
I was coming up on a break, which I was actually quite looking forward to.

Vulture’s 2015 Fall Entertainment Generator: 308 Things to Watch, Hear, and Do And we were chatting one day in the trailer about what we were doing next. And the hair-and-makeup artist was someone who I’d known for a while. I was filming The Dressmaker in Australia in the middle of absolutely nowhere. This film came to me through incredibly unconventional channels. Let me enlighten you if I may, because I’m very aware that this film has been so talked about for such a long time, with it having been David Fincher and then it was Leo and then it was Christian Bale and then it moved on to Danny with Michael, and all the Sony hacks, et cetera. Now I’m going upstairs by myself with the phone to conduct the best interview of my entire life, I swear it. I am cooking everything, which is not remotely unusual. I’ve taken the bread out of the oven that I was baking, and it’s all systems go, just another day at the office. I’ve fed the baby and I’m about to feed the 11-year-old, and we have people coming over for supper, so I’ve checked on the chicken. I’ve got to get the 11-year-old babysitter now to take care of a 1-and-a-half-year-old. I promise I don’t start all my interviews like this. I’ll just open another one and try again. I don’t know why, it’s a nice enough bottle of rosé. ( Long pause.) It tastes like cider, that’s the bad news. I have a little bit of an issue with the wine.

(To Winslet) Am I not allowed to tell the gentleman that you’ve had a glass of wine? You’re going to share her with a glass of wine.

Ned: She’s just pouring herself a glass of wine. She regaled us with the backstory and more during preparations for another chaotic production, a dinner party at home in England.
Watch steve jobs 2015 movie online michael fassbendor series#
After lobbying producer Scott Rudin with an emailed photo of herself in a wig, Winslet disappeared into Hoffman, opposite Michael Fassbender’s Jobs, over the course of a whirlwind series of long, intricate scenes. Among its most interesting and salutary turns was Kate Winslet’s 11th-hour casting as Joanna Hoffman, the brunette Eastern European–born marketing guru who speaks truth to Jobs’s charismatic power. Steve Jobs, Aaron Sorkin and Danny Boyle’s selective biopic, ran a painfully public gauntlet to production, riddled with false starts, jettisoned stars, and even a supporting role in the Sony-hack saga. Photo: Francois Duhamel/© Universal Pictures Michael Stuhbarg, Michael Fassbender, and Kate Winslet in Steve Jobs
