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Movies & parodies (about Steves Jobs)

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iSteve from Justin Long, Jorge Garcia, James_Urbaniak, Michaela Watkins, Steve Tom, John Ross Bowie, Paul Rust, Ryan Perez, Juzo Yoshida, Brian Huskey, Art Evans, jill_donnelly, Anthony Gioe, Ally Hord, iSteve, Funny Or Die, Charles Ingram, NickCorirossi, iSteve, le film parodique sur la vie de Steve Jobs, est en ligne. Ulrich Rozier • le 18 avril 2013 à 23:47 18 avril 2013 Article 0% Android iSteve, le film parodique sur la vie de Steve Jobs, est en ligne iSteve est un film parodique conçu par le site « Funny or Die », 72 minutes pour résumer la vie d’un des co-fondateurs d’Apple sur un ton humoristique. Si vous avez 72 minutes à occuper, le film iSteve pourrait bien vous intéresser.

Steve Jobs est interprété par Justin Long. Vous ne vous rappelez pas de cet acteur ? Il jouait « Mac » – dans les spots de publicité Apple dans lequel Apple était comparé avec Windows en 2010. Sans être un grand film, vous pourrez retrouver quelques scènes mythiques sous un autre angle. Pour regarder le film, c’est par ici ! Les acteurs de iSteve Le vrai Steve Jobs Vous aimez cet article, partagez-le ! Watch the trailer for 'Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine' Quite a few filmmakers have already unleashed their take on the life of Steve Jobs, with Aaron Sorkin's Michael Fassbender-starrer slated to be released in October.

But if you'd rather watch that Jobs documentary that premiered at the SXSW Film Festival in particular -- the same one Apple SVP Eddy Cue found "mean-spirited" -- then, well, here's a taste of it. Oscar winner Alex Gibney's The Man in the Machine doesn't only depict the CEO as a visionary, but also as a ruthless leader. "His stuff was beloved, but it wasn't that he was beloved," a voiceover said in the trailer below the fold, which also shows parts of Gibney's interview with some of Jobs' old co-workers. The documentary will precede Sorkin's movie by a month and will be shown in select theaters on September 4th. [Image credit: Magnolia Pictures] STEVE JOBS: THE MAN IN THE MACHINE talk with Alex Gibney. The new Steve Jobs documentary is an unforgiving look at tech's most complicated man. The day that Steve Jobs died, people around the world flocked to Apple Stores in a sort of spontaneous mass pilgrimage. They left letters and signs, holding up iPhones and iPads in tribute.

Director Alex Gibney shows the event early on in his new documentary Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine, and it stirred up a flurry of emotions in me, because I was one of those people. I couldn’t really tell you why I felt compelled to visit back in 2011, and I doubt any of the others that stopped by could explain it either — at least not in any coherent fashion. It was just a vague feeling: a sense that a page had turned and needed to be marked. It turns out Gibney, the man behind documentaries like Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, was mystified by the phenomenon as well, and it’s ground zero for his film, which premiered here at SXSW. An unflinching look at the emotional shrapnel his collaborators took It’s encapsulated best by early Macintosh director of engineering Bob Belleville.

Critical Steve Jobs documentary The Man in the Machine airs on CNN tonight at 9PM ET. Did you miss Steve Jobs: The Man in the Machine when it hit theaters earlier this year? Well, if you have a cable subscription, you can catch the controversial documentary on CNN tonight at 9PM ET. The documentary is centered around a series of interviews director Alex Gibney carried out with those who worked closely with Jobs. More often than not, those interviewees reveal the emotional costs of being around Jobs. We've heard many of these stories before, but instead of serving as a fawning look into Jobs' accomplishments, the documentary shines the spotlight on the Apple co-founder's flaws. You can watch a clip from the documentary above, and read our review here.

SourceCNN. SXSW2015 STEVE JOBS The Man in the Machine Q&A w dir Alex Gibney 2.