This week we check out the first full movie trailer "Steve Jobs". Opinions so far are quite different: we have a group that thought everything was very strange and did not like Michael Fassbender's interpretation at all; another who approved the actor in the role of Jobs; another who really liked Seth Rogen as Steve Wozniak, and so on. It is difficult to judge a movie by a trailer for a few minutes, but the truth is that trailers are just that.
How about listening to the opinions of people who participated in the production? Of course, they would hardly speak ill of the film, but it is still interesting to analyze everything from the point of view of those who experienced all of this. Check out what Kate Winslet (who played Joanna Hoffman, former Macintosh marketing chief) said as she released the EW.com:
The way this film was shot was extraordinarily extraordinary. Each act consisting of 45 continuous minutes of backstage, in real time, of each launch that Steve Jobs made during these periods 1984 was the launch of the Macintosh, 1988 was the NeXT computer and 1998 was the iMac. Each act takes place behind the scenes and literally ends with him walking backstage to the stage and applause.
We have takes (taken) 9 minutes, sometimes even longer. I think there is a scene with Michael and Jeff that had about 14 pages (of script), so we literally had about 11 minutes of continuous dialogue. It is not uncommon for an actor to learn longer passages of dialogues when you play a part. But it is unusual for an actor like Michael Fassbender to decorate 182 dialogue pages on which he is on all of them. like Hamlet, only twice.

Woz, who was involved in the production as a kind of consultant (he met Aaron Sorkin, the film's screenwriter, before the work actually started), also spoke a little with the Bloomberg about what you saw. Basically, he denied that everything we saw in the trailer happened (at least that way), even saying he didn't recognize himself there, but he said he still liked what he saw.
I don't speak that way. I would never accuse that the graphical interface was stolen. I never made comments in the sense that I had the credit (of genius) taken from me.
The speeches I heard are not things I would say, but they convey the right message, at least in part. I was really sorry for the real Jobs in the trailer, even though everything is a little bit exaggerated.
The Apple co-founder also commented on a specific scene in which Jobs denies the paternity of his daughter Lisa.
It was hard for me, even when I was silent, when Jobs refused to recognize his daughter and money was no longer a problem, and I almost cry when I remember that.
Woz also commented that it is unlikely that films about Apple will accurately portray real events since even the people who were there have different memories although the general meaning is often correct. For him, the accuracy of facts is in the background behind entertainment in films like this.
"Steve Jobs" has its premiere scheduled for October 9 in the United States. The premiere date in Brazil has not yet been released.
(via MacRumors, The Loop)