Ferguson On Films
 

All my life I've been passionate about movies. I find them to be such an all-involving art form, showing not only sights otherwise foreign to me but worlds, and encompassing so many different skills working together in cohesion - writing, music, lyricism, art form, acting, and performance. The best movies are capable of teaching and enlightening; of making us better people. It is a sublime human creation, which for me is so much more than mere entertainment or hobby.


Thursday, June 22, 2006

Pirates Of Silicon Valley (1999)

Directed by Martyn Burke
Written by Martyn Burke; James Frielberger, Michael Swain (book Fire In The Valley
Starring Anthony Michael Hall, Noah Wyle, Joey Slotnick, John Di Maggio, Josh Hopkins, Gema Zamprogna

Genre: Drama
Country: USA
Runtime: 97 minutes
MPAA Rating: No MPAA Rating

Evaluation: 6/10
by Greg Ferguson







At one point in Pirates Of Silicon Valley, a made-for-cable film based on the novel Fire In The Valley by Paul Freiberger and Michael Swaine, the audience is addressed in an aside by Steve Ballmer (John Di Maggio) and told that what we are witnessing is history and that it ought to be in taught in schools and shown in museums. If only the film itself believed that and went in some direction with it. Here is the story, well summarized and competently spun, of the modern-age computer revolution, spearheaded by Steve Jobs (Noah Wyle) and his initially anti-establishment band of Apple Computers wizards, and by conservative ninny Bill Gates (Anthony Michael Hall) with his silver-tongued Microsoft pals (of which Ballmer numbers among). As we know, these men would go on to change the world with their innovations, but director Martyn Burke and his crew appear to have nothing of worth to say. This isn't an homage to great men of great deeds, nor is it a criticism of the alleged piracy of Silicon Valley. All this film aspires to is getting actors who look their parts to re-enact key scenes from the source material and hitch a ride on the popularity of both computer giants.

Perhaps I'm being unfairly harsh on account of great expectations, though. To be sure, the performances are the film's main attraction, especially Noah Wyle as the miserable egomaniac Jobs, lending an uncommon amount of intensity and fervour to his role, and Joey Slotnik as his amiable yet exasperated partner Steve "Woz" Wozniak. They seem to get more screen time than Gates and Microsoft, though Pirates oscillates between both parties and dutifully documents both men's respective backgrounds and their rise to fame and canonization as patron saints of electronic technology from their scraggly beginnings as university geeks. Of that I have no complaints, and certainly audiences with a lack of knowledge about the origins of both present-day mega-corporations will be treated by the efficient and compelling run-down the film provides. I confess having held a certain ignorance about Apple and Microsoft beforehand and feel wiser knowing better how each came to be. What I was left wanting at the end, however, was a level of depth and intuitiveness about its arguably contentious subject matter. These guys and their cohorts are among the few who can rightly lay claim to having made a lasting imprint on the course of humankind, yet this sentiment amounts to little more here than a glorified cinematic encyclopaedia reference.

(Pirates Of Silicon Valley is available on DVD.)


2 Comments:

  • This is an awesome movie if you are a geek (like me)

    Its a great (mostly fictitious) account of the rise of both companies..

    I watched it after watching a documentary series called Triumph of the nerds by Robert X. Cringely(PBS), which made it even more entertaining to pick out the fiction and where they kept truth in it.

    If you are a proud geek it is defiantly part of your library!

    By Mike O'Hara, at 10:44 AM  

  • Mike,

    Thanks for the note - now I'm interested in looking up this "Triumph of the Nerds" doc from PBS.

    Greg

    By Ferguson On Films, at 11:16 AM  

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