Steve Jobs is one of my favorite biopics. Sorkin adapted Walter Isaacson's authorized biography into a weird narrative construct where all the key interactions between the characters occur at three product release shows. That obviously didn't happen, but Sorkin needed a way to get the key characters at the same spot because he didn't want to write 100 scenes at 100 sets. Sorkin shoehorned decades of interactions into those three acts that in the movie each take place over the space of about an hour. And he nailed it. He nailed the characters, he nailed their relationship with each other, and he told a great movie about a complex person in a complicated industry. As validation, Steve Wozniak loved the movie.
And that is my problem with Bohemian Rhapsody. There are inherent problems with biopics, and I am willing to give writers a long leash in adapting someone's life to the big screen, but when there is a full-blown white washing of the main characters then I feel a little robbed by the writers. There isn't going to be another biopic about Freddie Mercury and Queen, and this one left a lot out of important things out of the story.