The hottest biopic in Hollywood right now has to be based on former Time magazine top editor Walter Isaacson’s authorized biography of Steve Jobs being published by Simon & Schuster on November 21st. Given the TV and movie industry’s past and present penchant for making entertainment out of people’s lives, it won’t be long before the book is made into a film. The 448-page profile is based on over 40 interviews with the Apple co-founder and over 100 conversations with friends, family members, colleagues and competitors. And it’s a compelling story: the building of the world’s most valuable technology company by creating the devices that changed how people use electronics and revolutionized the computer, music, and mobile phone industries. Jobs gave his full cooperation but had not read it as of mid-August, the date of the Barnes and Noble overview. At first titled iSteve: the Book Of Jobs, Isaacson had second thoughts about what was appropriate for the first biography to get Jobs’ blessing and cooperation. Even when it wasn’t even finished, it made it (briefly) into the top 50 on Amazon’s bestseller list. Isaacson eventually persuaded his publisher Simon & Schuster to go with the simple title of Steve Jobs. First planned for 2012, the book’s release date was moved up.
Jobs reportedly fought off a long list of would-be biographers over the years then chose Isaacson who’s written about Henry Kissinger, Benjamin Franklin and Albert Einstein. Jobs himself said he had no skeletons in his closet, though there things he’d done he wasn’t proud of. But he was touchy about his personal life, understandably. According to Fortune magazine, in the early 1980s Jobs invited Michael Moritz, then Time‘s Silicon Valley reporter, to chronicle the Mac’s creation for the book that became The Little Kingdom (1984). But when Moritz reported, in Time‘s 1983 Machine of the Year, a detail about Jobs’ family, access was abruptly cut off. At the time of Jobs’ death, only one movie had ever chronicled his rise to tech titan: Pirates Of Silicon Valley, a semi-humorous docudrama about the two visionaries behind Microsoft and Apple based on the book Fire In The Valley: The Making of The Personal Computer by Paul Freiberger & Michael Swaine. Shown on TNT in 1999, the telefilm starred Anthony Michael Hall as Bill Gates and Noah Wyle as Jobs. Reportedly, Jobs thought the ER actor did a fantastic job donning the turtleneck. And, during the Macworld NY in July 1999, Jobs had Wyle come out dressed like him to start the keynote.
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.


I have a $100 that says Ashton Kutcher will play Steve!
Agreed.
I hope they focus or highlight Job’s most valuable lesson: focus on your passion or Arete.
He had the courage and conviction to pursue his passion which many fail to do.
I strongly would like to see Ashton Kutcher play Steve Jobs in “the movie”. I do feel he would be perfect for the role.
I’d love a sequel to PIRATES starring Noah Wylie as Steve Jobs again. Get on it, TNT!
I loved POSV. Great movie. Hall was awesome too.
Yes, Noah Wiley was the perfect Steve Jobs
A bit early for this. Can’t we just mourn for a minute please?
Agree completely. To some of us, Steve was more than just a public figure. Please spare us the jokes, okay?
I agree.
During the Macworld NY in July of 1999, Jobs had Noah Wyle come out dressed up like him to start the keynote.
And Pirates of Silicon Valley was a great film. If they do make a biopic, they should have Wyle return as Jobs and Martyn Burke direct it.
Noah Wylie’s phone must be ringing now.
Anybody want to make a bet on when a biopic of Jobs is announced? I’d say within 9 months…
And yeah, something died today along with Steve Jobs – he’s one of those very few who took the computer and personalized it, making it real and affordable.
(Noah Wyle? Maybe)
Brought a more personal user experience, yes; made technology more affordable, no. Apple products from iPods to laptops are the most expensive in their categories, and Macbooks are aimed at elite users, not the broad market. That’s like saying Mercedes-Benz made cars more affordable.
Apple has been great at establishing new categories (MP3, smartphones, tablets), then staying atop them price- and design-wise as competitors supply knockoffs and also-ran products for price-conscious buyers.
Better than a biopic about a martyr or explorer or something that didn’t make any of that sexy money!!!
While Noah Wyle has already played Jobs in the TV movie, I suggest Joseph Gordon-Levitt as a possible casting choice.
(Wyle was 28 when he played Jobs in “Pirates of Silicon Valley” in 1999. Gordon-Levitt turned 30 earlier this year.)
a little too short
Height is irrelevant. If Chris Evans can be CGI’d to be a scrawny kid in the beginnign of Captain America, then Gordon-Levitt can be made “taller”.
Gordon-Levitt is 5-10 and Wyle is 6-1 – a difference of 3 inches can easily be overcome.
Wyle is only 3 inches taller than Levitt (6′ 1″ vs 5′ 10″) – easily compensated on camera and in post.
How about Keanu Reeves?
I’d bet money Sony would buy the rights to the book, and reunite David Fincher and Aaron Sorkin to direct and write respectively.
… why, you say? Fincher had no problem remaking “Pirates of Silicon Valley” as “The Social Network” already. Jesse Eisenberg wouldn’t cut it as Steve Jobs, though.
Michael Ian Black should play Steve Jobs. They look similar, don’t they?
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0085438/
I like Toby.
Too soon.
Made the computer affordable? Oh please. Jobs kept Mac prices in the stratosphere for as long as he could. It was the PC and Windows that made computers affordable–you could buy from any vendor and this commodotized computers.
True. Though Steve Jobs and Apple made a clear choice to limit, as much as possible, the problems of making things too backwards compatible that has in many ways retarded the growth and andvancements in the PC.
I’m not big on Apple products simply because of their expense, however, I do appreciate what the company has done. I’ve never been one to take sides in the whole PC vs Apple because they both have their virtues and drawbacks (besides Commodore made the best bang-for-the-buck computers EVER! – I only mention this because some company is actually still making them).
Hi,
Yes!
Someone still remembers the legend that was the Amiga, incidentally named so it would appear ahead of Apple in any Alphabetic listing, a machine and design team that was respected by APPLE/Jobs and Microsoft/Gates and much better then either.
Yours kindly,
Shakir Razak
Being “first” trumps being appropriate I guess.
The man just passed away and already we are talking movie deals; let him rest. If they push it out too soon and too fast it will most definately bite.
Apparently Jobs and Wyle actually became good friends after the biopic and the Macworld stunt.
It would be nice if they did use Wyle again, since he had Jobs’ hard-won approval.
Taylor Lautner.
Steve Jobs was the man and is still the man. He literally changed the world. Think about that.
Will the book be updated with his death before it’s released?
Ashton – the resemblance, especially in the long-haired years – is remarkable.
An authorized biography simply means it’s a sanitized bible for the iCult to buy in the millions. And they will, of course; they buy what they’re told to buy.
I wonder if there will be a last-minute addendum explaining how well his 35-year militant veganism bolstered his health to a ripe old age of 56?
tom cruise…
I think a book is a natural decision following his death. Especially with such a high profile book from such a big author coming out. If not a feature film, this I can definitely see as a cable mini-series or some made for tv biopic…
A Steve Jobs biopic would be great. Brad Pitt as Jobs and Seth Rogen as “The Woz,” WINNER!
I would also love to see a Charles Napier biopic.