Become a Member
Film

Why Aaron Sorkin is cinema's finest talent

Sorkin, who comes from a middle-class Jewish family from Scarsdale and started out as a playwright, is at the top of his game

November 26, 2015 12:46
Intense: Sorkin, below, wrote the new Jobs film starring Michael Fassbender

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

4 min read

There's a West Wing episode that culminates in the presidential team deciding it's time to "let Bartlet be Bartlet". It's time for the great man to let his convictions shine through, never mind the consequences. It's a mantra by which you suspect the show's creator, Aaron Sorkin, aims to live.

With a host of award-winning films and television shows under his belt, at the age of 54, Sorkin, who comes from a middle-class Jewish family from Scarsdale and started out as a playwright, is at the top of his game.

"In cinema terms he is your greatest writer," director Danny Boyle said recently, and many would agree. Not least Boyle who is winning plaudits for his latest film about Apple Svengali Steve Jobs, which Sorkin wrote. More than a quarter of a century after his first play, A Few Good Men, opened on Broadway, and nearly 10 years after The West Wing concluded, the mere mention of his name on a project is enough to get the entertainment world talking. He has come far since his very public arrest for drug possession in 2001.

His latest film, released last week, tells of the tumultuous years preceding the launch of Apple's iMac in 1998. Directed by Boyle and starring Michael Fassbender as Jobs and Seth Rogen as Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, the film opened to broad if not universal acclaim. While it's perhaps not as sharp as Sorkin's 2010 Oscar-winning script for The Social Network, it's undoubtedly another triumph and he is likely to be in line for a few trophies come award season.