'Steve Jobs' Movie: A Who's Who Guide to Apple's Early Days

The movie follows Jobs through three key product launches in his career.

Focusing on Jobs as he prepares for three different launches in his career, the movie depicts the Apple co-founder as ruthless and ambitious while also examining his tumultuous relationship with his first daughter, Lisa, who the movie shows Jobs not initially accepting as his own.

The movie has garnered plenty of buzz but also some blowback from some people who knew the Apple co-founder and are concerned it may be more of a hit job than an accurate portrayal.

"There will be many more films made about them," Boyle said. "We have got to examine these people, either in a big political way or in a personal way, which this [movie] tries to do."

Steve Jobs

He said he chose to focus on the events leading up to the three product launches instead of writing a traditional "cradle to grave story where we land on greatest hits along the way."

"Steve had this talent to wrangle other talented people to make these devices and machines," Sorkin said. "We love these things."

"What do you do? You’re not an engineer. You're not a designer. You can't put a hammer to a nail," the movie version of Wozniak says. "I built the circuit board. The graphical interface was stolen. So how come, ten times in a day, I read Steve Jobs is a genius? What do you do?"

The real-life Wozniak told Bloomberg he would never talk that way but said some of the lines he heard the fictional Woz saying in the movie trailer at least carried an accurate message.

"He's a terribly nice guy who tried very hard to be the guy we would all want to be," Sorkin said. "But in the 31st minute of the conversation, you see it does hurt him a bit."

Wozniak, who is fond of entertaining people with magic tricks, bonded with Rogen so much, director Danny Boyle said the two men even hung out together at "The Magic Castle" in Los Angeles, a clubhouse of sorts for magicians.

Joanna Hoffman

"I loved spending time with her because she shared stories with me about her time with Steve and her relationship with Steve that a lot of people just don’t know anything about," Winslet told Entertainment Weekly. "And I actually came to understand a much softer, gentler side of Steve Jobs, a side of Steve Jobs who I think was kept sort of hidden away and private to those people or to his family.”

The real-life Hoffman married Alain Rossmann, who also worked on the Mac team.

John Sculley

The real-life Sculley now lives in Palm Beach, Florida, where, according to his Twitter bio, he's a mentor, adviser, entrepreneur and investor in all things tech.