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Believe it or not, I’d never touched one before we started making this movie,’ says writer-director-actor Matt Johnson, leaning back in his chair in Berlin’s Hyatt hotel. ‘I never touched a BlackBerry.’ Maybe that says it all. For the iPhone and Android generation, the BlackBerry might feel as antiquated as a gramophone. But for those who lived through the early 2000s, the handheld device – with a physical keyboard, it allowed you to make calls and, crucially, receive and send emails – was a game-changer.
Created by Research in Motion (RIM), a Canadian tech start-up run by friends Mike Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin, the BlackBerry story is the ultimate Icarus tale. Or, as authors Jacquie McNish and Sean Silcoff called their 2015 account, Losing the Signal: The Untold Story Behind the Extraordinary Rise and Spectacular Fall of BlackBerry. Once controlling over 50% of the global smartphone market, by 2016 RIM’s market share, staggeringly, was 0%.
For Johnson and his co-writer Matthew Miller (who previously co-produced Johnson’s 2013), McNish and Silcoff’s book was the perfect source for an indie take on one of the biggest tech stories of the 21st century. Joining the likes of David Fincher’s Facebook drama and Danny Boyle’s tale of Apple’s founder, , the resulting script – simply titled – startled those that read it.