Readers have been asking me about the news that actor Ashton Kutcher is going to be playing Steve Jobs in an independent movie about the Apple co-founder to be filmed this summer. It’s fine with me, I suppose, but if we’re going to get all Hollywood about this, the business implications are interesting, especially for Jobs biographer Walter Isaacson, because it probably means a film based on Isaacson’s book will never be made.
The reason I say this is because the last time a movie was made about Steve Jobs it was Pirates of Silicon Valley, which was originally titled Triumph of the Geeks. Sound familiar? I made them change the title, but that’s where my success story ends.
Pirates of Silicon Valley, while officially based on A Fire in the Valley, contained plenty of material that was only covered in my book Accidental Empires and documentary Triumph of the Nerds. These were events that happened after A Fire in the Valley had already been published. But you can’t copyright facts and my book was already optioned by another studio at the time… an option that was never exercised because Pirates came on the market first.
That’s exactly what I predict will now happen to Walter Isaacson. This Ashton Kutcher movie is not based on Isaacson’s book. Walter’s $3 million deal with Sony Pictures only pays off if a movie is actually made. Isaacson has only received an option payment. I don’t know how much that would be but it’s unlikely to be more than a tenth of the total amount — nice money but nothing like what he’d get if a movie is actually made.
The presence of this Ashton Kutcher vehicle in the market will make it very unlikely that Sony’s Steve Jobs picture will ever be made for exactly the same reason that Pirates killed my chance of success in Hollywood 15 years ago. Kutcher is a legitimate star and millions will have been spent on this movie. If the Kutcher film is good, well then the story’s been done. If the Kutcher movie is bad, well then maybe there wasn’t much of a story in the first place. That’s how Hollywood thinks.
Lots more movies are optioned than are ever made.
Whether one or both Jobs films are made I still see room for a really good feature documentary on Steve Jobs. My little Jobs film gives a glimpse of both the audience demand and possible depth of material, but Steve Jobs — The Lost Interview is something else — more of an artifact than a documentary. It’s fascinating in its own right, but it isn’t a complete story.
There’s still room for a really good documentary on Steve Jobs to give the greater depth and understanding of this character that I think Isaacson never quite achieved in his book, possibly because of his outsider status.
If anyone in Hollywood is listening, I’d like to be the guy to make that Steve Jobs documentary.
Have your people call my people.
I can’t remember the last movie I saw in a theatre that wasn’t animated or 3-D. This I’d go to see.
Bob, I just reread your blog from the day Steve died. What kind of work did you do for Apple when you were there?
So when is your interview coming out Bob? Last I heard you were going to screen it in theatres first. I haven’t heard anything about it since.
My movie will shortly return to theaters in the U.S. and Canada distributed by Magnolia Pictures. That will be followed by DVD, VoD, streaming, etc. International versions will be available this year in many other countries.
Great! Looking forward to it!
Very much looking forward to seeing it in Scotland – be it DVD or a trip to the cinema.
Will the DVD be available in Australia this year?
Hollywood is very good about upstaging each others projects and plans. One thing is for sure the first efforts are often done in haste and at the expense of quality. I doubt the writers will do much homework and give the subject the attention it deserves. It is a shame Hollywood is reluctant to duplicate efforts. A “good” production will pass the test of time and make good money for decades to come. A shoddy effort will be forgotten quickly and its DVD’s will wind up in the $5 bin at Walmart.
Bob — why don’t you and Walter and maybe others, combine efforts?
I am serious. Pull together a team of genuine Steve Jobs experts. I think a great movie maker would be willing to meet with you and consider making a great film. Steve had many friends and admirers in the industry. I am sure one of them would be willing to buck conventional Hollywood thinking and take on the project.
John
“It is a shame Hollywood is reluctant to duplicate efforts.”
hollywood has been retelling the same 8 stories for 75 years.
Like the one about the bad guy being chased by the good guy until he is caught. Or the one about the stolen disk that must be recovered. Or the natural disaster that destroys the earth or large parts of it. The point is all stories are versions of previous stories but that is the nature of entertainment.
Who the f*ck cares? Steve Jobs was a real bastard who terrorized his employees, and Kutcher is a third string no-talent actor. Only drooling Apple fanbois will go see this ludicrous movie.
From what I’ve read I think after Steve was kicked out his company, it couldn’t make success. And when jobs died wozniak’s video made me realise Steve wasn’t that a terrible boss!! Infact he was the best one in history, especially after his comeback to the valley
Just this morning I was telling a coworker how I always knew Pirates was based on your documentaries and not on Fire in the Valley!
I still would like to see a Movie based on Isaacson’s book. I hope that is the case.
I also would like to see one made by pixar, maybe you can pitch to them! Pixar and Cringely would be a winning combination!
Hmm… I wonder what the climax of a Steve Jobs biopic would be?
His return to Apple on the purchase of NeXT? His rise to iCEO after that? Maybe the unveiling of the first iPhone?
The earlier days might be more interesting like the response to IBM entering the personal computer market (I’m thinking helter-skelter Apple III), getting booted out of Apple and starting NeXT or taking over Pixar.
Still lots of tech grist for the mill. Certainly a mover and shaker for our industry and economy. Somehow Ashton Kutcher doesn’t seem evil enough for me for this role, I’m thinking more of a Lee Van Cleef-type as needed.
“Hmm… I wonder what the climax of a Steve Jobs biopic would be?” I’d like to see the fictionalized version where Jobs lives long enough to create the brain-implantable iBrain, where followers line up outside an Apple store for annual brain surgery to replace their chip with the latest version.
We don’t know what is in the pipeline, the iBrain might be a couple years away.
Look for MS try to get into the implant business with MySuppository.
Yea. The first thing I do with a new install is remove the “My” in front of the folder names. Numerous other customizations follow that one.
A two-hour TV movie with Charlie Sheen as Steve Jobs sounds good to me.
After that, a CNBC documentary about Jobsy — as his friends called him — and we have all the Steve Jobs information anyone could ever want.
Say, I was talking to Siri today and it misunderstood me. I shouted at it. Well, Steve Jobs’s voice shouted right back at me. He used Bill-Gates-like naughty language. I did not know the iPhone could behave this way. I threw the iPhone into the river.
Charlie Sheen is too short for the role.
And Tom Cruise is too short to play 6’5″ Jack Reacher in Oblivion but he’s still been cast. For that matter Anthony Hopkins bore little resemblance to Richard Nixon.
Fincher managed to make an interesting film out of the Facebook story but I can’t see a lesser director getting very far with the Steve Jobs story especially given his position of a latter day saint (not of the Mitt Romney variety) which will put the director in the position of having to walk the fine line between having their film denounced either as a hagiography or blasphemy.
I’m afraid you’re right. Too bad because the Isaacson book paints a picture of a very complicated and conflicted individual– the kind of part that’s right in Kutcher’s wheel house. If I remember correctly, years ago Tom Cruise optioned a book about Jobs, even he would have been a better choice than Kutcher.
Who knows, maybe the director will pull a magical performance out of Kutcher, there’s always a first time.
“magical”. Pun intended.
When is the last time a media property Bob Cringely was connected to actually made it out to the public? How many things have been pre-announced here that have yet to see the light of day? All these promises…
Also, while Bob may have worked at Apple and interacted with Steve Jobs way back in the day, has Apple and/or Steve EVER returned his calls since the NeXT acquisition and Steve’s return to Apple? He keeps mentioning when they HAVEN’T, and I can’t recall any mention of when they have. So at this point Bob’s as much an outsider about the story of Steve Jobs’ return to Apple and success as anyone. He also clearly has no insight into the post-NeXT acquisition Apple based on how he’s not made a single correct prediction or speculation in dozens of posts he’s written about them.
Bob, your shows have been entertaining in the past, but please, show us some follow through on something recent! It’s hard to even hope that that “lost interview” will be seen by the public, and it’s already been filmed.
Having a bad day?
As I wrote above, Steve Jobs — The Lost Interview will shortly be released in theaters all over the world. Other projects will be appearing immediately thereafter.
I’ve been busier than you think.
I do like reading the predictions every year. Sure, not all of them come true; if they did it would be easy and obvious! But they always make you think about the subject. I’d personally rather read Bob’s work that makes you think about the subject, than spoon fed by someone who doesn’t know the subject.
If all Bob’s predictions came true he’d be a squillionaire by now and getting someone else to build his aeroplanes for him.
Merely disappointed at seeing all these promises over the years that haven’t yet led to anything (NerdTV Season Two, foil hard drives, the Cringely moon shot, etc). Your track record has been poor of late, leading one to question your domain knowledge. You’re lucky so much of the audience in your blog here gives you so much benefit of the doubt.
Actually, Steve Jobs — The Lost Interview is pretty redundant, since there are long, exhaustive interviews of Jobs avaliable on youtube, just like this one….
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=121ofj_l6vM
Pretty deep stuff
Why bother to wait for Hollywood to call… put it up on Kickstarter. I’d throw some cash in, and I bet a whole lot more would too.
Mr. Cringly, I am sure you are already aware of this, but since Mr. Isaacson was a former CEO of CNN, a Time Warner company, I am sure that he still has a lot of pull to make such a film.
I hope it includes a part where the young Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniac meet John Draper aka CaptainCrunch so they can learn how to build Blue Boxes and sell them to U.C Berkley students.
( Steve Jobs on the Blue Box )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFURM8O-oYI
Ashton Kutcher even some what looks like the younger Steve Jobs, and I am sure such a film would appeal to the millions of Mac users Apple has.
Jose F. Medeiros
San Jose, Calif
Noah Wyle should be the one to play Steve … as he did on one of Apples’s keynotes. (besides: Pirates of Silicon Valley).
IMHO Ashton Kutcher is a total douche-bag who couldn’t act his way out of a wet paper bag.
There are only possible endings to this drama: the film will never be made, or the film is made never released to theaters, or the film will be released directly to media.
So who’s going to play Wos?
Also… Kutcher is a fatuous little twerp.
See http://nasawatch.com/archives/2008/11/dude-wheres-my-space-program.html
and http://nasawatch.com/archives/2008/11/earth-to-ashton-kutcher-in-answer-to-your-question.html
Someone less like Jobs is difficult to imagine.
I appreciate the space program, especially in the role of national defense. However, Ashton does make a good point about the allocation of resources.
As I understand, the Kutcher movie will only cover the early days of Jobs.
So maybe there is still room for the Sony movie based on Isaacson’s biography.
I see macrumors little April 1st headline suckered all of you. Kudos!
@John Abely
Except… it’s not an april fools joke at all. And it’s not macrumors either. AFAIK it was Variety who first reported it and they say it is not a joke. CNN since confirmed the “rumor”. I think you’re the one to get suckered mate.
Kutcher casting is good news. A Jobs comedy is much more appealing than techno-saint treatment. Charlie Sheen could play Gil Amelio.
Actor Justin Long might be a better choice for the job.
Justin Long was great playing (an implied) S.Jobs in the “Get a Mac” TV commercials. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Get_a_Mac
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Long
Played a believable nerd in “Live Free of Die Hard” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_Free_or_Die_Hard
And an inspirational leader/dreamer in “Accepted” http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accepted
Ashton will probably do a good enough job, but he is too tall and doesn’t look like Steve.
Hollywood quite often spends big bucks issuing the same story
simultaneously. Consider “Mirror Mirror” and the soon to be released ”
Snow White and the Huntsman”.
Don’t like Ashton Kutcher a Steve Jobs ? How about Keanu Reeves ?
Who has the movie rights to your book on Three Mile island?
We’re about due for a redo of The China Syndrome. Maybe the second time Hollywood could make a movie that is slightly factual.
Now who should we pick for the lead characters?
Bob, what’s to stop you from writing a documentary book on Jobs yourself? I mean, I think you still bear some stripes on your back from Steve, and I think the world would benefit from knowing the real person. Btw/ I know a guy who has a dead ringer voice like Jobs’. He doesn’t look anything like him, but his voice is a perfect match.
It’s possible. Parampreet counted and I’ve already written 63,000 words about Jobs over the years. But I’d rather do the 100+ video interviews for a documentary then write a book from that during post-production.
I’d love to see a last and final chapter to Triumph of the Nerds. I hope it won’t be centered around Steve Jobs, but in true Silicon Valley style. I really liked the second part where you revisited the guys from part one.
Here’s a slightly different idea to throw out. How about a documentary film about Woz? Wasn’t it really from Wozniak’s genius that Apple was born? I know his name isn’t as familiar/popular as Jobs’, but then a Steve Wozniak documentary film might be a good prelude to a later Steve Jobs one.
Also, I noted in your follow up on computer history day that you were unaware why Woz left the University of Colorado and only learned it at the iHop gathering. Sounds like you haven’t read his autobiography iWoz. I was the one who suggested to have your kids ask Woz if he knew any good Polish jokes, when you polled your bloggers for questions to the computer founders. Wozniak once operated a telephone call-in joke line with new daily Polish jokes. Adding this now so you don’t think my suggestion was a rude one. Steve was a real prankster, his book is a good read.
If you want to learn something deep about anything, don’t expect to do it by watching the move version.
You could always re-imagine a few things and write “Steve Jobs: Vampire Hunter.” Hollywood is bereft of ideas but not money. They’ll try anything.
hey – post your video. hopefully somebody can pick it up and use it.
I am sure you would be the first to agree that the primary condition of a serious documentary maker is one of near poverty
hey – post your video. hopefully somebody can pick it up and use it.
I am sure you would be the first to agree that the primary condition of a serious documentary maker is one of near poverty
I absolutely approve Mr. Cringely as S. Jobs movie producer, because Triumph Of Nerds was very pleasurable documentary to watch.
A Cringely-produced Jobs documentary? Me wants.
How about crowd-sourcing? Something on Kickstarter for instance.
We know you are good for it so how about setting a target and
we’ll voice our support with our wallets.
See for example; https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/66710809/double-fine-adventure?ref=live
Why does the RSS link for the audio feeds remain broken? https://www.cringely.com/feed/podcast/ only points to content from 2011.
No more podcasts until Bob has time to figure out how to solve the technical problems. (Previously, the sound quality issues generated some complaints.)
Thanks for the interesting things you have exposed in your post. One thing I would really like to comment on is that FSBO connections are built with time. By introducing yourself to the owners the first saturday their FSBO is announced, prior to a masses commence calling on Monday, you build a good association. By sending them resources, educational components, free records, and forms, you become an ally. By taking a personal interest in them and also their problem, you make a solid connection that, on most occasions, pays off if the owners opt with a representative they know and trust — preferably you. Regards, NestHeaven
peaceful and noiseless, it will be very…
conducive to such article writing.original and high quality contents matter the mostprospective writer should realize that whether it is traditional article or those meant for search engine optimization, it is only original and high quality writing tha…
in the styles, formats or genres you…
would like to explore. reading not only improves your vocabulary and level of comprehension, it also gives you a kind of ‘writer’s sense’. it raises your awareness of style conventions, makes grammar feel more natural, shows you what does work, and…