It’s that time of the year again, when the Hollywood elite rushes to
Park City, Utah to enjoy the latest movie projects and highly
anticipated premieres. The Sundance Film Festival is at its 35th year
and it’s likely going to be one of the most popular editions, since the
Steve Jobs biopic with Ashton Kutcher is set to premiere.
In 35
years, there wasn’t a movie so anticipated at the Sundance Film Festival
as the Steve Jobs biopic. Fans, movie critics, directors and well,
basically, the entire Hollywood world are all waiting for “jOBS”. The
biopic was directed by Joshua Michael Stern and will premiere on the
festival’s last night, which is next Saturday.
From 4,000 films
submitted, only the most interesting and best 119 feature films from 32
countries were chosen. And while the schedule features enough
interesting headlines, it is jOBS that has everybody thrilled. “The true
story of one of the greatest entrepreneurs in American history...a
candid, inspiring and personal portrait of the one who saw things
differently” reads the biopic description starring Ashton Kutcher as
Steve Jobs during his “30 most defining years”.
The movie is
also a huge bet for Ashton Kutcher’s acting career, but Josh Gad,
co-star in jOBS says Kutcher lived up to the challenge. “There’s
something extraordinarily about the material in that it’s unlike
anything you’ve seen Ashton Kutcher do before. I think he’s going to
astound a lot of people” the actor told Wenn. “There is an eerie
resemblance – he didn’t have to do much to get there” Gad said about
Ashton Kutcher preparing for his part.
“When he showed up, it
sent a ripple of shock throughout the set. Everyone was like, ‘We’re in
the presence of Jobs. Let’s go do this’. It was literally like being in
the room with the creator of Apple. This is one of those roles that’s
the perfect fit” the actor added.
Running January 17 through
January 27, Sundance Film Festival features a plethora of movies, such
as Lovelace, story of porn star Linda “Deep Throat”, as well as Joseph
Gordon-Levitt’s debut as a movie director, “Don Jon’s Addiction”. In a
nutshell, as Trevor Groth, director of programming for Sundance said,
this year’s movies “offer compelling portraits of worlds and people
ranging from the beloved to the misunderstood to the unknown” and also
“have the power to delight audiences at the festival and impact our
culture at large”.
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