Fight club : a journey into Jack’s sick brain
In 1999, American cinema was doing very well Sixth Sense, Matrix, As John Malkovich OR Fight club. Films that reveal or confirm the talent of innovative directors such as David Fincher, one of the first directors to reveal entirely digital environments, with the aim of creating “mental journeys”, in the words of special effects supervisor Dominique Vidal.
Fight Club: drug addicts, Brad Pitt and Edward Norton attend a disastrous screening
In Fight club, this journey takes place in the sick mind of the narrator played by Edward Norton. Sleepless, the latter can no longer stand the daily routine and realizes that he no longer has a real goal or belief. In addition to furniture and supplies from a major Swedish brand that he purchases mechanically, this character finds comfort in support groups focused on various pathologies, in which he regularly meets the enigmatic Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter).
Her life changes when she meets Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt), a free-spirited soap producer who has no problem with the narrator’s materialistic considerations. After hitting it off, they create an underground fight club together that allows the narrator to feel fully alive again. But as Fight Club gains more and more followers, the protagonist realizes that Tyler has actually come up with a much bigger and more devastating plan.
A disappointing ending for Chuck Palahniuk
Warning, the following lines contain spoilers!
At the end of Fight club, the narrator suffering from schizophrenia manages to kill Tyler, his lookalike, by shooting himself in the mouth. The latter carried out his plan by placing explosive charges in the buildings where financial companies have their headquarters, to bring down the American banking system. In a nearby building, the narrator and Marla witness the destruction of the buildings hand in hand about the song Where is my Mind? Goblins.
A conclusion that differs from that of the novel of the same name by Chuck Palahniuk. In work, the bombs planted by the narrator do not work and his ruse fails. The protagonist shoots himself in the head, before waking up in a psychiatric hospital. The author has already made it known that he is not a fan of David Fincher’s approach, who chose to end his film with “a spectacular view”, too far from his work for his liking.
In an interview given to Varietyexplained Chuck Palahniuk he’s also not a fan of the final countdown idea of the feature film, the narrator tries to defuse a bomb before realizing that he won’t have time to prevent all the explosions. The writer said about it:
I wasn’t a big fan of time bombs, of this countdown to the end. And the writer Jim Uhls used it because it’s a cliché, but I’ve learned to accept that it’s a cliché.
Source: Cine Serie
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