Steve Jobs


4:40 pm - 6:50 pm, Monday, November 24 on HBO MUNDI HD (Mexico English) ()

Average User Rating: 0.00 (0 votes)
My Rating: Sign in or Register to view last vote

Add to Favorites


About this Broadcast
-

This biographical drama explores the genius and shortcomings of computing guru Steve Jobs through the lens of three product launches.

2015 English Stereo
Biography Drama Profile

Cast & Crew
-

Michael Fassbender (Actor) .. Steve Jobs
Kate Winslet (Actor) .. Joanna Hoffman
Seth Rogen (Actor) .. Steven Wozniak
Katherine Waterston (Actor) .. Chrisann Brennan
Sarah Snook (Actor) .. Andrea Cunningham
Jeff Daniels (Actor) .. John Sculley
Michael Stuhlbarg (Actor) .. Andy Hertzfeld
John Ortiz (Actor) .. Joel Pforzheimer
Adam Shapiro (Actor) .. Avie Tevanian
Perla Haney-Jardine (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (19)
Ripley Sobo (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (9)
Makenzie Moss (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (5)
Vanessa Ross (Actor) .. Elizabeth Ramos
Steven Wiig (Actor) .. Bill Martin
John Steen (Actor) .. Mike Markkula
Stan Roth (Actor) .. George Coates
Mihran Shlougian (Actor) .. Jandali
Robert Anthony Peters (Actor) .. Engineer with Diskette
Noreen Lee (Actor) .. Airline Concierge
Gail Fenton (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Karen Kahn (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Rachel Caproni (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Lily Tung Crystal (Actor) .. Woman on P.A. (NeXT)
Damara Reilly (Actor) .. Woman on P.A. (iMac)
Marika Casteel (Actor) .. Woman on P.A.(iMac)
Dylan Freitas-D'Louhy (Actor) .. Straggler
Chris Tomasso (Actor) .. Straggler
John Chovanec (Actor) .. VIP
Daniel Liddle (Actor) .. VIP
Lora Oliver (Actor) .. Andrea's Assistant
Colm O'Riain (Actor) .. Violinist
Anita Bennett (Actor) .. News Anchor
Greg Mills (Actor) .. News Anchor
Melissa Etezadi (Actor) .. News Anchor
Rick Chambers (Actor) .. News Anchor
Sara Welch (Actor) .. News Anchor
Emmett Miller (Actor) .. News Anchor
Marc Istook (Actor) .. News Anchor
Carlo Cecchetto (Actor) .. News Anchor
Kristina Guerrero (Actor) .. News Anchor
Bill Seward (Actor) .. News Anchor
Mark Mester (Actor) .. News Anchor
Derrin Horton (Actor) .. News Anchor
Jackie Dallas (Actor) .. Flint Stage Manager
Keenan Johnston (Actor) .. Investor 1988 Launch
Tina Gilton (Actor) .. Steve's Colleague (Cafe)
Bryan Casserly (Actor) .. Apple Employee
Natalie Stephany Aguilar (Actor) .. Cafe Patron
Mihran Slougian (Actor) .. Jandali

More Information
-

No Logo
No Logo
No Logo

Did You Know..
-

Michael Fassbender (Actor) .. Steve Jobs
Born: April 02, 1977
Birthplace: Heidelberg, West Germany
Trivia: German-born, Irish-raised actor Michael Fassbender first caught many viewers' attention with the role of Sergeant Burton Pat on the HBO-produced WWII series Band of Brothers in 2001. He would make waves again with roles on a number of popular British TV series, like Murphy's Law and Hex, but Fassbender would ingrain himself in the minds of American audiences when he was cast in the role of Spartan warrior Stelios in the 2006 blockbuster 300, even uttering the iconic line "Then we will fight in the shade." Fassbender would continue to find exciting roles in film, appearing in movies like the critically acclaimed Hunger, and Quentin Tarantino's World War II epic Inglourious Basterds. He quickly became one of the most sought-after and respected young actors in the business earning rave reviews in 2011 for his work as a sex-addict in Shame, and that same year played Magneto in the successful X-Men prequel. The next year he continued to work with revered directors, playing an assassin in Steven Soderbergh's Haywire, and landing a lead role in Ridley Scott's sci-fi summer film Prometheus.In 2013, he re-teamed with his Hunger and Shame director Steve McQueen for 12 Years a Slave, earning Fassbender his first Academy Award nomination, for Best Supporting Actor. He reprised his role of Magneto in X-Men: Days of Future Past in 2014. The following year, he tackled "the Scottish play," playing Lord Macbeth opposite Marion Cotillard's Lady Macbeth, and earned rave reviews (and a second Oscar nomination) playing Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.
Kate Winslet (Actor) .. Joanna Hoffman
Born: October 05, 1975
Birthplace: Reading, England
Trivia: A handful of actresses carry such a wellspring of inner grace and presence that they appear destined for celebrity from birth. Natalie Wood had it, as did Elizabeth Taylor and Grace Kelly; many would doubtless place Kate Winslet among their ranks. A tender 11 when she commenced her formal dramatic training, 19 when she debuted cinematically, and 20 when she received her first Best Supporting Actress Oscar nomination, Winslet never "ascended" to stardom; she became a star overnight. The possessor of an hourglass-figured, full-lipped beauty that lends itself effortlessly to costume dramas, Winslet was roundly hailed by the press for standing in stark, proud contrast to her more conventional Hollywood peers. Born on October 5, 1975, and raised in Reading, England, as the daughter of stage actors and the granddaughter of a repertory theater manager, Winslet inherited the "drama bug" from her folks. After training exhaustively as a child and securing professional representation she went on the air as a spokesgirl for a popular British cereal, and later attended a performing-arts secondary school. Following an early graduation in 1991 (prior to the age of 16), Winslet launched her regional stage career, highlighted by roles in adaptations of The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole and Peter Pan. It would be difficult to imagine a more auspicious film bow than the role of Juliet Hulme in Peter Jackson's Heavenly Creatures -- or a more difficult one. This characterization -- that of an extroverted adolescent who constructs an incestuously exclusive fantasy world with her best friend (Melanie Lynskey) -- put Winslet on the map, and opened the door for follow-ups in international megahits such as Ang Lee's Sense and Sensibility (1995), as the willful, passionate Marianne; and James Cameron's Titanic (1997), as the object of Leonardo Di Caprio's affections, Rose DeWitt Bukater. She received dual Oscar nominations for those roles, but, surprisingly, failed to net either one.Meanwhile, Winslet concurrently shied away from the high gloss of Cameron and unveiled her stage origins, traveling the arthouse circuit with such productions as Michael Winterbottom's Jude (1996), as Sue Bridehead; and Kenneth Branagh's disappointing, overbaked, four-hour Hamlet (1996), as Ophelia. Hideous Kinky embodied a turn on a much smaller scale. Directed by Scottish helmer Gillies MacKinnon (and scripted by his brother, Billy), the film casts Winslet as a freewheeling young hippie who takes her children to Morocco in order to pursue spiritual enlightenment. Beyond the positive reviews gleaned by the film and the praise that critics lavished onto Winslet's performance, one of the most alluring sidelights happened off camera, when Winslet dated and then married James Threapleton, the third assistant director on the MacKinnon film. The couple divorced in 2001.During 1999 and 2000, Winslet dove into two roles that required her to cut loose and break free of all inhibitions. First, she played another young woman in search of spiritual enlightenment, this time in Jane Campion's Holy Smoke. Starring as an Australian girl who joins a cult on a visit to India, and is then "deprogrammed" by Harvey Keitel, Winslet's role pushed her beyond the limits of propriety and embarrassment (one scene has her standing naked and urinating in front of Keitel). Unfortunately, one or two brave performances did not an unequivocal masterpiece make; the picture sharply divided critics, falling far short of the praise heaped onto Campion's The Piano six years earlier. Even gutsier (though more successful on a dramatic level) was Winslet's turn as a laundress who delivers the Marquis de Sade's manuscripts to the outside world in Phil Kaufman's Quills. Winslet reentered the Oscar limelight with yet another Academy-nommed performance as a youthful Iris Murdoch in director Richard Eyre's Iris, but the gold statuette eluded her a third time when Jennifer Connelly netted it for A Beautiful Mind. In early 2003, she hit a low point as Bitsey Bloom, opposite Kevin Spacey in The Life of David Gale. Based on the experience of a University of Texas professor -- an avid anti-death-penalty activist faced with execution after a false conviction -- Winslet portrayed the reporter who broke the story in a desperate attempt to discover the truth behind the mysterious and brutal crime for which Gale was convicted. As scripted by Charles Randolph and directed by Alan Parker, the picture opened and closed almost simultaneously, to devastating, brutal reviews. Winslet fared better in 2004, as the love interest opposite Jim Carrey in Michel Gondry's Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. This humorous and poignant mindbender, with a tender romance at its core, scored on all fronts, as did Winslet's performance, earning her Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations. She followed it up with a return to period film in Finding Neverland (2005), a movie about Victorian author J.M. Barrie, played by Johnny Depp. Playing the inspiration for the character of Wendy in the beloved novel Peter Pan seemed only natural for the charming actress, who had long since proven herself a similarly charismatic onscreen force. The next year, 2006, found Winslet in a quintet of back-to-back projects. In the CG-animated Flushed Away -- from Aardman and Dreamworks -- she voiced Rita, a scavenging sewer rat who helps Hugh Jackman's Roddy escape from the city of Ratropolis and return to his luxurious Kensington origins. That year, she also headlined the political drama All the King's Men, opposite Sean Penn. Written and directed by Schindler's List's Steven Zaillian, the picture cast Winslet as Jude Law's childhood sweetheart; while overflowing with talent, the long-gestating remake was a major misfire with critics and audiences. Perhaps more fortuitously, Winslet joined the cast of Todd Field's Little Children, an ensemble comedy drama about fear and loathing in an upper-class suburb in New England. The film would net her her fifth Oscar nomination, this time for Best Actress. More financially successful was her involvement in Nancy Meyers' romantic comedy Holiday, as Iris, a British woman who temporarily "swaps homes," as part of a vacation ploy, with Cameron Diaz's Amanda, and has an affair with Jack Black. Meanwhile, Winslet and Johnny Depp reunited for the first occasion since Finding Neverland as narrators of the IMAX documentary Deep Sea 3D (2006), filmmaker Howard Hall's lavish exploration of the aquatic depths, designed for young viewers.After taking some time off in 2007, Winslet returned in 2008 with a pair of award-winning performances. Playing opposite her Titanic co-star Leonardo DiCaprio in Revolutionary Road earned her Best Actress nominations from both the Screen Actors Guild and the Hollywood Foreign Press, as well as a healthy number of year-end critics awards. But it was her work in Stephen Daldry's adaptation of The Reader that provided her with the sixth Academy nomination of her career, as well as Best Supporting Actress nods from the Screen Actors Guild and the Golden Globes. The Hollywood Foreign Press made history that year selecting her the winner in both the Best Actress in a drama and the Best Supporting Actress categories at that year's Golden Globes.In 2011, Winslet would win an Emmy, Golden Globe, and Screen Actors Guild award for her performance in HBO's 5-part miniseries Mildred Pierce, and take on a lead role in Contagion, a disaster film directed by Steven Soderbergh. In 2013, she starred in Labor Day and joined the Divergent film series, returning for the film's sequel, Insurgent, in 2015. She also starred in Steve Jobs, and earned her seventh Oscar nomination.
Seth Rogen (Actor) .. Steven Wozniak
Born: April 15, 1982
Birthplace: Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Trivia: Canadian-born actor Seth Rogen tapped into his skills as a comedian when he was only 13, signing up for comedy classes and honing his deadpan style. He tooled around as an amateur for a few years but eventually took his act down south, hoping to find success as an actor and standup comedian in the U.S. He was soon discovered by Judd Apatow and was cast in his short-lived series Freaks and Geeks. After its cancellation, Apatow cast Rogen in his next series, Undeclared -- for which Rogen significantly contributed as a writer. Undeclared met the same fate as Freaks and Geeks and was canceled mid-season, but both series became surprisingly hot cult hits upon their DVD releases. Rogen went on to write for Da Ali G Show and take minor roles in Donnie Darko and Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy before being tapped by Apatow once again for a new project, this time on the big screen. The film was 2005's The 40-Year-Old Virgin, and Rogen's role as Steve Carell's well-meaning friend Cal finally brought him the large-scale success that made his comic skills a valuable commodity. Rogen also acted as co-producer on the film, which was touted as the funniest movie in years by critics and audiences alike, eventually grossing well over a hundred million dollars. There was obviously good chemistry on the set of The 40 Year Old Virgin, so Rogen signed on to appear in Apatow's 2007 comedy Knocked Up. Appearing alongside his old cast mates Paul Rudd and Leslie Mann, Rogen starred as a man who is forced to deal with serious unforeseen consequences when his one-night stand becomes pregnant. After the filmmakers' initial plans to cast Anne Hathaway in the opposite role fell through, Grey's Anatomy star Katherine Heigl signed on to star as the female lead. The smash success of Superbad made him one of the biggest comedy stars of his generation and led to Pineapple Express, a pot comedy opposite James Franco. He was Zack in Zack and MIri Make a Porno, and took a screenwriting credit on Drillbit Taylor in 2008. He lent his distinctive gravelly voice to a number of animated films including Kung Fu Panda and Monsters vs. Aliens. In 2009 he stretched himself, reteaming with Apatow for Funny People, and taking the lead in the black comedy Observe and Report. In 2011 he was The Green Hornet, but he also appeared as the best friend to a young cancer victim in the comedy 50/50. He also played the husband of Michelle Williams in Sarah Polley's Take This Waltz.
Katherine Waterston (Actor) .. Chrisann Brennan
Born: March 03, 1980
Birthplace: Westminster, London, England
Trivia: Daughter of the refined, Oscar-nominated American actor Sam Waterston (The Killing Fields, Law & Order), statuesque actress Katherine Waterston attended New York University and then followed her dad's footsteps by entering the arena of acting, taking her on-camera bow in fellow show-business scion Bryce Dallas Howard's short-subject film Orchids. Waterston scored her feature film debut with a bit part in Tony Gilroy's Best Picture-nominated Michael Clayton (2007) and signed for her first lead in a Hollywood feature in David Ross' black comedy The Babysitters (2007), in which she played an honors student who slides into an affair with a dissatisfied suburban househusband and then turns the tables to engage in a little fly-by-night prostitution (and collect some college money in the process) via affairs with the husband's friends.
Sarah Snook (Actor) .. Andrea Cunningham
Born: July 28, 1987
Birthplace: Adelaide, South Australia, Australia
Trivia: Wanted to pursue a career in the entertainment industry after seeing a performance of her sister in an amateur theatre production.Started performing at a young age.Was awarded a scholarship to study drama at Scotch College in Adelaide.Enrolled in drama school in Sydney when she was 17-years-old.Was very active on stages at the beginning of her career.Made her debut on television as an actress in 2009.Moved to Brooklyn, New York, in 2019.
Jeff Daniels (Actor) .. John Sculley
Born: February 19, 1955
Birthplace: Athens, Georgia
Trivia: Though he has never achieved the high profile or widespread acclaim of a Robert De Niro, Jeff Daniels ranks as one of Hollywood's most versatile leading men and over his career he has played everything from villains and cads to heroes and romantic leads to tragic figures and lovably goofy idiots, in movies of almost every genre. Daniels has also worked extensively on television and stage, where he first distinguished himself by winning an Obie for a production of Johnny Got His Gun. Blonde, cleft-chinned, and handsome in a rugged all-American way, Daniels made his screen debut playing PC O'Donnell in Milos Forman's Ragtime (1981). His breakthrough came when he was cast as Debra Winger's inconstant husband in Terms of Endearment (1983). Daniels has subsequently averaged one or two major feature films per year with notable performances, including: his memorable dual portrayal of a gallant movie hero/self-absorbed star who steps out of celluloid to steal the heart of lonely housewife Mia Farrow in Woody Allen's Purple Rose of Cairo (1984); his turn as a man terrified of spiders who finds himself surrounded by them in the horror-comedy Arachnophobia; and his role as Union officer Colonel Joshua Chamberlain, who led his troops into doom in Gettysburg (1993). In 1994, Daniels took a radical turn away from drama to star as one of the world's stupidest men opposite comic sensation Jim Carrey in the Farrelly brothers' hyperactive Dumb and Dumber. This lowest-common-denominator comedy proved one of the year's surprise hits and brought Daniels to a new level of recognition and popularity. Since then, Daniels has alternated more frequently between drama and comedy. His television credits include a moving portrayal of a troubled Vietnam vet in a Hallmark Hall of Fame production, Redwood Curtain. Daniels still maintains his connection to the stage and manages his own theatrical company. Before launching his acting career, he earned a degree in English from Central Michigan University in Mount Pleasant, MI. The later '90s found Daniels turning homeward and venturing into new territories through his labor of love, the Purple Rose Theater. Located in the small town of Chelsea, MI, the bus garage turned playhouse was designed to give Midwestern audiences the opportunity to enjoy entertainment generally reserved for big-city dwellers. Though he continued to appear in such films as Fly Away Home (1996) and Pleasantville (1998), Daniels made his feature directorial debut with the celluloid translation of his successful Yooper stage comedy Escanaba in da Moonlight (2000). Set in the Michigan's Upper Peninsula (U.P., hence "Yooper"), the tale of redemption by means of bagging a buck mixed the regionally accented humor of Fargo with the eccentricities inherent to northerners and served as an ideal directorial debut for the Michigan native. A modest regional success, Daniels would subsequently appear in such wide releases as Blood Work and The Hours (both 2002) before returning to the director's chair for the vacuum-salesman comedy Super Sucker (also 2002). Later reprising his role as Lt. Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain from Gettysburg, Daniels once again went back in time for the Civial War drama Gods and Generals (2002). In 2004 he appeared in the adaptation of fellow Michigander Mitch Albom's best-seller The Five People You Meet in Heaven, and the next year he earned rave reviews for his role as a self-absorbed academic and terrible father in The Squid and the Whale. He continued to work steadily in a variety of projects including the Robin Williams vehicle RV, the indie thriller The Lookout, and Away We Go. He portrayed a Senator in the American remake of the British miniseries State of Play in 2009, and three years later he was cast as the lead in Aaron Sorkin's first cable series, The Newroom, playing the host of a cable news program who decides to tell it like it really is.
Michael Stuhlbarg (Actor) .. Andy Hertzfeld
Born: July 05, 1968
Birthplace: Long Beach, CA
Trivia: A graduate of the prestigious Juilliard School, Michael Stuhlbarg began his career on the stage, appearing in Broadway productions like Cabaret, Taking Sides, and The Pillow Man ( for which he earned a Tony award nomination). Stuhlbarg's career also occasionally landed him onscreen, where he made a handful of appearances in films like Body of Lies and Cold Souls. In 2009, he was cast in the lead role as a troubled professor in the Coen Brothers film A Serious Man, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination. He played a film historian in Martin Scorsese's Hugo, the time-jumping center of Men in Black 3, and Lew Wasserman in the biopic Hitchcock. On the small screen, he was memorable as the gambler Arnold Rothstein on the HBO period gangster series Boardwalk Empire.
John Ortiz (Actor) .. Joel Pforzheimer
Born: November 21, 1968
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: A tough and slightly surly character actor most at home in ethnically oriented Hollywood roles, John Ortiz often found himself cast as nefarious hoods and toughs. Ortiz landed one of his earliest assignments with a 1992 guest appearance on Law & Order, then branched out into A-list supporting roles in such features as Carlito's Way (1993), Ransom (1996), Piñero (2001), and Miami Vice (2006). Ortiz essayed two extremely different cinematic assignments in 2007: a part in the Ridley Scott-directed period crime drama American Gangster and one in the sci-fi-horror opus Aliens vs. Predator: Requiem.
Adam Shapiro (Actor) .. Avie Tevanian
Perla Haney-Jardine (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (19)
Born: May 02, 1997
Ripley Sobo (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (9)
Makenzie Moss (Actor) .. Lisa Brennan (5)
Born: September 09, 2006
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: Landed her first professional role when she was 5, in a Mott's for Tots commercial.Earliest film work included parodies by writer/ director Craig Moss in which she co-starred with her sister Olivia Moss.Notably played Steve Jobs' daughter Lisa Brennan at age 5 in 2015's Steve Jobs, and Lou in the Pup Star series from Air Bud Entertainment.Has been a dancer with the popular and successful studio, The Rage Complex.Has aspirations of becoming a veterinarian. Is a supporter of Bless A Vet whose mission is to support Veterans and Active Military Members, and a portion of the proceeds from her film God Bless The Broken Road went towards this cause.
Vanessa Ross (Actor) .. Elizabeth Ramos
Steven Wiig (Actor) .. Bill Martin
Born: December 30, 1972
John Steen (Actor) .. Mike Markkula
Stan Roth (Actor) .. George Coates
Mihran Shlougian (Actor) .. Jandali
Robert Anthony Peters (Actor) .. Engineer with Diskette
Noreen Lee (Actor) .. Airline Concierge
Gail Fenton (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Karen Kahn (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Rachel Caproni (Actor) .. Stage Manager (NeXT)
Lily Tung Crystal (Actor) .. Woman on P.A. (NeXT)
Damara Reilly (Actor) .. Woman on P.A. (iMac)
Marika Casteel (Actor) .. Woman on P.A.(iMac)
Dylan Freitas-D'Louhy (Actor) .. Straggler
Chris Tomasso (Actor) .. Straggler
John Chovanec (Actor) .. VIP
Daniel Liddle (Actor) .. VIP
Lora Oliver (Actor) .. Andrea's Assistant
Colm O'Riain (Actor) .. Violinist
Anita Bennett (Actor) .. News Anchor
Greg Mills (Actor) .. News Anchor
Melissa Etezadi (Actor) .. News Anchor
Rick Chambers (Actor) .. News Anchor
Sara Welch (Actor) .. News Anchor
Emmett Miller (Actor) .. News Anchor
Marc Istook (Actor) .. News Anchor
Carlo Cecchetto (Actor) .. News Anchor
Kristina Guerrero (Actor) .. News Anchor
Bill Seward (Actor) .. News Anchor
Mark Mester (Actor) .. News Anchor
Derrin Horton (Actor) .. News Anchor
Jackie Dallas (Actor) .. Flint Stage Manager
Keenan Johnston (Actor) .. Investor 1988 Launch
Trivia: In the early 1950s, his parents along with his older siblings traveled by boat to move from Ireland to North Hollywood, California.First-generation American, son of Irish immigrants.Although he was the first of his siblings to be born in the U.S., he also has an Irish citizenship.Traveled a lot between California an Ireland during his childhood and young adulthood.Studied at the Mosaic Acting Academy with Charlie Holliday.Host of the podcast Be Hollywood from Home.
Tina Gilton (Actor) .. Steve's Colleague (Cafe)
Bryan Casserly (Actor) .. Apple Employee
Natalie Stephany Aguilar (Actor) .. Cafe Patron
Mihran Slougian (Actor) .. Jandali