'Steve Jobs' Trailer Arrives Starring Michael Fassbender. Apple Boss Tim Cook Unhappy With 'Opportunistic' Filmmakers

Steve Jobs Trailer Arrives; Apple Boss Not Happy At All

A brand new trailer has arrived for a biopic drama about late Apple boss Steve Jobs, on the day his successor at the company calls such films "opportunistic".

'Steve Jobs' stars Michael Fassbender as the computing guru, with the film directed by Danny Boyle from a script by Aaron Sorkin. But this pedigree of filmmakers involved has not stopped the drama being criticised by Apple CEO Tim Cook.

Speaking on the Late Show in the US with host Stephen Colbert, Tim Cook responded to Colbert's remarks that the film was less than flattering to Jobs, who famously left Apple, the company he founded, in acrimony in 1985, before returning in 1997 to embark on the next generation of i-products that would make such an impression on the world.

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'Steve Jobs' stars Michael Fassbender as the late pioneering tech guru and chief of Apple

Tim said he did not recognise the man being portrayed, adding, "He was a joy to work with and I love him dearly, I miss him every day. I think that a lot of people are trying to be opportunistic and I hate that, it’s not a great part of our world.”

The film is told in a three-part format based around three products that Steve Jobs launched at different times in his career, and does not stint from revealing the single-mindedness that both fuelled the pioneer's work, but also meant he could be highly critical of others' contributions.

Tim Cook also said, "The Steve I knew was an amazing human being. He’s someone that you wanted to do your best work for. He had this uncanny ability to see around the corner and describe the future – not an evolutionary future but a revolutionary future.”

Also in the film is Kate Winslet, starring as Joanna Hoffman, former marketing chief of Macintosh. Steve Wozniak, who co-founded Apple, is played by Seth Rogen, and Jeff Daniels stars as former Apple CEO John Sculley. The film also stars Katherine Waterston as Chrisann Brennan, Jobs’ ex-girlfriend, and Michael Stuhlbarg as Andy Hertzfeld, one of the original members of the Apple Macintosh development team.

Tim Cook will be equally unhappy with Oscar-winning filmmaker Alex Gibney's forthcoming documentary on the same subject. Gibney, who previously turned his lens on Julian Assange and Lance Armstrong, delves forensically into some of the contradictions around Steve Jobs' life, including his refusal to recognise for a long time his own eldest daughter, and the big-corporation tactics he employed to protect his intellectual property, even while he enjoyed the brand being recognised as the little guy putting the finger up to the big ones, quite literally in one photo.

'Steve Jobs' the drama will be in UK cinemas from 13 November. Its UK premiere will form the closing gala event for the London Film Festival, with stars and director attending.

Remembering Steve Jobs
Tim Cook, CEO of Apple(01 of10)
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"One of the greatest gifts Steve gave to the world is Apple. No company has ever inspired such creativity or set such high standards for itself. Our values originated from Steve and his spirit will forever be the foundation of Apple. We share the same privilege and responsibility of carrying his legacy into the future." -- on Steve Jobs' impact (credit:Wikimedia)
Hip Hop artist Tomm Dogg(02 of10)
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Om Malik of Gigaom(03 of10)
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"[Steve] Jobs showed us that conviction of a single person can transform the world of even inanimate objects such as computers by focusing on simplicity and happiness." -- on the genius of Steve Jobs (credit:AP)
Arianna Huffington, The Huffington Post(04 of10)
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Harry McCracken of Time Magazine(05 of10)
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"This hair-trigger tendency to see everything as a sign that the post-Jobs Apple is doomed, doomed, doomed gives lots of potentially reasonable Apple criticism an absurdist quality. I mean, anybody who contends that Tim Cook is doing a catastrophically crummy job as Apple CEO — maybe so badly that he should be fired, or even has Jobs riled up in Heaven — really ought to name at least one person who’d be better-suited to the gig. Nobody ever does." -- on Apple's future without Steve Jobs (credit:Wikimedia)
Monologist Mike Daisey(06 of10)
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"It feels hard to say it even now, but I can’t stop turning it over in my mind. I find myself thinking that Jobs’s death may the best thing that could’ve happened to Apple." -- on Steve Jobs and Apple (credit:Wikimedia)
Mat Honan of Wired(07 of10)
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"[Steve] Jobs has joined the pantheon of greats who advanced science and industry and society itself — a modern-day Tesla but appreciated in his own lifetime. He’s our Thomas Edison or Henry Ford, one of those rarefied individuals who had not only a vision but the will and force of personality to execute it through America’s greatest cultural triumph: the public corporation" -- on the power of Steve Jobs' personality (credit:AP Photo,Wenner Media)
The Huffington Post(08 of10)
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Pete Cashmore, Mashable(09 of10)
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John Biggs of TechCrunch(10 of10)
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"One year later we can’t forget him. It wasn’t supposed to be this way. He made computers and phones and MP3 players. He wasn’t a political figure, a missionary, a healer. He was a guy who knew how to put software into hardware and make the whole as desirable to many as air." -- on Steve Jobs' influence (credit:AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)