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  Matt
  
Willis
Fight Club
USA, 1999
[David Fincher]
Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, Helena Bonham-Carter, Meatloaf, Jared Leto
Drama
  
Similar in idea to American Beauty but certainly not in style or content this bleak look at underground culture and the spiritual redemption it brings is easily one of the most intelligent films I've ever seen. Directed by the same man who brought us the excellent The Game and Se7en this is another film you'll have to see more than once to truly understand. Focusing primarily on sad white-collar middle-class Ed Norton whose only real dream in life is to own the entire contents of an IKEA catalogue, it follows him through a chance meeting with charismatic stranger Brad Pitt and the unfortunate events which conspire to draw them together. After a night's hard drinking and moralising they start a friendly-ish scrap which is viewed by a couple of others and from that small acorn a mighty oak called Fight Club grows.

This is the point around which the whole film revolves with Norton and Pitt forming an underground club which draws more and more disillusioned young men to join it. Based on firm 'Queensbury Rules' it is a cathartic if bloody way to spend your night. Eventually as it becomes a huge operation Pitt, the de facto leader, steps it up a gear and creates his own cult from this secret society. This is where the film becomes sensationally brilliant and the twist near the end is magnificent, better even than the much-hyped
The Sixth Sense. It just has so much to say about things: the emasculation of an entire generation of young men ("no great war, no great depression"), the growing isolation we all feel from one another and the need to find something to draw us back together and most importantly, the power of an exciting, challenging idea and it's fermentation into cultism.

However, where many films would automatically say, 'This is a bad thing',
Fight Club doesn't. It's more of a cinematic condemnation of a materialistic society which has forgotton, or ignored, a large section of itself. You can emphathise with these men completely, even when they band together against this uncaring society which has reared them to be something their instincts don't understand. It's as close to true genius as you'll get and one film you'll talk about and think about for months.
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