The revolution came when we weren’t looking. It happened in a garage. In a dorm room. In countless hours of effort, imagining and intrigue. Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates were changing the way the world works, lives and communicates. The event-packed saga of the quirky visionaries who jump-started the future unfolds with exhilarating, cutting-edge style in Pirates of Silicon Valley. Noah Wyle (ER) portrays Jobs and Anthony Michael Hall (The Dead Zone) portrays Gates in this chronicle of the fierce and often humorous battle to rule the fledgling personal computer empire. “The story is almost Shakespearean… it’s a tale of lust, greed, ambition, love and hate,” writer/director Martyn Burke reflects. And it’s a success story unlike any other.This dramatization of the tangled history of Apple Computer and Microsoft, based on a book by Paul Freiberger and Michael Swaine, hits enough of the right notes to make its failures all the more frustrating. The scri
Review by for Pirates of Silicon Valley Rating:
This takes you from beginning to present day. Shows Paul Allen (who now OWNS the Seahawks and Trailblazers pro teams) Bill Gates, Steve Jobs etc. etc. Dropping out of college to pursue a slow burning fire that would become the personal computer/windows software that we know today.What is interesting is that it shows who talks and who works. Gates lies a lot, pretty much living by the saying “telling people what they want to hear” while Paul Allen grinds away at making code. On the other end it’s the same somewhat, rogue cannon Steve Jobs handling the business part while we get a sense that Steve Wozniak is a true tech who goes above and beyond Jobs’ rantings to produce the final product.What is so funny is the irony of this movie:Loan Officer: “Sorry Mr. Jobs, but we don’t think the ordinary person will have any use for a computer”.HP: “You think people are interested in something called a mouse?”.Xerox: “We build it and then they can come right in here and steal it from us? It’s just not fair, this operating system is a result of our hard work!”.Jobs to Gates: “You’re STEALING FROM US!!!”Assistant to Gates: “Do you realize Apple has a pirate flag over their front door, and they just gave us 3 prototypes of their operating system?”Jobs: “I don’t want people to look at it like a monitor and mouse, I think of this as art, a vision, people need to think outside the box”.Jobs: “You stole it from ussss!” Gates: “No it’s not stealing, you see, it’s like we both have this neighbor, and he leaves his door open all the time. You go over there to get his TV, only I’ve gotten their first..and now you’re calling me the thief?!”.Just some of the excerpts that make this movie a classic and show you everything that went down when a bunch of college dropouts set out and changed the world in which we live today.
Review by dsrussell for Pirates of Silicon Valley Rating:
In the first few minutes of the film, we see Steve Jobs pacing the floor on a Boston stage (year 1997–shortly after his return to Apple), and above him is the gigantic image of Bill Gates smiling down (smirking?) at him, while we hear the voice of Steve Wozniac (the Woz) in the background say, “How did we get from there to here?” And there, dear readers, lies the tale of the century.Kudos for the director, the casting director, and the fine performances from Hall and Wyle. In this film, we see the rise of the personal computer from two of most important players of the era, and along the way, we are shown how deeply power and wealth corrupts. Those of us that lived through this period are well acquainted with the first personal computers. Indeed, many of us have heard enough rumors concerning Steve Jobs’ late night tantrums as he walked the halls of his empire, to know that this film depicted both him and Steve Wozniac fairly honestly. As far as the depiction of Bill Gates, there are those that agree and those that disagree. Obviously, artistic license was used on both sides. Steve Wozniac mentioned that he was surprised how accurately the movie portrayed the personalities, but indicated they got many of the dates screwed up (check his web site, he has many interesting comments concerning the movie).As the title aptly suggests, both Steve and Bill gained their initial fame not just from their own creative genius (although both are considered geniuses), but as much from “borrowing” — Jobs from Xerox PARC, and Gates from Apple Computer. And while that is the central theme of the movie, it also points out the astonishing short-sightedness of top corporate executives–HP (unfairly in reality) and IBM for not realizing the potential of the personal computer and software for the masses, and Xerox for not understanding what they themselves had developed. One of the best lines comes from an HP exec talking to Steve Wozniac (the creator of the Apple computer)… “Why would the average person ever want a computer?” (I’m paraphrasing here–and I think in reality, it was IBM who had this attitude).In fairness, back in those days computers were used mainly by scientists, the military, and mathematicians. These things were gigantic and cost a fortune. Still, it makes me think that the trillions of dollars lost by some of these giant corporations sprang from an immense lack of imagination at key positions (I doubt any of those people ever opened a science-fiction novel). To Jobs’ credit, he understood immediately what he was shown at the Xerox PARC center, and the rest, as they say, is history.”Pirates” works on many levels, and it really is a fascinating movie, however, I think it bit off a little more than it could chew. This movie is only 100 minutes long (or thereabouts), yet tries to encompass 25 years of creation, in-fighting, slight-of-hand, and lying, with a blend of madness and out-and-out theft thrown in. It also has a tendency to stray from its theme, trying (and failing) in its depiction of the main characters’ personal lives. Yet, inspite of these weaknesses, I throroughly enjoyed this film, and have viewed it several times (each time gaining a little more respect for the director’s efforts).So, whether your computer is the mac or a windows pc, I think most will find this film entertaining and enlightening. Between 1 and 10, I give “Pirates” a very high 7 (it had real potential of being a “don’t miss” gem). What I find almost as fascinating is the widespread polarization people still have for one platform over the other–and the war continues with no end in sight….
Anonymous
November 4, 2010 at 3:34 am
Review by for Pirates of Silicon Valley
Rating:
This takes you from beginning to present day.
Shows Paul Allen (who now OWNS the Seahawks and Trailblazers pro teams) Bill Gates, Steve Jobs etc. etc. Dropping out of college to pursue a slow burning fire that would become the personal computer/windows software that we know today.What is interesting is that it shows who talks and who works. Gates lies a lot, pretty much living by the saying “telling people what they want to hear” while Paul Allen grinds away at making code. On the other end it’s the same somewhat, rogue cannon Steve Jobs handling the business part while we get a sense that Steve Wozniak is a true tech who goes above and beyond Jobs’ rantings to produce the final product.What is so funny is the irony of this movie:Loan Officer: “Sorry Mr. Jobs, but we don’t think the ordinary person will have any use for a computer”.HP: “You think people are interested in something called a mouse?”.Xerox: “We build it and then they can come right in here and steal it from us? It’s just not fair, this operating system is a result of our hard work!”.Jobs to Gates: “You’re STEALING FROM US!!!”Assistant to Gates: “Do you realize Apple has a pirate flag over their front door, and they just gave us 3 prototypes of their operating system?”Jobs: “I don’t want people to look at it like a monitor and mouse, I think of this as art, a vision, people need to think outside the box”.Jobs: “You stole it from ussss!” Gates: “No it’s not stealing, you see, it’s like we both have this neighbor, and he leaves his door open all the time. You go over there to get his TV, only I’ve gotten their first..and now you’re calling me the thief?!”.Just some of the excerpts that make this movie a classic and show you everything that went down when a bunch of college dropouts set out and changed the world in which we live today.
dsrussell
November 4, 2010 at 3:32 am
Review by dsrussell for Pirates of Silicon Valley
Rating:
In the first few minutes of the film, we see Steve Jobs pacing the floor on a Boston stage (year 1997–shortly after his return to Apple), and above him is the gigantic image of Bill Gates smiling down (smirking?) at him, while we hear the voice of Steve Wozniac (the Woz) in the background say, “How did we get from there to here?” And there, dear readers, lies the tale of the century.Kudos for the director, the casting director, and the fine performances from Hall and Wyle. In this film, we see the rise of the personal computer from two of most important players of the era, and along the way, we are shown how deeply power and wealth corrupts. Those of us that lived through this period are well acquainted with the first personal computers. Indeed, many of us have heard enough rumors concerning Steve Jobs’ late night tantrums as he walked the halls of his empire, to know that this film depicted both him and Steve Wozniac fairly honestly. As far as the depiction of Bill Gates, there are those that agree and those that disagree. Obviously, artistic license was used on both sides. Steve Wozniac mentioned that he was surprised how accurately the movie portrayed the personalities, but indicated they got many of the dates screwed up (check his web site, he has many interesting comments concerning the movie).As the title aptly suggests, both Steve and Bill gained their initial fame not just from their own creative genius (although both are considered geniuses), but as much from “borrowing” — Jobs from Xerox PARC, and Gates from Apple Computer. And while that is the central theme of the movie, it also points out the astonishing short-sightedness of top corporate executives–HP (unfairly in reality) and IBM for not realizing the potential of the personal computer and software for the masses, and Xerox for not understanding what they themselves had developed. One of the best lines comes from an HP exec talking to Steve Wozniac (the creator of the Apple computer)… “Why would the average person ever want a computer?” (I’m paraphrasing here–and I think in reality, it was IBM who had this attitude).In fairness, back in those days computers were used mainly by scientists, the military, and mathematicians. These things were gigantic and cost a fortune. Still, it makes me think that the trillions of dollars lost by some of these giant corporations sprang from an immense lack of imagination at key positions (I doubt any of those people ever opened a science-fiction novel). To Jobs’ credit, he understood immediately what he was shown at the Xerox PARC center, and the rest, as they say, is history.”Pirates” works on many levels, and it really is a fascinating movie, however, I think it bit off a little more than it could chew. This movie is only 100 minutes long (or thereabouts), yet tries to encompass 25 years of creation, in-fighting, slight-of-hand, and lying, with a blend of madness and out-and-out theft thrown in. It also has a tendency to stray from its theme, trying (and failing) in its depiction of the main characters’ personal lives. Yet, inspite of these weaknesses, I throroughly enjoyed this film, and have viewed it several times (each time gaining a little more respect for the director’s efforts).So, whether your computer is the mac or a windows pc, I think most will find this film entertaining and enlightening. Between 1 and 10, I give “Pirates” a very high 7 (it had real potential of being a “don’t miss” gem). What I find almost as fascinating is the widespread polarization people still have for one platform over the other–and the war continues with no end in sight….