Joybubbles discovers he can manipulate the telephone system by whistling a magic tone. Born blind and yearning for connection, his early obsession unwittingly lays the groundwork for a subculture that shapes the future of hacking and technology.
Directed by Rachael J. Morrison
IMDB
N/A
Letterboxd
3.6 / 5
Cast
Steve Wozniak
Crew
Bradford Thomason
Editor
Patrick Lawrence
Editor
Sarah Winshall
Producer
Rhianon Jones
Executive Producer
George Rush
Executive Producer
Ashley Connor
Cinematography
Popular Reviews
4 reviews
bailey
10.0★ · 01/30/26
#1 hopecore and jell-o fan
#1 hopecore and jell-o fan
Cameron Ritter
Sundance #32
Sundance #32
Cinergy
9.0★ · 01/29/26
Probably too sincere and face value for most audiences, but as a fellow disabled man, it gave me a warm embrace of the heart to see a disabled man find his joy and place in the world, a world that, in his own words wasn't:
answering my question.
So many people don't when they're of the opinion that you're inferior and need help, they don't feel that your question is of adult relevance.
Even in the present, as my health worsens from an immune disorder, I encounter this from medical professionals, coworkers and bosses. To be disabled and successful in the present day, you have to work twice as hard and excel in every minute you are "on" just to make up for how you are differently abled than the average able person around you. As such, seeing this man find his peace and joy and community lowered my personal emotional guard and had me tearing up throughout. It was Mr Rogers for the soul, and words can barely express what that means to me.
Probably too sincere and face value for most audiences, but as a fellow disabled man, it gave me a warm embrace of the heart to see a disabled man find his joy and place in the world, a world that, in his own words wasn't:
answering my question.
So many people don't when they're of the opinion that you're inferior and need help, they don't feel that your question is of adult relevance.
Even in the present, as my health worsens from an immune disorder, I encounter this from medical professionals, coworkers and bosses. To be disabled and successful in the present day, you have to work twice as hard and excel in every minute you are "on" just to make up for how you are differently abled than the average able person around you. As such, seeing this man find his peace and joy and community lowered my personal emotional guard and had me tearing up throughout. It was Mr Rogers for the soul, and words can barely express what that means to me.