Summary Capsule
Mutant Meter
Movie Store [proceeds go toward monthly MRFH upkeep]
The story is great, I love how the fight club evolves. I won't tell you what it evolves into, that would spoil it. But it's a neat process. Now the ending was definitely weird. I mean, mondo bizarro. For awhile, I was like what is going on? But by the very end it sort of makes sense. Sort of. Anyway, it's a cool movie, very entertaining and very much worth the over two hours I spent watching it. I'd definitely watch it again and I recommend it to all guys. Girls, no offense, might not like it so much. It depends on the girl. But give it a try, it's definitely an experience.
Brad Pitt is as intense here as I've ever seen him, but I was definitely more taken with Ed Norton's performance. He's got this way of walking around with an innocent, wide-eyed look as he delves deeper and deeper into the night life of what basically amounts to human cockfighting (minds out of gutter, girls). He perpetually looks entranced by what goes on around him, and it's a great contrast to his surrounding. Argh. I'm not going to be able to put this the way I want to (I'm still a little upset at having seen Very Bad Things the day after I saw this), but I really loved Fight Club. Roll up your sleeves, put up your dukes, and check it out. And keep your eyes open. Maybe you'll be able to see the ending coming before I did. (no great feat, but hey, I can't help that I'm slow!)
Ed Norton plays an office worker without a life, who finds the best way to feel alive is to live through other people’s miseries at support group meetings. This leads to him meeting skankily-hot Marla (Helena Bonham Carter) and then Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). This leads to forming Fight Club. I will tell you nothing more. Sorry! Be surprised! Fight Club, thanks in no small part to director David Fincher (Alien 3, The Game), is one of the dirtiest and darkest films I’ve ever seen. Every minute you’ll hear another cool line you’ll want to print on tee-shirts and wear proudly to work. It’s brilliantly acted, with one of the most complex and impressive plots I’ve ever seen, and in a year without The Sixth Sense it would have had the ultimate climatic twist of 1999. And there isn’t as much blood as you’d think! Well, there is some. But it’s not too bad. Nothing you haven’t seen in the Die Hard trilogy a hundred times before. Prepare yourself for a few blood-spraying fistfights and the sound of facial bones crunching, and you’ll be fine. Oh, and you see a few bags of liposuctioned human fat, but it’s nothing you couldn’t find nightly spilled all over Sunset Boulevard. See Fight Club! It’s not as violent as you might have heard, it’s more engaging and thought-provoking than you’d think, and you’ll finally find out the cool significance of that pink soap you see on the video box. Where can I buy some?
Anyway, it'd take many many paragraphs to even begin to analyze this film, and I don't feel like doing that. Besides, you might utterly hate this movie. It's inventive, but also subversive. It's violent, and the mixed signals anyone could get out of this is potentially scary. My previous boss was all hot to get involved in a real fight club (and the poor white boy has never even thrown a real punch). To tell you the truth, I'm not even SURE what the ultimate message of Fight Club is. But I like it a lot, a heckuva lot. It's a dark morality tale, and Edward Norton and Brad Pitt breathe life into a new underground cluture. I guess the attraction of the movie is a lot like the concept of the fight club: it's alluring, exciting, yet also dangerous. I don't mind the huge twist at the end (unlike the bewildering and stupid twists of films like American Psycho and Wild Things). The entire movie is set up very specifically: when you know what you're looking for, the clues are all there, the themes are all structured, and the film is not clever just to be clever (thus the irony of Pitt's early statement to Norton about coming up with clever phrases). Geez, is this film smart, tho. I just know everyone will have a different reaction to seeing Fight Club, and it'd almost be worth it to know them. Sure, you could skip out of renting this in order to see something a bit less dangerous, but you also won't have lived fully in the cinematic world.
Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]
Groovy Quotes
Narrator: If I did have a tumor, I'd name it Marla. Tyler: The things you own end up owning you. Narrator: I can't get married. I'm a 30 year old boy. Marla: The condom is the glass slipper of our generation. Tyler: First rule of Fight Club, you do not talk about Fight Club. Second rule of Fight Club, you DO NOT talk about Fight Club. Third rule of Fight Club, when someone say "stop" or goes limp, the fight is over. Fourth rule of Fight Club, only two guys to a fight. Fifth rule of Fight Club, one fight at a time. Sixth rule of Fight Club, no shirt, no shoes. Seventh rule of Fight Club, fights go on as long as they have to. Eighth and final rule of Fight Club, if this is your first night at Fight Club, you have to fight. Narrator: This is your life and it's ending one minute at a time. Narrator: Marla was like that cut on the roof of your mouth that would go away if you'd stop tonguing it, but you can't. DVD Review
Even more scenes (9, actually) are presented in the "Behind the Scenes-Visual Effects" submenu, showing the creation of various visual effects in Fight Club with an accompianing commentary (and either storyboards or something else to look at). The "Behind the Scenes-On Location" is your standard film promo documentary showing a lot of behind the scenes stuff, including special effects and outtakes. I suppose this would be a nice time to note one of the only bad things about the DVD - when you select the menus (on the main menu screen), the choices and little notes beside it are very faint and hard to read (yellow does not a good selection color make). Moving on to "Deleted/Altered Scenes", there are seven scenes to view; most of these are different versions of the same scenes (although there is the infamous alternate dialogue Marla uses in bed). Hi-yo Silver, the "Publicity Material" menu is a press kit's dream: 3 Fight Club trailers, 17 TV spots (gee, is that all?), 2 PSAs from Jack and Tyler (these are hilarious), 5 internet spots, a Dust Brothers music video, a promotional gallery with lobby cards, the press kit, and stills to peruse through, and a transcript of an interview with Edward Norton. Finally, the "Art Gallery" menu offers storyboards, visual effects stills, and, oh gee, just a lot of pretty things to look at. This one DVD alone took me a couple hours to sift through, and it's about the most complete supplimental materials ever compiled in one place. Hey, and that finally gets us to the first disc, which has the movie. Remember the movie? Well, it also comes with not one, not two, three, but FOUR seperate commentary tracks. Four! You know, I'm as thrilled as the next movie freak to get a good commentary track, but I hardly ever will listen to one more than once, forget four of them! The sound and image of this DVD are about as excellent as they get, and if there ever was a movie where a DVD player was absolutely necessary to watch (and freeze frame for all those important little clues), Fight Club is it. Soundtrack Review
If you liked this movie, try these:
Comment On This Review Page In Our Feedback Forum! This review page was last updated on 12.25.07 MRFH Home . Reviews . Findaflik . Features! . MRFH Forum © 2007 Mutant Reviewers From Hell (Original Content). All Rights Reserved. |