Current:Home > MarketsA new film explains how the smartphone market slipped through BlackBerry's hands -StockHorizon
A new film explains how the smartphone market slipped through BlackBerry's hands
View
Date:2025-04-15 21:09:00
Like a lot of people, I'm a longtime iPhone user — in fact, I used an iPhone to record this very review. But I still have a lingering fondness for my very first smartphone — a BlackBerry — which I was given for work back in 2006. I loved its squat, round shape, its built-in keyboard and even its arthritis-inflaming scroll wheel.
Of course, the BlackBerry is now no more. And the story of how it became the hottest personal handheld device on the market, only to get crushed by the iPhone, is told in smartly entertaining fashion in a new movie simply titled BlackBerry.
Briskly adapted from Jacquie McNish and Sean Silcoff's book Losing the Signal: The Untold Story Behind the Extraordinary Rise and Spectacular Fall of BlackBerry, this is the latest of a few recent movies, including Tetris and Air, that show us the origins of game-changing new products. But unlike those earlier movies, BlackBerry is as much about failure as it is about success, which makes it perhaps the most interesting one of the bunch.
It begins in 1996, when Research In Motion is just a small, scrappy company hawking modems in Waterloo, Ontario. Jay Baruchel plays Mike Lazaridis, a mild-mannered tech whiz who's the brains of the operation. His partner is a headband-wearing, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles-loving goofball named Douglas Fregin, played by Matt Johnson, who also co-wrote and directed the movie.
Johnson's script returns us to an era of VHS tapes and dial-up internet, when the mere idea of a phone that could handle emails — let alone games, music and other applications — was unimaginable. That's exactly the kind of product that Mike and Doug struggle to pitch to a sleazy investor named Jim Balsillie, played by a raging Glenn Howerton, from It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia.
Jim knows very little about tech but senses that the Research In Motion guys might be onto something, and he joins their ragtag operation and tries to whip their slackerish employees into shape. And so, after a crucial deal with Bell Atlantic, later to be known as Verizon, the BlackBerry is born. And it becomes such a hit, so addictive among users, that people start calling it the "CrackBerry."
The time frame shifts to the early 2000s, with Research In Motion now based in a slick new office, with a private jet at its disposal. But the mix of personalities is as volatile as ever — sometimes they gel, but more often they clash.
Mike, as sweetly played by Baruchel, is now co-CEO, and he's still the shy-yet-stubborn perfectionist, forever tinkering with new improvements to the BlackBerry, and refusing to outsource the company's manufacturing operations to China. Jim, also co-CEO, is the Machiavellian dealmaker who pulls one outrageous stunt after another, whether he's poaching top designers from places like Google or trying to buy a National Hockey League team and move it to Ontario. That leaves Doug on the outside looking in, trying to boost staff morale with Raiders of the Lost Ark movie nights and maintain the geeky good vibes of the company he started years earlier.
As a director, Johnson captures all this in-house tension with an energetic handheld camera and a jagged editing style. He also makes heavy use of a pulsing synth score that's ideally suited to a tech industry continually in flux.
The movie doesn't entirely sustain that tension or sense of surprise to the finish; even if you don't know exactly how it all went down in real life, it's not hard to see where things are headed. Jim's creative accounting lands the company in hot water right around the time Apple is prepping the 2007 launch of its much-anticipated iPhone. That marks the beginning of the end, and it's fascinating to watch as BlackBerry goes into its downward spiral. It's a stinging reminder that success and failure often go together, hand in thumb-scrolling hand.
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Small twin
- Police seek suspect in Southern California restaurant shooting that injured 4
- Hong Kong leader John Lee will miss an APEC meeting in San Francisco due to ‘scheduling issues’
- Visibly frustrated Davante Adams slams helmet on Raiders sideline during MNF loss to Lions
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Giant of the Civil Rights Movement Medgar Evers deserves Medal of Freedom, lawmakers say
- Giant of the Civil Rights Movement Medgar Evers deserves Medal of Freedom, lawmakers say
- Robert De Niro loses temper during testimony at ex-assistant's trial: 'This is all nonsense!'
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- NASA releases images of the 'bones' of a dead star, 16,000 light-years away
Ranking
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Cornell student arrested after antisemitic threats made against Jewish campus community
- Hong Kong leader John Lee will miss an APEC meeting in San Francisco due to ‘scheduling issues’
- Suspect arrested in Halloween 1982 cold case slaying in southern Indiana
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- Germany’s president has apologized for colonial-era killings in Tanzania over a century ago
- SPANX Flash Sale: Get Ready for Holiday Party Season and Save up to 68% Off
- Critics seek delay in planned cap on shelter for homeless families in Massachusetts
Recommendation
South Korean president's party divided over defiant martial law speech
Youngkin issues order aiming to combat antisemitism, other anti-religious hatred
Remains of a person missing since devastating floods in 2021 have been found in Germany
Red Wings' Danny DeKeyser trades skates for sales in new job as real-estate agent
Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
DNA leads to murder charge in cold case in Germany nearly 45 years after retiree was bludgeoned to death
See the Dancing With the Stars Cast's Jaw-Dropping Halloween 2023 Transformations
Utility clerk appointed to West Virginia Legislature as GOP House member