and spending the rest of his life making his daughter happy. If your comment has a different meaning and I'm thinking you are saying something you aren't just tell me:)
it's also based on true events meaning, if he was never the perfect dad, they're not gonna suddenly make him an awesome family man to give the audience its happy ending.
While everyone seems to have their favorite moment in this scene, mine was when Jobs handed his daughter a copy of her design on the LISA, and she finally realized that the Jetson's Easy-Bake Oven was actually based on her design. Beautiful.
I love how this entire scene ties up the themes of this movie. Throughout the entire film, Steve is pursuing perfection through his products. In this final scene he admits that he is poorly made. This ties into an earlier scene with Scully where he admits that he was "given back" implying that he feels that was never good enough to being with. These final scenes give us an interesting interpretation of Jobs. This movie portrays him as a man who pursued perfection in his products yet was aware of his own flawed, imperfect nature. His solution? To ignore any attempt to reconcile his flawed nature and instead focus on what he can control. It's only in this final scene where he embraces his imperfection at the last possible moment. He has his epiphany at the 11 hour. He grows up at midnight.
i'm wondering where do you see an epiphany? to me it seems like every other argument with the women in the movie. he's always going back and forth between aggression and caring. i don't see how this time he changed except for the positive music playing to suggest that in the very last shot.
It's actually REALLY meaningful that he wants to put a thousand songs in her pocket. For the first time, he's genuinely trying to make her life better.
@Akmal Ahmad And I'd argue its not just to make these movies compelling. Its sacrificing historical accuracy for emotional accuracy. These movies are more character studies than documentaries. They are accurate in depictitnt these characters as people.
He is a narcissistist. He us trying to get emotional credit for some thing he created without having to emotionally invest in her. He wasn't capable of giving emotional investment.
Don't think it was for the first time necessarily, they started improving their relationship when Lisa was a teen. This was more of a sweet bonding moment when he finally showed how important she was for him.
I don't know why, but that line where he says "The whole world is waiting for you" because he won't do his thing until he reads her essay immediately stirs tears in me. I don't know why, maybe something primal in me is activated but i can only say the performances in this movie from all the actors are fantastic. I'm a bitter, jaded, misanthrope in real life so to get that snap response from me in that little moment is truly a show of how great this movie is at being the reason movies exist, to be visual art form to create emotional response from its audiences.
@@AC-mp7cx I have issues with myself that i am personally trying to overcome that i can't get past just yet. I'm doing my best but yeah, I'm an overly negative person mostly.
People who say this film only demonises Jobs are idiots, or they were watching a different film altogether. In both 1984 and 1988, we see Jobs being obsessed with starting on time and being an asshole to Lisa. In 1984, he denies that Lisa is even his daughter, and in 1988, he refuses to engage with her when all she wants to do is talk to him about computers and hang around to watch his presentation. In 1998, he not only doesn't care if the presentation starts on time, but he delays it on purpose because he wants Lisa to stick around and watch it. His heartfelt acknowledgement that he's poorly made is his way of apologising for how he used to behave. The film ends with him standing on the stage bathed in his fans' adulation, but he only has eyes for his daughter. That shows just how much he has changed. How is this a demonisation? People need to think twice before judging something.
Too bad this is fictional, he was a dick to her all the way onto his deathbed. She said that it wasn’t until he was dying that he acknowledged the computer was named after her.
No it doesn’t. I think you were caught up in all the gay drama. I don’t care about Jobs’s personal life; I didn’t know him. I care about his business life as a user of his products. I don’t care if he was a good father or husband. Who really gives a shit? Nobody.
Alex Banuelos I watched this movie a while ago but I don't remember any gay drama from it tbh. Where did you get the gay plot from it? Was it implied that he was gay or am I missing something?
Didn’t like either one. Almost constantly, Jobs is about to give a presentation and random people are hounding him... gets repetitive and frustrating. The acting was good, direction suxxed.
This one lacks Apple spirit, though I think the acting is pretty good. I think the best film would have been a hybrid between the 2 of them. But both fail to really explain the whole life of achievements of Jobs and the many different personalities he developed during the years. The "entrepreneur Jobs" is not the same as "CEO Jobs", for example.
This whole scene breaks my heart. His ego won't let him completely realize or admit that what he did to her was ultimately wrong but his "I'm poorly made" is his way of saying "I'm sorry for what I did to you". And his "I'm gonna put 1000 songs in your pocket" is his way of making up for it by helping her life a little bit. At least thats what it meant for me. Beautiful movie.
I absolutely love that little moment in the brief garage flashback where he is pacing and briefly stops to say “Woz” with a little bit of a quiver in his voice.
Being quite old, when people would discuss something like an IPOD being real, it just seemed so unreal. No my iPod holds over 50,000 songs. I cannot believe what they created, and it is still going. God rest his soul, and THANK YOU Steve.
What did they create? All they did was make a pretty Mp3 player with more memory (which companies were doing at the time), only difference is that the Ipod was prettier. Hardly fucking innovative is it? so again, what did they create?
It was certainly innovative. They managed to combine the best of the technologies of the time, vastly improved user-friendliness, and did successfully revolutionize the music industry.
A multi-billion dollar industry changer. New ideas - even something as innocuous as a scroll wheel - change the tech industry, not specification improvements. Otherwise, the iPod would've never destroyed its competition.
Really a powerful ending. First Woz enters after the fight. Next, John Lennon on the screen. And finally... "Remember that painting you did on the original Mac?" Shakes head "I do." "Ladies and gentlemen....Steve Jobs"
"I'm poorly made" and the line in the earlier scene with Scully after John tells him "You can't refuse to love someone" and Steve replies "Turns out you can" are so perfectly written to show how Steve finally came to accept his own shortcomings as a father.
@@uno8049 The reason they put that in is to show how far they've come. From two dudes in a garage to an auditorium full of people clamoring for the next Apple product. On a character level, it shows where Steve and Woz grew apart. How they're in a garage together both in the same camera shot, to ending up in separate shots at the end, divided by a sea of fans. That's what makes it such a bittersweet moment. And the reason he says "Woz" after pacing around in thought, that "Woz" is the moment Apple, or the idea to start a company, was born in Steve's head and he's about to tell Woz the idea.
I keep going forward and back about the respect I have for Steve Jobs' personality, but I simply cannot deny that "I'm going to put 1000 songs in your pocket" line is so powerful.
"Woz?" Many people here have commented about the music used in the final scene, the dialogue between Steve and his daughter Lisa or the emotions they got from the film. But I think we're overlooking the moment we briefly cut back to the garage where Steve turns to Woz one last time. I don't know if this is credit to Danny Boyle, Sorkin or to the editor Elliot Graham (might as well give credit to all three) but that insert is one of the key components of this finale. In context, both scenes -the iMac product launch and the garage moment- were preceded by arguments between Steve and Woz. Both fights were about who is right and who is wrong (and technically they're both right and wrong in both instances). The reason why this flashback scene is key is because 1. it bookends the film in a chronological sense. The furthest we go back in Steve's life in this film is to the garage days, and we end on the iMac launch. 2. it bookends Jobs' and Wozniak's partnership. Both their egos have clashed many times over the years but they have continuosuly stuck together. And it shows that even when they disagree, Steve always turns back to make sure that his friend is still there. We see Woz re-enter the auditorium moments before, which I believe is also a sign of him never abandoning his friend regardless of what has happened. In addition to Steve previously reconciling with Lisa, these two moments together redeem Steve's character (at least little); because ultimately, if the faces missing from the crowd are of the people he actually cares about then the auditorium may as well be empty. When we audibly hear him call out to Woz in front of the garage, he figuratively is doing the same on stage in that moment. I'm not saying this coincides with Jobs' and Wozniak's real life relationship -I know this movie took liberties with the stories of the people depicted. I'm also not saying this ending would have been terrible without that insert. It just perfectly completes Steve's character arc with a very simple edit.
I think the use of the song is perfect for Jobs’ and Woz’s relationship too used in this scene. “We were only kids then”, because in that one second scene they only were kids, and it cuts straight back to them as adults again. Can’t help but think of Woz watching this scene himself and getting a lump in his throat. It’s poignant.
honestly, im cried when he says "woz" and the camera quickly zoom in to steve wozniak face.. that moment is so deep and touching with a fantastic soundtrack
Agree. Steven would've never quit inventing more futuristic gadgets. Cook is no Jobs or anyone for that matter. Only Elon comes close but it's not the same. Everyone out there are only reinventing iphones in which Jobs started. Apple hasn't come up with anything new other than upgrades from what Jobs started. Apples technology is on a halt for now.
As a person who was adopted at birth, and considers himself lucky to have the parents who had adopted him, I've always been easily moved to tears in movie scenes that visit the emotions related to the separation or uniting of a child and parent. This movie hit that nerve several times, particularly this entire ending scene. Great stuff.
I admire Steve's power in this scene. How Lisa tells him he's gonna be late and he doesn't give a shit. He'll basically stop the company for five mins to be with her. Similarly with the opening scene when he insists "get rid of the exit signs. Don't tell me how you did it."
Carl Jung wrote a review of James Joyce’s Ulysses in which he stated “This is either Mental Illness or a degree of Mental Health incomprehensible to most people.” The prevailing view is that he ultimately concluded that it was a degree of Mental Health incomprehensible to most people. That’s Steve Jobs - “I Don’t *Want* People to Dislike Me, I’m Just Indifferent When They Do.”
Anyone else ever notices during the movie how the announcer always says ''Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome..' and then right at the end, only at the end when he recognizes his flaws.. then his name is mentioned, 'Ladies and gentlemen.. Steve Jobs' as though it took him a lifetime to build himself up to be who he is.
Every time, every time I watch this scene, when Steve told Lisa that he was going to put songs in her pocket, hundreds, thousands. My tears just can't stop.
Very powerful ending. I have never been a MAC fan but I've been a huge Steve Jobs fan. We all owe him credit to how technology is today. Such a brilliant guy. He's missed.
What's fascinating here, besides it being one of the best scenes and endings of all time, is how completely the editing and the emotional arch of the scene is taylor made to fit the emotional arch of the song ("Grew Up At Midnight" by The Maccabees). The song was barely edited in length, and even the last moment of silence in the movie is exactly how the song plays in original form. It's basically a music video for the Maccabees.
I’m pretty sure that short flashback to the garage is after Jobs and Wozniak are arguing about the number of boards to put into the computer. I believe this is showing how Jobs was able to surrender his ego in that moment and admit Wozniak was right. Then it cuts back to jobs on stage surrendering is ego and fully acknowledging his love for his daughter despite all those years of emotional neglect.
Every few months I'm scrolling through Netflix trying to find something to watch but end up giving up and coming here and watching clips from this brilliant movie.
There’s something about estranged fathers and daughters taking a step towards healing (or closure) that does it for me. One of my favourite last scenes in film.
When he told her he was gonna put songs in her pocket, u cant help but shed a tear. Say what u will about him, but his vision, his vision is why I looked up to this man and his idea to business. The vision of the ipod and so much more.
leave it up to aaron sorkin to right another perfect screenplay. he is my favorite screenwriter. the dialogue he comes up with is witty, to the point and smart
"I'm poorly made...." Man, that line. I wonder how many people heard that line (and like me) thought 'Wow...I've felt like that at times.' Even if only for a few minutes or maybe while going thru a bad period in life. That line just speaks to me.....gets me teary eyed. That whole scene, btw Father and Daughter, speaks volumes. Not saying it actually happened. But the writing in this movie (so many of the scenes in this movie) just stayed with me for a long time. I always thought this was a fantastic movie.
“Local Integrated Systems Architecture doesn’t even mean anything”.....was a great one, you realize it was named after her, even if he had to make up the words. Finally “Do you remember that painting you did on the Mac?” Lisa:”No?” S.Jobs:”I do........” (hands her a copy he kept for 14 years). Great scene, emotional and The Maccabees song really made the scene.
When Steve Jobs started denying Lisa's parentage to the press, he hired a marketing firm to create a backronym for the name then rejected them all and asked for suggestions from within the company. Andy Hertzfield said that they'd suggest joke acronyms like "Let's Invent Some Acronym,"_"Lisa: Invented Stupid Acronym,”_ _"Let's Indulge Steve's Alibi."_
It’s great to watch a movie about Steve Jobs, but it’s enough to watch a video of him talking about his beliefs, thoughts, plans, strategies, and even a random content, to get inspired and impressed and emotional.
i m not so aware about the accents , but if u say so then it must be. i am hoping she will be back in award seasons next year with "Wonder Wheel" or "The Mountain Between Us"
criminally underappreciated the movie. The screenplay is incredibly well written. So many great lines, delivered by great performances. Even Seth Rogan, who I don't usually like in movies, did a great job in this movie. And man I loved that ending scene with the 1000 songs in your pocket lol. Fantastic stuff.
I love how the film never announces his name at any of the stage events prior to this last one. With this beautiful song playing, it’s pay off after pay off, layers of a satisfying ending. _Ladies and gentlemen, Steve Jobs._
@@anasofia4692 I read Lisa's memoir _Small Fry_ and Chrissann's memoir _The Bite in the Apple._ Also, the official Steve Jobs autobiography approved by Steve Jobs himself before his passing by Water Isaacson.
What actually just i watched. Its mind boggling. So many things to notice. Many deep insights. Everytime you watch it again you will notice something new. Great direction and screenplay.
I think has to be one of my favorite films done on a real life individual because unlike _Jobs_ which was a biography (a stereotypical one at that), this film was more of a character study that allowed the audience to get into the mind of Steve Jobs. It gives us a perspective into who he was through the good and the bad. A lot of biopics have the mistake of putting the achievements over the achiever. Biopics should focus more on the aspects that make the person who he is, who he is. This film is beautifully crafted and the fact it is purely run by the dialogue of the actors is truly brilliant. This film doesn’t try to replay events or be 100% accurate. It tries to explain to us the person.
Exactly! The funny thing about it, is that we all know...and I mean - every - single - human knows, that if every little intricate detail of who we are, were showcased on screen, it would not paint us in a good light. Yeah, i know our egos tell us we were better than him, but that is because YOU are telling your own story. Let every single person you have ever interacted with tell it. Because we tend to brainwash ourselves, using selective memories, to forget our wrongdoings.
2:36 At that moment, Steve might have introduced the iPod. Besides that, this movie was really a classic! Fantastic performances! Cool editing and pace! Such a great film!
From what I read the conversation about the iPod and the LISA did take place between Jobs and his daughter according to her, just not in that Hollywood dramatic fashion. Woz demanding credit for the Apple II never happened though. Or if it did, he never admitted it.
That moment at the end has me in tears every time! I have always had a soft spot for girls with terrible fathers. I never wanted kids but part of me wishes I had a daughter. What an incredibly powerful scene with an amazing song!
“I’m poorly made”. Even then, he couldn’t own it. It’s not that he made bad choices, it’s that he’s “flawed”. Everything in his life that he likes, he “made happen” and everything that’s bad happened “to him”.
Uh, that was his second, his biggest sin was probably making millions of dollars of off slave labor while men, women, and kids literally died in factories making his products, whilst only getting paid like, 50 cents an hour.
gtfomaddie You have the wrong perspective. Foxconn enslaves them Apple and Samsung just use Foxconn. Also, FoxConn is in line with China's minimum wage if not more than. Only reason this happens is China's government is full of cunts who just want more manufacturing power and net exports, while shitting on their own citizens with low ass minimum wages.
Apple knows exactly what goes on in the factories and yet STILL used Foxconn, in my opinion that makes them just as bad. Because it is an evil company that copies everyone else's technology and fools its customers :) Nice try little sheep BAAAAA
I really dont get why Jony Ives doesnt like this movie? its sooo awesome and it totally nailed the essence of Steve Jobs. (not the actual him, but the spirit, the essence, the creative genius, the man thar made mistakes and learned from them, the man with passion and fealings, the man with bite) Jony Ive you really need to give this movie a chance, its brilliant and really captures Jobs in a loving way.
Wozniak watches the presentation because, as he said, “that’s what friends do”.
"I was so gung-ho fighting every product he introduced. I was there, I loved him, I loved the products I felt they where good because they came from Steve Jobs. I was gung-ho for them"
-the real Wozniak talking about this movie
th-cam.com/video/UpE1PbVWQEg/w-d-xo.html
min: 2:14
Armando Castro to be fair Woz does also say he loves the movie
That’s what programmers do 😂😂 showbiz is not fr us.
That's not why he stayed. He stayed so he can be closer to his daughter Lisa.
As if he doesn’t know what to do so he refers to the manual.
When he says "I'm poorly made" sums up his past you learn about and the reason why he's obsessed over trying to make his products the best they can be so it's him living vicariously , such a great film.
Very nice analysis. I completely agree with you bud.
Well his hard work of making things perfect really payed off today.
Can you please tell me the name of the song?
Tom Miller yeah fuck telling an even somewhat reasonable and correct story, It should have ended with him giving the company away for free and spending the rest of his life making his daughter happy. If your comment has a different meaning and I'm thinking you are saying something you aren't just tell me:)
it's also based on true events meaning, if he was never the perfect dad, they're not gonna suddenly make him an awesome family man to give the audience its happy ending.
While everyone seems to have their favorite moment in this scene, mine was when Jobs handed his daughter a copy of her design on the LISA, and she finally realized that the Jetson's Easy-Bake Oven was actually based on her design. Beautiful.
The sketch was done on an original Mac, and it became the design of the iMac.
Exactly
Mine was when steve gently says “waz” in the flasback
I liked the idea that he kept it with him, presumably at every conference?
Yes I agree, epic moment!
"YOU ARE TEARING ME APART LISA!!!"
I DID NWAAAAHTTT !
This was probably the best comment thread I have read in a long time
I FED UP WITH THIS WORLD
I DID NOT HIT HER, IT'S NOT TRUE!
IT'S NOT TRUE, IT'S BULLSHIT
I DID NOT HIT HER! I DID NAAAAAH!
oh hi mark...
Oh hi mark
it's a travesty this wasn't even nominated for Best Screenplay at the Oscars. "I'm poorly made"--one of the greatest lines ever.
I was pissed this didn't get even more nominations. Best Screenplay, Best Director, Best Picture, Best Editing, Best Sound Mixing, etc.
the oscars are a literal joke at this point.
That's insane. I thought the screenplay was absolutely stand out. It was Sorkin's masterpiece
Eoin Brennan he has been better... I hated the way time jumps is handled in this movie.
Wow I didn’t know that. Terrible decision
Danny Boyle knows how to find the perfect songs for scenes.
Aidan Smith can you please tell me the name of the song?
Grew up at midnight - the maccabees
I got it , but thanks
I know, he also like using lots of flash light during one of those music, it is like Michael Fassbender is transcending to the heaven or something.
(trainspotting)
“I’m gonna put a thousand songs in your pocket “ frick I love that line
Me 2. Now I’ve got over a thousand songs in my pocket ;)
@@inxj5915 kinda crazy to think about, but you have millions now thanks to streaming. Pretty mind blowing to think about
@@lordfatcock truly mind blowing.
And now I can play whatever music I want on my phone that can get me any information I want with a camera to take pictures of anything I want.
Yes that got me a little bit and I couldn’t believe I was teary eyed
Amazing director.
Amazing lead actor.
Amazing script.
Amazing movie.
Noah Wylie did a better jobs
@@knerduno5942ehhh no. Looked the part, did not do better than Fassbender tho.
I love how this entire scene ties up the themes of this movie. Throughout the entire film, Steve is pursuing perfection through his products. In this final scene he admits that he is poorly made. This ties into an earlier scene with Scully where he admits that he was "given back" implying that he feels that was never good enough to being with. These final scenes give us an interesting interpretation of Jobs. This movie portrays him as a man who pursued perfection in his products yet was aware of his own flawed, imperfect nature. His solution? To ignore any attempt to reconcile his flawed nature and instead focus on what he can control. It's only in this final scene where he embraces his imperfection at the last possible moment.
He has his epiphany at the 11 hour. He grows up at midnight.
Id like to read one of your essays.
One of the best comment i have ever read.
i'm wondering where do you see an epiphany? to me it seems like every other argument with the women in the movie. he's always going back and forth between aggression and caring. i don't see how this time he changed except for the positive music playing to suggest that in the very last shot.
He was like his products, flawed but well made.
And when Wozniak said "Your products are better than you" and Jobs replied "That's the idea".
It's actually REALLY meaningful that he wants to put a thousand songs in her pocket. For the first time, he's genuinely trying to make her life better.
@Akmal Ahmad And I'd argue its not just to make these movies compelling. Its sacrificing historical accuracy for emotional accuracy.
These movies are more character studies than documentaries. They are accurate in depictitnt these characters as people.
He is a narcissistist. He us trying to get emotional credit for some thing he created without having to emotionally invest in her. He wasn't capable of giving emotional investment.
fbvamp vamp where are you getting this from?
Oh great now some people think this movie is a documentary...
Don't think it was for the first time necessarily, they started improving their relationship when Lisa was a teen. This was more of a sweet bonding moment when he finally showed how important she was for him.
In the last few seconds of the scene there's just a father walking towards his child n not a super successful entrepreneur. Brilliant execution!
Yeah, but Lisa said this scene never happened.
Jody that’s why it never said “Based on a true story.” It’s a realistic fiction film.
Nor it should have happened.
yes but i think they used his relationship with his daughter too much, it just made it all negative
@@AC-mp7cx You see the ending? How is it ''negative''? It's a beautiful bonding moment between a father and daughter.
The grown up Lisa is on screen for fraction of the movie but her line delivery is so powerful. Leaves quite an impression.
yes but i think they used his relationship with his daughter too much, it just made it all negative
@@AC-mp7cx Well, it's a fact that he was a negligent father when Lisa was little but gradually improved their relationship.
That's how you end a film.
L OS: No, bitch. This movie sucks.
It's perfect.
Hardcore Doom really? Go watch another Adam Sandler movie while you study for your GED
@@NEpatriots88 Haahaa!!
@@hardcoredoom5892 lmao fuck off nobody agrees with you fuckin hater
That split second garage scene-gets me everytime.
I AM TRYING TO FIND THAT SCENE! ON WHICH MINUTE IT COMES?!! PLEASE TELL ME!
@@lifeinslo-mo595 5:21
@@vishesh9516 THANK YOU SO MUCH! I GOT IT!
Me too
Ties in perfectly with the song lyric playing, "We grew up at midnight, were only kids then"
I don't know why, but that line where he says "The whole world is waiting for you" because he won't do his thing until he reads her essay immediately stirs tears in me. I don't know why, maybe something primal in me is activated but i can only say the performances in this movie from all the actors are fantastic. I'm a bitter, jaded, misanthrope in real life so to get that snap response from me in that little moment is truly a show of how great this movie is at being the reason movies exist, to be visual art form to create emotional response from its audiences.
It's just like a father finally giving his daughter the validation she rightly deserves
you shouldnt be bitter or jaded
@@AC-mp7cx I have issues with myself that i am personally trying to overcome that i can't get past just yet. I'm doing my best but yeah, I'm an overly negative person mostly.
@@WerewolfGuyyy okay :) you're valid
@@AC-mp7cx Thanks, we all grow in different ways i guess, :)
People who say this film only demonises Jobs are idiots, or they were watching a different film altogether. In both 1984 and 1988, we see Jobs being obsessed with starting on time and being an asshole to Lisa. In 1984, he denies that Lisa is even his daughter, and in 1988, he refuses to engage with her when all she wants to do is talk to him about computers and hang around to watch his presentation. In 1998, he not only doesn't care if the presentation starts on time, but he delays it on purpose because he wants Lisa to stick around and watch it. His heartfelt acknowledgement that he's poorly made is his way of apologising for how he used to behave. The film ends with him standing on the stage bathed in his fans' adulation, but he only has eyes for his daughter. That shows just how much he has changed. How is this a demonisation? People need to think twice before judging something.
People are complicated, selfish and stupid, love them anyway
Jobs does not need demonization - he was such. The movie humanized him ;)
Too bad this is fictional, he was a dick to her all the way onto his deathbed. She said that it wasn’t until he was dying that he acknowledged the computer was named after her.
People just want reason to fuel their personal vendetta against Apple, really
He isnt such a bad guy in real life but i have seen videos where he is being a dick like when he failed the unveiling of the iphone 5
I don't understand how anyone would prefer the ashton movie. This blows ashton out of the water and off the universe.
juhabaka peci lel
Just no
No it doesn’t. I think you were caught up in all the gay drama. I don’t care about Jobs’s personal life; I didn’t know him. I care about his business life as a user of his products. I don’t care if he was a good father or husband. Who really gives a shit? Nobody.
Alex Banuelos I watched this movie a while ago but I don't remember any gay drama from it tbh. Where did you get the gay plot from it? Was it implied that he was gay or am I missing something?
Didn’t like either one.
Almost constantly, Jobs is about to give a presentation and random people are hounding him... gets repetitive and frustrating. The acting was good, direction suxxed.
This one lacks Apple spirit, though I think the acting is pretty good. I think the best film would have been a hybrid between the 2 of them. But both fail to really explain the whole life of achievements of Jobs and the many different personalities he developed during the years. The "entrepreneur Jobs" is not the same as "CEO Jobs", for example.
This whole scene breaks my heart. His ego won't let him completely realize or admit that what he did to her was ultimately wrong but his "I'm poorly made" is his way of saying "I'm sorry for what I did to you". And his "I'm gonna put 1000 songs in your pocket" is his way of making up for it by helping her life a little bit. At least thats what it meant for me. Beautiful movie.
I dont think that's beautiful.
Real Lisa confirms this is 100% fiction
"I'm poorly made"...Jesus Christ, that cuts deep. What an astoundingly well-written scene.
hmm, that is a very egoistic thing to say: "it is not my fault, it is the fault of who made me".
@@marsovac not at all. It's simply acknowledging that you're a very flawed human being. No blame assigned.
Glad this movie became a cult classic. I was one of the few people that actually watched it in cinema.
Is it? Really? I always see more scenes and reruns of the Kutcher version
gadget00 This movie wasn't a blockbuster like Kutcher's version.. Fassbender was nominated for an Oscar for playing Steve Jobs
cult classic? it's only been been three years.
cult classic ? what the fuck are u talking about lol NO, its not ... yet
Pirates of Silicon Valley, that's a cult classic.
I absolutely love that little moment in the brief garage flashback where he is pacing and briefly stops to say “Woz” with a little bit of a quiver in his voice.
The actress who plays Lisa was also little B.B. in the Kill Bill movie!
Bea Kiddo o m g this fact is mind blowing
OMG yes she is... time flies! :o
Bea Kiddo aahh
She's so beautiful..
And she is brazilian
The last scene where Steve Jobs walks toward Lisa saying “I’m gonna put a thousand songs in your pocket” is just incredible.
The ipod
@@ericsantana1184no shit
@@jd0879 I was being sarcastic I know that Steve Jobs created the iPod but then again was Steve Jobs ever honest? Not even Mark Zuckerberg is honest
What do you mean "Not even Mark Zuckerberg"? Is Mark Zuckerberg believed to be a bastion of moral integrity?@@ericsantana1184
and there were already mp3 players that could do that, since the iPod came about two and a half years after the first mp3 players
Such a beautiful movie.
Winning in front of people who gave up on you is a beautiful feeling.
What a beautiful comment.
thank you for a beautiful and inspirational thought... i needed that.
Being quite old, when people would discuss something like an IPOD being real, it just seemed so unreal. No my iPod holds over 50,000 songs. I cannot believe what they created, and it is still going. God rest his soul, and THANK YOU Steve.
What did they create? All they did was make a pretty Mp3 player with more memory (which companies were doing at the time), only difference is that the Ipod was prettier. Hardly fucking innovative is it? so again, what did they create?
It was certainly innovative. They managed to combine the best of the technologies of the time, vastly improved user-friendliness, and did successfully revolutionize the music industry.
havingfun1968 thank his engineers. Not him
HaZeuestGaming will your pretty stupid if Steve never had the idea for the iPod then his "engineers" Would never make it.
A multi-billion dollar industry changer. New ideas - even something as innocuous as a scroll wheel - change the tech industry, not specification improvements. Otherwise, the iPod would've never destroyed its competition.
The moment when Lisa sees the old drawing is just magic.
Really a powerful ending. First Woz enters after the fight. Next, John Lennon on the screen. And finally...
"Remember that painting you did on the original Mac?"
Shakes head
"I do."
"Ladies and gentlemen....Steve Jobs"
shouldve left lennon out of it
"I'm poorly made" and the line in the earlier scene with Scully after John tells him "You can't refuse to love someone" and Steve replies "Turns out you can" are so perfectly written to show how Steve finally came to accept his own shortcomings as a father.
this part was completely beautiful.
Lisa Jobs is beautful
that footage where steve calling woz in the garage, make this scene even more powerfull.
How?
@@Phantom-ux7gz if you have to ask why, you'll never understand the answer.
@@mikeyg1868 sorry but what does it actually mean tho when he called woz in the garage?
@@uno8049 The reason they put that in is to show how far they've come. From two dudes in a garage to an auditorium full of people clamoring for the next Apple product.
On a character level, it shows where Steve and Woz grew apart. How they're in a garage together both in the same camera shot, to ending up in separate shots at the end, divided by a sea of fans. That's what makes it such a bittersweet moment.
And the reason he says "Woz" after pacing around in thought, that "Woz" is the moment Apple, or the idea to start a company, was born in Steve's head and he's about to tell Woz the idea.
@@matchalover2884 excellent explaination
I keep going forward and back about the respect I have for Steve Jobs' personality, but I simply cannot deny that "I'm going to put 1000 songs in your pocket" line is so powerful.
Do you determine whether or not to like him based on a movie? This is not a documentary. Most of the dialogue was never spoken in real life.
It’s also totally fiction
"Woz?"
Many people here have commented about the music used in the final scene, the dialogue between Steve and his daughter Lisa or the emotions they got from the film.
But I think we're overlooking the moment we briefly cut back to the garage where Steve turns to Woz one last time. I don't know if this is credit to Danny Boyle, Sorkin or to the editor Elliot Graham (might as well give credit to all three) but that insert is one of the key components of this finale.
In context, both scenes -the iMac product launch and the garage moment- were preceded by arguments between Steve and Woz. Both fights were about who is right and who is wrong (and technically they're both right and wrong in both instances).
The reason why this flashback scene is key is because
1. it bookends the film in a chronological sense. The furthest we go back in Steve's life in this film is to the garage days, and we end on the iMac launch.
2. it bookends Jobs' and Wozniak's partnership. Both their egos have clashed many times over the years but they have continuosuly stuck together. And it shows that even when they disagree, Steve always turns back to make sure that his friend is still there. We see Woz re-enter the auditorium moments before, which I believe is also a sign of him never abandoning his friend regardless of what has happened.
In addition to Steve previously reconciling with Lisa, these two moments together redeem Steve's character (at least little); because ultimately, if the faces missing from the crowd are of the people he actually cares about then the auditorium may as well be empty.
When we audibly hear him call out to Woz in front of the garage, he figuratively is doing the same on stage in that moment.
I'm not saying this coincides with Jobs' and Wozniak's real life relationship -I know this movie took liberties with the stories of the people depicted. I'm also not saying this ending would have been terrible without that insert.
It just perfectly completes Steve's character arc with a very simple edit.
Patrick Woltmann I'm happy I wasnt the only one that noticed and got emotional with that single 1-second scene. Bravo.
Wow..I was wondering about that flashback for months..thanks man..
I think the use of the song is perfect for Jobs’ and Woz’s relationship too used in this scene. “We were only kids then”, because in that one second scene they only were kids, and it cuts straight back to them as adults again. Can’t help but think of Woz watching this scene himself and getting a lump in his throat. It’s poignant.
honestly, im cried when he says "woz" and the camera quickly zoom in to steve wozniak face.. that moment is so deep and touching with a fantastic soundtrack
This movie was incredibly well made.
Nothing is more beautiful than a father daughter relationship. No matter the obstacles
This film displays Steve Jobs as a human who can be vulnerable and who’s done mistakes. It’s really brilliant
This whole movie is a masters course on Aaron Sorkins brilliant writing.
Of all the people we’ve lost in recent history this one hurts the most. The world lost a man that was truly pushing it forward
Agree. Steven would've never quit inventing more futuristic gadgets. Cook is no Jobs or anyone for that matter. Only Elon comes close but it's not the same. Everyone out there are only reinventing iphones in which Jobs started. Apple hasn't come up with anything new other than upgrades from what Jobs started. Apples technology is on a halt for now.
@@cksammi elon...
yes but i think they used his relationship with his daughter too much, it just made it all negative
@@cksammi Jobs was a certainly a visionary. But was he an inventor?
He was able to organize and steer inventors toward a clear goal.
Steve Jobs was a genius at taking other peoples ideas and calling them his own.
Yeah! That's what called an artist.
@@AyushSingh-be2nm a thief
@@niraxlevi9930 No, Art of acquiring ideas that's what known as creativity.
_"Good artists copy; Great artists steal"_ - Picasso
Which ideas?
Thanks for uploading.This is probably the best ending i have ever seen.
As a person who was adopted at birth, and considers himself lucky to have the parents who had adopted him, I've always been easily moved to tears in movie scenes that visit the emotions related to the separation or uniting of a child and parent. This movie hit that nerve several times, particularly this entire ending scene. Great stuff.
I admire Steve's power in this scene. How Lisa tells him he's gonna be late and he doesn't give a shit. He'll basically stop the company for five mins to be with her. Similarly with the opening scene when he insists "get rid of the exit signs. Don't tell me how you did it."
Michael Fassbender is such a great actor. It’s insane how good he did in this role
Loved this movie. Thank you for uploading.
Carl Jung wrote a review of James Joyce’s Ulysses in which he stated “This is either Mental Illness or a degree of Mental Health incomprehensible to most people.”
The prevailing view is that he ultimately concluded that it was a degree of Mental Health incomprehensible to most people.
That’s Steve Jobs - “I Don’t *Want* People to Dislike Me, I’m Just Indifferent When They Do.”
Imma use that last line, sums me up pretty well.
I like how it looks like a 90s movie with the camera representing the year it all takes place in
Man, I really wish Steve Jobs will still here 😔
Anyone else ever notices during the movie how the announcer always says ''Ladies and gentlemen, please welcome..' and then right at the end, only at the end when he recognizes his flaws.. then his name is mentioned, 'Ladies and gentlemen.. Steve Jobs' as though it took him a lifetime to build himself up to be who he is.
Every time, every time I watch this scene, when Steve told Lisa that he was going to put songs in her pocket, hundreds, thousands. My tears just can't stop.
Very powerful ending. I have never been a MAC fan but I've been a huge Steve Jobs fan. We all owe him credit to how technology is today. Such a brilliant guy. He's missed.
aaf1218 would love to say the same but, he was a seller not a inventor, same with musk...read or listen to his biography
He was a visionary
Steve jobs didn't invent anything he couldn't even code
Brilliant film. Thanks for sticking with it Michael
I wonder if while she is going off being critical of the company if Steve Jobs is thinking, "she really is my daughter."
That line was actually in the script, but cut in the film, so you're right!
What's fascinating here, besides it being one of the best scenes and endings of all time, is how completely the editing and the emotional arch of the scene is taylor made to fit the emotional arch of the song ("Grew Up At Midnight" by The Maccabees). The song was barely edited in length, and even the last moment of silence in the movie is exactly how the song plays in original form. It's basically a music video for the Maccabees.
This ending always gets me 😢
I’m pretty sure that short flashback to the garage is after Jobs and Wozniak are arguing about the number of boards to put into the computer. I believe this is showing how Jobs was able to surrender his ego in that moment and admit Wozniak was right. Then it cuts back to jobs on stage surrendering is ego and fully acknowledging his love for his daughter despite all those years of emotional neglect.
This scene has an impact of its own. The moment where he tells her he hates that brick and would launch a music product just hits me hard everytime.
Every few months I'm scrolling through Netflix trying to find something to watch but end up giving up and coming here and watching clips from this brilliant movie.
He's gone soon from this world but he will always be remembered as THE GREATEST ENTREPRENEUR of all time
😢😭
Absolutely, people like him are once in centuries
I remember him as a shitty father
Westinghouse and Edison may have been greater. But you can’t deny Jobs’s impact.
The song just goes so perfectly with this scene. Cant even explain the emotions. Brilliant
This ending is perfect!!! Danny boyle has such masterfully crafted endings!!!
Harold Tan True that!
Saw this movie for the first time today and this scene made me cry harder than any movie I've seen in the last 10 years. Wow. So powerful.
I cried my eyes out
@@davidmckesey7119 just watched after reading your comment. Dropped some more tears 2 years later 😭
@@davidmckesey7119 just watched after reading your comment. Dropped some more tears 2 years later 😭
There’s something about estranged fathers and daughters taking a step towards healing (or closure) that does it for me. One of my favourite last scenes in film.
When he told her he was gonna put songs in her pocket, u cant help but shed a tear. Say what u will about him, but his vision, his vision is why I looked up to this man and his idea to business. The vision of the ipod and so much more.
“I’m poorly made”...I’m going to start using that excuse
Did it worked?
@@micajohansson1138 yes
@@arivara02 I think I shall start using that quote.
leave it up to aaron sorkin to right another perfect screenplay. he is my favorite screenwriter. the dialogue he comes up with is witty, to the point and smart
I think you meant 'screenrighter'. ;)
We grow at the midnight...................................
I watch the movie. Last scene just make me cry.
"I'm poorly made...." Man, that line. I wonder how many people heard that line (and like me) thought 'Wow...I've felt like that at times.' Even if only for a few minutes or maybe while going thru a bad period in life.
That line just speaks to me.....gets me teary eyed. That whole scene, btw Father and Daughter, speaks volumes. Not saying it actually happened. But the writing in this movie (so many of the scenes in this movie) just stayed with me for a long time. I always thought this was a fantastic movie.
“Local Integrated Systems Architecture doesn’t even mean anything”.....was a great one, you realize it was named after her, even if he had to make up the words. Finally “Do you remember that painting you did on the Mac?” Lisa:”No?” S.Jobs:”I do........” (hands her a copy he kept for 14 years). Great scene, emotional and The Maccabees song really made the scene.
When Steve Jobs started denying Lisa's parentage to the press, he hired a marketing firm to create a backronym for the name then rejected them all and asked for suggestions from within the company. Andy Hertzfield said that they'd suggest joke acronyms like "Let's Invent Some Acronym,"_"Lisa: Invented Stupid Acronym,”_ _"Let's Indulge Steve's Alibi."_
I can't watch this movie without sobbing like a baby 😭
"I can put a thousand songs in your pocket". and that's how iPod was made. OMG this was so epic!
Right 👍
“Why did you say you weren’t my father?”
“I’m poorly made.”
kills me everytime. It doesn’t make up for anything but catharsis is always late.
Love the scene when the time goes back to the initial days of steve and woz working in a garage. Thats just amazing screenplay.
This will never stop to gives goosebumps to me !!
It’s great to watch a movie about Steve Jobs, but it’s enough to watch a video of him talking about his beliefs, thoughts, plans, strategies, and even a random content, to get inspired and impressed and emotional.
I watch this video again and again just for the most last part and the ending tune.
I wished Kate winslet should have won her second Oscar for this
Kateamby winslet nah, her accent totally came out in the third act of the movie.
performances aren't only about accents, for fuck's sake. there's more to it than that.
dallashood67 And for fuck's sake, if your accent comes out in a movie, you don't deserve to win an Oscar. Simple as that.
no seth rogen does. everytime he shows up he steals it
i m not so aware about the accents , but if u say so then it must be. i
am hoping she will be back in award seasons next year with "Wonder
Wheel" or "The Mountain Between Us"
criminally underappreciated the movie. The screenplay is incredibly well written. So many great lines, delivered by great performances. Even Seth Rogan, who I don't usually like in movies, did a great job in this movie. And man I loved that ending scene with the 1000 songs in your pocket lol. Fantastic stuff.
In the final analysis, the power of Steve Jobs was to inspire; he was the Maestro of the symphony!
I love how the film never announces his name at any of the stage events prior to this last one. With this beautiful song playing, it’s pay off after pay off, layers of a satisfying ending. _Ladies and gentlemen, Steve Jobs._
Such a powerful ending and Boyle used the perfect song to boot.
After years of denying lisa, he actually done so much for her and for her.
Have u read her book??
671JH I haven’t but I heard Lisa basically says her dad treated her like shit her entire life.
@@TempleofAmon666 That is true. But the private moments with him that she shared are more good than bad. It gave a picture of a complicated man.
@@MildMisanthropeMaybeMassive How do you know there are more good moments? Because of a movie? 🤨
@@anasofia4692 I read Lisa's memoir _Small Fry_ and Chrissann's memoir _The Bite in the Apple._
Also, the official Steve Jobs autobiography approved by Steve Jobs himself before his passing by Water Isaacson.
@4:41 ladies and gentlemen stevejobs that goosebumps moment
Yessssss
What actually just i watched. Its mind boggling. So many things to notice. Many deep insights. Everytime you watch it again you will notice something new. Great direction and screenplay.
The whole payoff of the movie was here "Your goanna be late" "I don't care"
No better way to end a movie.
The garage scene touched my soul.
Really hope they actually had a good relationship in his last years, despite this being half fictional. I really enjoyed it
I think has to be one of my favorite films done on a real life individual because unlike _Jobs_ which was a biography (a stereotypical one at that), this film was more of a character study that allowed the audience to get into the mind of Steve Jobs. It gives us a perspective into who he was through the good and the bad. A lot of biopics have the mistake of putting the achievements over the achiever. Biopics should focus more on the aspects that make the person who he is, who he is. This film is beautifully crafted and the fact it is purely run by the dialogue of the actors is truly brilliant. This film doesn’t try to replay events or be 100% accurate. It tries to explain to us the person.
Exactly! The funny thing about it, is that we all know...and I mean - every - single - human knows, that if every little intricate detail of who we are, were showcased on screen, it would not paint us in a good light.
Yeah, i know our egos tell us we were better than him, but that is because YOU are telling your own story. Let every single person you have ever interacted with tell it. Because we tend to brainwash ourselves, using selective memories, to forget our wrongdoings.
Steve Jobs is Magneto. 😄
2:36 At that moment, Steve might have introduced the iPod. Besides that, this movie was really a classic! Fantastic performances! Cool editing and pace! Such a great film!
Too bad this never happened.
It's a movie not a documental.
From what I read the conversation about the iPod and the LISA did take place between Jobs and his daughter according to her, just not in that Hollywood dramatic fashion. Woz demanding credit for the Apple II never happened though. Or if it did, he never admitted it.
If you watch the real key note it does look like he is looking at someone in the backstage in the beginning but yeah most likely not
brett 2004 woz said that it did happen but he didn’t ask jobs he actually asked John sculley to acknowledge the apple 2 team
Also if you watch the keynote the image of the man painting of the screen and the little girl are there. It really makes one wonder.
I absolutely love the song choice for this ending sequence. Also it's an amazing movie.
One of the best endings of all time, including the music that seems to have been designed for this ending. I love it because I identify with Lisa.
That moment at the end has me in tears every time! I have always had a soft spot for girls with terrible fathers. I never wanted kids but part of me wishes I had a daughter. What an incredibly powerful scene with an amazing song!
Rest In Peace Steve Jobs
“I’m poorly made”. Even then, he couldn’t own it. It’s not that he made bad choices, it’s that he’s “flawed”. Everything in his life that he likes, he “made happen” and everything that’s bad happened “to him”.
Steve's biggest sin was denieing he's kid
Uh, that was his second, his biggest sin was probably making millions of dollars of off slave labor while men, women, and kids literally died in factories making his products, whilst only getting paid like, 50 cents an hour.
gtfomaddie You have the wrong perspective. Foxconn enslaves them Apple and Samsung just use Foxconn. Also, FoxConn is in line with China's minimum wage if not more than. Only reason this happens is China's government is full of cunts who just want more manufacturing power and net exports, while shitting on their own citizens with low ass minimum wages.
gtfomaddie And yes Foxconn is a shitty place to work practically slave labor.
Apple knows exactly what goes on in the factories and yet STILL used Foxconn, in my opinion that makes them just as bad. Because it is an evil company that copies everyone else's technology and fools its customers :) Nice try little sheep BAAAAA
Please quote me where I said I knew 'the truth' :)? Can you? No you can't. Nice try anyhow.
When a film is that good that you unconsciously think about it in your sleep and wake up thinking about it
I really dont get why Jony Ives doesnt like this movie? its sooo awesome and it totally nailed the essence of Steve Jobs. (not the actual him, but the spirit, the essence, the creative genius, the man thar made mistakes and learned from them, the man with passion and fealings, the man with bite) Jony Ive you really need to give this movie a chance, its brilliant and really captures Jobs in a loving way.
Watching this on my iPad
This actually it's an amazing film.
The greatest scene I've ever seen gave me goosebumps ❤️