hav u seen fight club????
By navkrishna9
@navkrishna9 (5)
India
October 30, 2006 7:20am CST
cast - brad pitt ......watch it man sxc muvie
Fight Club is an exciting, dangerous, and intense story about an unnamed corporate worker played by the great Edward Norton who suffers from insomnia and attends group counseling for illnesses and conditions he doesn't have. His life gets turned around when he meets Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). The two start an underground"fight club," which becomes a sort of secret society that continually grows, even though its members are not supposed to talk about it. Fight Club allows members to feel alive by triggering primal emotions not usually tested in modern life. The powerless feel powerful once again.
Meat Loaf has an interesting role as Bob, a big man with testicular cancer and hormonal problems. Helena Bonham Carter is at her best as Marla Singer, a screwed-up hanger-on who also attends group counseling simply for the human connection.
This movie takes a wrong turn when it attempts to make a larger statement by turning Fight Club into a militia bent on destroying everything that numbs American lives. The movie presents the militia as a mindless cult who follow their leader without question. The ultimate message of Fight Club is that there is no solution for feeling dead in modern society, except to maybe stop and smell the roses once in a while.
2 responses
@kvarun88 (274)
• India
20 May 12
I love this movie dude..! One of the best ever..! If u guys got the time do read the book Fight club as well..! both are awesome..!
@MrKennedy (1978)
•
14 Feb 10
It is one my most favourite films AND books. I found it so original and creative, and was certainly thought-provoking in many aspects
For me, the film takes the egde over the book, and even Fight Club's author, Chuck Palahniuk thinks so too
What I do find ironic however is how Fight Club has become a contradiction of itself. Throughout the movie and book, it rants about consumerism, although after the film's release, it generated so much merchandise, like T-shirts and memoribillia, and even a (terrible) video-game