You don't get to 500 million friends without making some enemies. |
Review Vital Stats:
Theater: AMC 30 at the Block
Time: 5:25 pm - Friday October 8th
Screen Type: Digital
Biases:
Loves: David Fincher
Likes: True stories
Neutral: Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield, Justin Timberlake
David Fincher is my hero, this guy has never let me down. When a Fincher movie comes out I do not hesitate to recommend it to everyone and anyone I know. His filmography is nothing short of amazing with such notables as Fight Club, Seven, Zodiac, and more recently The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. If you were to look at his films in the order they were released you would see a common theme which is that with each new film he makes he gets further and further away from the exploitative nature of his past works and gets closer and closer to being considered an A list dramatic director. The Social Network I believe is the end point of that pursuit where he finally has a film that is driven by nothing more than pure dialogue and acting.
Now there isn't really a whole lot to go into as far as plot is concerned for this film. Most everyone out there knows it is an account of what transpired during the creation of the largest social networking site in the world, Facebook. I, like many others, was curious as to how a movie about a website could be done in a way that wouldn't bore the hell out of me. Well, like I said before, director David Fincher should have never been doubted because he and writer Aaron Sorkin have delivered one of the most engrossing films of the year. I am not entirely sure about the legitimacy of the actions depicted here unlike others but I am sure that I like it...a lot.
Meet Mark Zuckerberg, the youngest billionaire in the world. |
By doing this (which he did in 4 hours time) his site becomes popular so fast that it eventually crashes the entire Harvard network. This catches the eye or eyes of twin brothers, Harvard elite athletes and basically spoiled rich boys Cameron & Tyler Winklevoss (both played by Armie Hammer) as well as Divya Narendra (played by Max Minghella). They have an idea for a social network where all of Harvard's students can keep up with their friends through the Internet and they want Mark to build it for them. It isn't exactly My Space is what they say because this will be locked out to anyone not part of the Harvard alumni. They tell Mark this idea which he then uses to make something even better all the while keeping the twins in the dark thinking he is still working for them.
Eduardo tries to explain his idea on how to monetize Facebook. |
The film does not have as straight forward a narrative as that sounds though due to how it inter-cuts between Mark Zuckerberg in the middle of two legal battles that arose once Facebook became huge, one with the Winklevoss twins and another with his friend Eduardo, while also showing us how Facebook came together. It all flows flawlessly and as a matter of fact every scene in this film flows with a natural but quick pace. Every single person in this film save for maybe the lawyers talks at a rapid fire pace which is borderline too fast at times. It gives you a good sense as to how smart all these people are but at the same time I don't think anyone can talk that fast and be that clear without missing a beat.
Divya and the Winklevoss twins trying to get a piece of the pie. |
Jesse Eisenberg...I have always put him in the same category as Michael Cera. They both share that same off center sarcastic tone to their rhythm of speech and both actors have either not really tried or have found it hard to get away from those now cliche character types. As I was happy for Michael Cera earlier this past summer, I am now equally as happy for Jesse Eisenberg. He has taken that type-cast character he gets and has turned him into a determined asshole of a genius. A kind of guy that is only a jerk to others because he has no other way to talk to people. As with all misunderstood intellectual masterminds he has no way to relate to others and because of that he makes Facebook where he can meet and talk to people without ever really meeting or talking to them.
Meet the real asshole of the film, Sean Parker. |
I think that it is funny that so much attention in the media was paid to how Mark Zuckerberg was portrayed where he came out OK in my opinion. I think this is funny because the man behind Napster, Sean Parker (played by Justin Timberlake) is the guy that gets it really bad in the film. I am unsure what exactly this man is about in real life but I know I think he is the worlds biggest douche bag based solely on how he is portrayed here. He comes into Mark Zuckerberg's and Eduardo Saverin's lives at a key turning point for Facebook and he shakes things up in a good but mostly bad way. Sure, he may be the guy that got Facebook its current status but man did he step on some toes to get it there. I hold no ill will towards the man but he makes Mark seem like a saint.
Mark and Eduardo trying to work things out. |
I like this film and judging from the high score on Rotten Tomatoes I believe this could end up being David Fincher's prize production come Oscar time next year. I would have liked to seen him win for Zodiac which I still think is one of the best movies of the past decade, but I will take this as well. It is his first true drama without any whimsical or thriller aspects thrown in and it is a dam good one at that. And just as a side note, if you get the chance I would highly recommend making this a double feature and checking out Catfish afterwards, I am not doing a written review for that film (due to it being sort of unconventional) but it makes a great follow up to this. As far The Social Network is concerned though...
CHECK IT OUT IMMEDIATELY
2 comments:
Good review! i hope i get the time to check this out!
It is really good, go see it now, lol.
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