Add movie star to the many accomplishments of the late Steve Jobs.

One of Steve Jobs' most memorable TV interviews appeared in the 1995 PBS miniseries Triumph of the Nerds. Just 10 minutes of footage of Jobs at his bitter best -- he'd just been ousted from Apple, the company he co-founded -- made it into the documentary, but the special's filmmaker has turned up the complete 70-minute interview he conducted with Jobs.

Also read: 'Steve Jobs' Bio Becomes Fastest-Selling Book Since George W. Bush's Memoir

The complete chat, titled Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview, will be released for a two-day-only showing in Landmark Theaters on Nov. 16 and 17.

Robert Cringely, the producer of Triumph of the Nerds, thought the original tape of his interview with Jobs had been lost. But the tape resurfaced after Jobs' Oct. 5 death, and Cringely tells the Los Angeles Times an email exchange with Landmark owner Mark Cuban led to a deal to turn the VHS tape interview into a big-screen worthy project.

Also read: Stephen Colbert Thanks Steve Jobs (Video)

Steve Jobs: The Lost Interview includes Jobs thoughts on the company that he felt had betrayed him, and lighter moments, according to Cringely, like Jobs' anecdote about pretending to be Henry Kissinger and prank calling the pope.

He was great that day, Cringely told the Times. He was a cranky guy. I think we see that.