 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
|
  |
  |
  |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
  |
Fight Club
Directed By: David Fincher
Produced By: Ross Bell, Cean Chaffin, Art Linson
Written
By: Chuck Palahniuk (novel), Jim Uhls
Cinematography By:
Jeff Cronenweth
Music By: Howard Shore
Distributed By: 20th Century
Fox
Rating: R
Running Time: 139 Minutes
Cast: Brad Pitt,
Edward Norton
Helena Bonham Carter, Meat Loaf,
Zach Grenier, Jared
Leto, Eion Baily
|
 |
|   |
 |
 |
What it's about:
|
 |
  |
  |
  |
  |
  |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
Jack (Norton), a man in a dead end corporate job, meets up with a man named Tyler
Durden (Pitt). Together they start up a secret fight club where people can vent
their frustrations on each other. The secret fight club becomes an underground
cult that spawns many other fight clubs. But as the popularity rises the riskier
the stakes get. All that and throw in a girl and things go bad real quick.
|
 |
|   |
 |
The Review
Roger Ebert, Chicago Sun-Times
|
  |
  |
  |
  |
 |
|   |
 |
"Fight Club" is the most frankly and cheerfully fascist big-star movie since "Death
Wish," a celebration of violence in which the heroes write themselves a license
to drink, smoke, screw and beat one another up.
Sometimes, for variety,
they beat up themselves. It's macho porn--the sex movie Hollywood has been moving
toward for years, in which eroticism between the sexes is replaced by all-guy
locker-room fights. Women, who have had a lifetime of practice at dealing with
little-boy posturing, will instinctively see through it; men may get off on
the testosterone rush. The fact that it is very well made and has a great first
act certainly clouds the issue.
Edward Norton stars as a depressed urban
loner filled up to here with angst. He describes his world in dialogue of sardonic
social satire. His life and job are driving him crazy. As a means of dealing
with his pain, he seeks out 12-step meetings, where he can hug those less fortunate
than himself and find catharsis in their suffering. It is not without irony
that the first meeting he attends is for post-surgical victims of testicular
cancer, since the whole movie is about guys afraid of losing their cojones.
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
These early scenes have a nice sly tone; they're narrated by the Norton character
in the kind of voice Nathanael West used in Miss Lonelyhearts. He's known only
as the Narrator, for reasons later made clear. The meetings are working as a sedative,
and his life is marginally manageable when tragedy strikes: He begins
to notice Marla (Helena Bonham Carter) at meetings. She's a "tourist" like himself--someone
not addicted to anything but meetings. She spoils it for him. He knows
he's a faker, but wants to believe everyone else's pain is real.
On an
airplane, he has another key encounter, with Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt), a man
whose manner cuts through the fog. He seems able to see right into the Narrator's
soul, and shortly after, when the Narrator's high-rise apartment turns into
a fireball, he turns to Tyler for shelter. He gets more than that. He gets in on
the ground floor of Fight Club, a secret society of men who meet in order to
find freedom and self-realization through beating one another into pulp.
|
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt) in "Fight Club"
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
IIt's at about this point that the movie stops being smart and savage and witty, and
turns to some of the most brutal, unremitting, nonstop violence ever filmed.
Although sensible people know that if you hit someone with an ungloved hand hard
enough, you're going to end up with broken bones, the guys in "Fight Club" have
fists of steel, and hammer one another while the sound effects guys beat the
hell out of Naugahyde sofas with Ping-Pong paddles. Later, the movie takes still
another turn. A lot of recent films seem unsatisfied unless they can add final
scenes that redefine the reality of everything that has gone before; call it
the Keyser Soze syndrome.
What is all this about? According to Durden, it
is about freeing yourself from the shackles of modern life, which imprisons and
emasculates men. By being willing to give and receive pain and risk death, Fight
Club members find freedom. Movies like "Crash" must play like cartoons for
Durden. He's a shadowy, charismatic figure, able to inspire a legion of men in
big cities to descend into the secret cellars of a Fight Club and beat one another
up.
|
 |
|   |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter) and Jack (Edward Norton) in "Fight Club"
|
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Only gradually are the final outlines of his master plan revealed. Is Tyler Durden
in fact a leader of men with a useful philosophy? "It's only after we've lost
everything that we're free to do anything," he says, sounding like a man who tripped
over the Nietzsche display on his way to the coffee bar in Borders. In my
opinion, he has no useful truths. He's a bully--Werner Erhard plus S & M, a leather
club operator without the decor. None of the Fight Club members grows stronger
or freer because of their membership; they're reduced to pathetic cultists.
Issue them black shirts and sign them up as skinheads. Whether Durden represents
hidden aspects of the male psyche is a question the movie uses as a loophole--but
is not able to escape through, because "Fight Club" is not about its ending
but about its action.
Of course, "Fight Club" itself does
not advocate Durden's philosophy. It is a warning against it, I guess; one critic
I like says it makes "a telling point about the bestial nature of man and
what can happen when the numbing effects of day-to-day drudgery cause people to
go a little crazy." I think it's the numbing effects of movies like this that
cause people go to a little crazy. Although sophisticates will be able to rationalize
the movie as an argument against the behavior it shows, my guess is that
audience will like the behavior but not the argument. Certainly they'll buy tickets
because they can see Pitt and Norton pounding on each other; a lot more people
will leave this movie and get in fights than will leave it discussing Tyler
Durden's moral philosophy. The images in movies like this argue for themselves,
and it takes a lot of narration (or Narration) to argue against them.
Lord
knows the actors work hard enough. Norton and Pitt go through
almost as much physical suffering in this movie as Demi Moore endured in "G.I.
Jane," and Helena Bonham Carter creates a feisty chain-smoking hellcat who is probably
so angry because none of the guys thinks having sex with her is as much
fun as a broken nose. When you see good actors in a project like this, you wonder
if they signed up as an alternative to canyoneering. The movie was directed
by David Fincher and written by Jim Uhls, who adapted the novel by Chuck Palahniuk.
In many ways, it's like Fincher's movie "The Game" (1997), with the violence
cranked up for teenage boys of all ages. That film was also about a testing
process in which a man drowning in capitalism (Michael Douglas) has the rug of
his life pulled out from under him and has to learn to fight for survival. I admired
"The Game" much more than "Fight Club" because it was really about its theme,
while the message in "Fight Club" is like bleeding scraps of Socially Redeeming
Content thrown to the howling mob.
Fincher is a good director
(his work includes "Alien 3," one of the best-looking bad movies I have
ever seen, and "Seven," the grisly and intelligent thriller). With "Fight Club"
he seems to be setting himself some kind of a test--how far over the top can he
go? The movie is visceral and hard-edged, with levels of irony and commentary
above and below the action. If it had all continued in the vein explored in the
first act, it might have become a great film. But the second act is pandering
and the third is trickery, and whatever Fincher thinks the message is, that's
not what most audience members will get. "Fight Club" is a thrill ride masquerading
as philosophy--the kind of ride where some people puke and others can't wait
to get on again.
|
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
Other Reviews:
|
 |
  |
  |
  |
  |
  |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
The Blair Witch Project (1999)
|
  |
  |
  |
  |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
The Sixth Sense (1999)
|
  |
  |
  |
  |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
  |
  |
 |
Click below to return to
|
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
  |
  |
 |
 |
|   |
 |
 |
 |
 |
  |
 |
 |
  |
  |
 |
  |
![]() |
  |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|