
Work hard. Fail hard.
Two mismatched entrepreneurs – egghead innovator Mike Lazaridis and cut-throat businessman Jim Balsillie – joined forces in an endeavour that was to become a worldwide hit in little more than a decade. The story of the meteoric rise and catastrophic demise of the world's first smartphone.
- 7.1
- 2023
- Released
- 2h 0m

Jay Baruchel
Mike Lazaridis
Glenn Howerton
Jim Balsillie
Matt Johnson
Doug Fregin
Michael Ironside
Charles Purdy
Cary Elwes
Carl Yankowski
Saul Rubinek
John Woodman
Martin Donovan
Rick Brock
Rich Sommer
Paul Stanos
Michelle Giroux
Dara Frankel
SungWon Cho
Ritchie Cheung
Mark Critch
Gary Bettman
Kelly Van der Burg
Jasmine
Gregory Ambrose Calderone
Young Businessman #1
Laura Cilevitz
Shelly
James Elliot Miniou
Callaghan Drummond
Fuad Musayev
Derek
Michael Scott
Michael
Steve Hamelin
Steve
Ben Petrie
Allan
Lauren Howe
Bell Assistant
Stephanie Moran
Peggy
Maher El Hares
RIM 2 Engineer
Conor Casey
Justin Fabian
Dillon Casey
Mark Guibert
Eric Osborne
Austin
Derek Groulx
Security Derek
Rodrigo Fernandez-Stoll
Jack Manishen
Elena Juatco
Dawn
Malakai Fox
Kai
David Christo
Pilot
Sean Jones
Small SEC Investor
Evan Buliung
Stan Sigman (voice)
Gwynne Phillips
Real Estate Agent (uncredited)
Al Bernstein
Building Manager
Jinny Wong
Bank Manager
Samantha Brown
Heidi Balsillie
Keanu Lee Nunes
RIM Employee
Tyler Robinson
BlackBerry Engineer









Released
en
$5,000,000.00
$2,600,000.00
- #based on novel or book
- #technology
- #it-expert
- #silicon valley
- #satire
- #biography
- #based on true story
- #workplace
- #rise and fall
- #cell phone
- #phone
- #information technology
- #social history
- #communicating via phone
- #1990s
- #science and technology
- #smart phone
- #it professional
- #new technology
- #technological evolution
- #history and legacy
- #phone message
- #smartphone
- #digital technology
- #offbeat
- #advanced technology
- #make it happen
- #history and technology
- #humans and technology
Reviews

Thoroughly fascinating to watch this unfold. <em>'BlackBerry'</em> reminded me a lot of fellow 2023 flick <em>'Air'</em>, two movies that were in fact released within months of each other interestingly. Both are great watches, with this being one I particularly enjoyed. It's super well put together. The two hours go by fast, the story is presented in such a way that there wasn't a single mom
The downfall part is a bit sudden as compared to the first 2/3 of the film, but still a very fun watch.
With the release of such innovative communications products as the Apple and Android smartphones, questions began to circulate about the future viability of onetime market leader BlackBerry, a line of devices that subsequently went into rapid decline. Ironically, that real-life business world narrative itself raises comparable questions about the viability of a movie that tells the BlackBerry stor
In one sense, this is a comedic action film. In another sense, it's a biopic of a lying, cheating, ruthless, tech businessman of a slightly less rank than Bezos, Zuckerberg and the "Don't be Evil" Page/Brin team. Overall, it's brilliantly cast and paced. It moves along at the perfect clip for this kind of action film. I was interested in the technology, but that truly wasn't the story.
I kept hearing people say this movie was actually not bad for a movie about BalckBerry, and you know what, they were right! Glenn Howerton plays an incredibly entertaining psycho as always. Jay Baruchel does the befuddled muppet thing with aplomb. And then the doofus sidekick guy who's actually more insightful than others give him credit for also does a good job. It's an easy mindless entertainmen

The script seems to be written mostly from the perspective of Jim Balsillie, a businessman that was co-CEO of Blackberry, while engineers take a backseat. This follows the general tendency in film to glorify businessmen, treating the people who actually conceptualize, design and implement the products (i.e., do the core work that is societally useful) as mere sidekicks. The general timeline is
“Blackberry” is a film about the failure and spectacular collapse of the world’s first smart phone. Adapting Jacquie McNish and Sean Silcoff’s book “Losing the Signal: The Untold Story Behind the Extraordinary Rise and Spectacular Fall of BlackBerry” for the screen, director Matt Johnson creates an entertaining look at contemporary history with his tale of the rise and fall of a revolutionary gadg

Matt Johnson's rather John McEnroe-esque "Doug" rather stole this tale of what was literally a tech-tonic shift in how we used our mobile phones. He, together with his boss Mike (Jay Baruchel), has been working with a small team of geeks to develop a mobile word processor that can send messages by text and email. It's funding they lack and it's during a fairly flawed presentation that they encount











