Asides

Something to watch tonight: Wednesday 15 May

By May 15, 2024No Comments

BlackBerry (Johnson, 2023)

The cur­rent trend for films about nos­tal­gic brands and products is one that has largely passed me by.

As a pro­fes­sion­al, I should prob­ably not admit that I haven’t even seen Tetris, Flamin’ Hot, Air or the new Jerry Seinfeld film about Pop-Tarts, Unfrosted.

Last year I did review The Beanie Bubble (“… there is much fun to be had at the expense of the fash­ion and the cul­ture as well as the cor­por­ate excess that often fol­lows when the mar­ket­ing of cheap Chinese-made plastic tat makes you a bil­lion­aire”) and that film is pretty close in tone to Matt Johnson’s BlackBerry.

Covering a sim­il­ar era (the 90s to the early 2000s), and with a com­par­ably extra­vag­ant approach to the truth, BlackBerry is the story of RIM, the plucky little Canadian tech­no­logy star­tup that inven­ted the mod­ern smart­phone but was brought down by pride and hubris.

The most nom­in­ated film ever in the his­tory of the Canadian Screen Awards – due to be handed out in a couple of weeks – it’s the Canadian-ness that is part of this film’s appeal. There’s some­thing about the plucky under­dog that makes the RIM story, and the unlikely char­ac­ters at its centre, easy to get behind.

Mike Lazaridis (Jay Baruchel) and Doug Fregin (co-writer and dir­ect­or Matt Johnson) were best friends from grade school. In the 90s they built a small tech star­tup spe­cial­ising in build­ing these new fangled things called modems that allowed people to get on to the inter­net from their homes.

The dream, even then, was to have a device that you could carry around that could also get online but mobile com­mu­nic­a­tions were con­trolled by cel­lu­lar pro­viders who took great care to pro­tect their net­works, as well as their minute-by-minute revenues.

Lazaridis developed a device that could send and receive email without over­load­ing those mobile net­works, chan­ging the game entirely. That device became BlackBerry, and with the aggress­ive (to say the least) sup­port of early investor and co-CEO Jim Balsillie (Glenn Howerton), it went on to become a tech­no­lo­gic­al and cul­tur­al phenomenon.

I don’t recall BlackBerry being that big a deal here in New Zealand – some­thing to do with our tiny mar­ket and the fact that their serv­ers were in Waterloo, Canada, strain­ing to keep the whole thing afloat. So, I didn’t own one but was an early adop­ter of many com­pet­ing devices dur­ing this peri­od, includ­ing an early PalmPilot and a beau­ti­ful but fun­da­ment­ally use­less per­son­al organ­iser called an iPaq PocketPC.

The film brings that era flood­ing back. The endorph­in rush of being able to com­mu­nic­ate instantly with almost any­one around the world, and the way it encour­aged us to check out of real-life situ­ations and stare at our phones instead.

RIM appears to have run almost entirely on adren­aline and testoster­one. There’s one not­able shot where the blow­hard new COO (played by legend Michael Ironside) tells a room full of engin­eers that they have very small pen­ises and the cam­era settles on the dis­com­fited face of the one woman on the team.

Johnson pre­vi­ously wrote, dir­ec­ted and starred in my favour­ite ‘fake moon land­ings’ film, Operation Avalanche, which played in the 2016 New Zealand International Film Festival, and the style here is sim­il­ar to mock­u­ment­ary but without the con­ceit of a fake cam­era crew. Visuals are largely hand­held and shot through win­dows into intern­al offices, through a crowd of faces at a board­room table, or from a dis­tance across dreary diners.

It’s as if someone is gath­er­ing evid­ence for these guys’ inev­it­able comeuppance.

By the way, it’s not all that much of a mor­al­ity tale. All three of the RIM lead­ers at the centre of the story are still among the richest people in Canada, if not the world, and BlackBerry, the com­pany, still has rev­en­ues of over US$500m a year (although zero remain­ing cul­tur­al capital).


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Where to watch BlackBerry

The con­tent below was ori­gin­ally paywalled.

Aotearoa: Streaming on Netflix

Australia: Streaming on Binge or Paramount+

Canada: Digital rental

Ireland: Streaming on Paramount+

USA: Streaming on Hulu or AMC+. There’s also an exten­ded three-part TV ver­sion avail­able for stream­ing on AMC+

UK: Streaming on Paramount+ or NowTV