Friday, April 27, 2012

Fight Club musical in the works (possibly with Trent Reznor)


<em>Fight Club</em> musical in the works (possibly with Trent Reznor)
When you watch Fight Club, do you think muscles or musicals, testosterone or theater, six packs or stage sets? (Really, we could do this all day.) Fear not, dear reader, because you no longer need to file David Fincher’s 1999 classic solely in each of those former designations.
This is because Fight Club is slated to become a Broadway musical. In a recent interview with MTV.com, Fincher expressed interest in a truly theatrical interpretation of the film, which would hit the Great White Way in 2009, ten years after the film’s original release. There isn't much else going on with the project, aside from the fact that Fight Clubauthor Chuck Palahniuk has agreed to it and Trent Reznor has expressed interest in developing the music. Of course, we'll keep you posted as things develop.

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Chuck Palahniuk: The Mind Behind Fight Club

 Interviewed by Andrew O. Thompson (Sept/Oct 2004)






“All my books are about achieving the isolation that our culture tells us should make us happy. Someone has gotten onto an island or into a high-rise condo and is completely cut off from all ‘the jerks’ in the world. That’s supposed to make them happy, but they are more miserable than they ever were. So they create circumstances—whether or not they are aware of it—which force them on a quest to reconnect with people.”

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Fight Club (10th Anniversary Edition)


A beautiful and unique snowflake

David Fincher’s film adaptation of Chuck Palahniuk’s Fight Clubdoesn’t tell us anything about consumerism that we don’t already know. That’s exactly why it’s a stunning piece of cinema, and a searing indictment of a society wandering a labyrinth of material comfort and spiritual discontent.
Edward Norton’s unnamed insomniac milquetoast is a font of dark comedy, playing the suit to Brad Pitt’s cocksure and scenery-devouring Tyler Durden. Their titular hyper-violent recreational group represents the ultimate escape from the nepenthe of the “Ikea nesting instinct,” promising a return to the Paradise Lost of a mythical ideal masculinity. The end result is a gun in Norton’s mouth and the realization that we are destined to either destroy the illusions we create, or be destroyed by them. You are more than your khakis, and this is more than a movie: It’s a brutal portrait of our own quiet desperation.


By Michael Saba

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Tyler Durden turns 10 (in film years)



soap“This is your life and it’s ending one minute at a time.”
Ten YEARS later…
Has it really been ten years since Edward Norton trembled with the taste of gun metal in his mouth? It’s been a decade since Brad Pitt wore leather and fur and taught us what it meant to be a man? I won’t deny it, when I saw this darkly appealing film in 1999 I felt like David Fincher andChuck Palniuk had hit me as hard as they could… and I liked it.
From the scathing critique of group therapy sessions, to the masculine renewal of fighting, to the logical extension of will-to-power, Fight Club’s story and panache punched its way to cult status and even a critical turnaround to earn itself an 81% on Rotten Tomatoes and onto several critical lists as one of the greatest movies of all time. Perhaps the only significant holdout reviewer is Ebert, who gave Fincher’s film 1.5 stars back in 1999. (NOTE: the same year, Roger Ebert gave 3.5 stars to The Phantom Menace – anyone feel like they just got hit in the ear?)
fight clubI thought it was worthwhile to break the first rule and talk about Fight Club once again, since my wife and I recently inducted a new member into the club and she thoughtfully muses on the film, and the novel that inspired it, in her blog post “I am Jack’s Random Thoughts“. In addition, the nomenclature has even permeated Christendom, as a friend of mine is speaking at the Fight Club ’09 Men’s Training Day in Atlanta this August. The influence of this film lives on, like little Marla Singer… the little scratch on the roof of your mouth that would heal if only you could stop tonguing it, but you can’t.
To read Cinemagogue’s original punch from our 1999 review of Fight Club, I want you to click this as hard as you can.
Share your thoughts: when did YOU first see it? What was your initial reaction? 
“Would you like to say a few words to mark the occasion?”
(posted by James Harleman)

Monday, April 23, 2012

Fight Club (1999)


An insomniac office worker and a devil-may-care soap maker form an underground fight club that transforms into a violent revolution.

Director: 

David Fincher

Writers: 

Chuck Palahniuk (novel)Jim Uhls (screenplay)

Fight Club Poster

Storyline

A ticking-time-bomb insomniac and a slippery soap salesman channel primal male aggression into a shocking new form of therapy. Their concept catches on, with underground "fight clubs" forming in every town, until an eccentric gets in the way and ignites an out-of-control spiral toward oblivion. Written by Anonymous  
Plot Summary | Plot Synopsis

Box Office

Budget:

 $63,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend:

 $11,035,485 (USA) (17 October 1999) (1963 Screens)

Gross:

 $71,000,000 (Worldwide) (except USA)
See more »

Did You Know?

Trivia

The film's title sequence is a pullback from the fear center of The Narrator's brain, and is supposed to represent the thought processes initiated by The Narrator's fear impulse. The sequence was conceived by director David Fincher and budgeted separately from the rest of the film. The studio told Fincher that they would only finance the elaborate sequence if the film itself was any good. After seeing a rough cut, they decided they were happy and so the sequence went ahead. The CG brain was mapped using an L-system, with renderings by medical illustrator Kathryn Jones, and was designed by Kevin Scott Mack of Digital Domain.See more »

Quotes

[first lines]
[Tyler points a gun into the Narrator's mouth]
Narrator: [voiceover] People are always asking me if I know Tyler Durden.
Tyler Durden: Three minutes. This is it - ground zero. Would you like to say a few words to mark the occasion?
Narrator: ...i... ann... iinn... ff... nnyin...
Narrator: [voiceover] With a gun barrel between your teeth, you speak only in vowels.
[Tyler removes the gun from the Narrator's mouth]
Narrator: I can't think of anything.
Narrator: [voiceover] For a second I totally forgot about Tyler's whole controlled demolition thing and I wonder how clean that gun is.
See more »

Crazy Credits

The warning at the beginning of the DVD, after the copyright warnings
reads:
WARNING
If you are reading this then this warning is for you. Every word you
read of this useless fine print is another second off your life. Don't
you have other things to do? Is your life so empty that you honestly
can't think of a better way to spend these moments? Or are you so
impressed with authority that you give respect and credence to all who
claim it? Do you read everything you're supposed to read? Do you think
everything you're supposed to think? Buy what you're told you should
want? Get out of your apartment. Meet a member of the opposite sex.
Stop the excessive shopping and masturbation. Quit your job. Start a
fight. Prove you're alive. If you don't claim your humanity you will
become a statistic. You have been warned...... Tyler See more »

User Reviews

 
A unique film
15 October 1999 | by (human@alientomato.com) (Toronto) – See all my reviews
Fight Club is one of the most unique films I have ever seen. In addition to presenting a rather fresh take on life, FC also presents its material in a fresh way. My main interest in the film is in that, in my opinion, it does not present characters for us to think about. Rather, it presents actions for us to think about. I will say that I cannot recall *ever* having been "asked" by a film to both suspend my disbelief the way this film asks in its third act AND at the same time come to terms with an understanding that there is no room--or need--for disbelief.

Perhaps these comments will not make sense to the average movie goer who will dismiss this film--and, unfortunately, its premise--as another hollywood flick filled with gratuitous violence. I'd go as far as to say that this film is not about violence. It is about choices. It is about activity. It is about lethargy. It is about waking up and realizing that at some point in the past we've gone to the toilet and thrown up our dreams without even realizing that society has stuck its fingers down our throat.

I would argue that anyone caught, at some point in their lives, between a rock and a hard place--anyone who has reached bottom on a mental level--anyone who has uttered to themselves "Wait, this isn't right. I would not do/say/feel what it is that I just did/said/felt... I do not like this. I must change before I am forever stuck being the person that I am not." These people, they will know what I'm talking about. These people will not only recognize the similarities between Edward Norton's character and themselves--they will be uncomfortably familiar with him. These people will appreciate Fight Club for what it is: a wake up call that we are not alone.

As David Berman once said: "I'm afraid I've got more in common with who I was than who I am becoming." If this sentence makes any sense to you, go see Fight Club. You won't regret it.

L.

Friday, April 20, 2012

Gran Torino

In scene 5, More about death, Father Janovich tracks Walt to the VFW where his persistence to get Walt to confession continues to annoy Walt as they talk frankly about life and death.  Walt has made and continues to make it clear his disdain for the Father's youth and inexperience when it comes to death.  While Walt makes his case for his expertise in the matter, it slowly becomes more evident that his wealth in this area sadly equals his lacking when it comes to truly living.
Matthew 1:21
She will bear a Son, and you shall call His name Jesus [the Greek form of the Hebrew Joshua, which means Savior], for He will save His people from their sins [that is, prevent them from failing and missing the true end and scope of life, which is God].

John 10:9-11


9I am the Door; anyone who enters in through Me will be saved (will live). He will come in and he will go out [freely], and will find pasture.
    10The thief comes only in order to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have and enjoy life, and have it in abundance (to the full, till it [a]overflows).
    11I am the Good Shepherd. The Good Shepherd risks and lays down His [own] life for the sheep.

In scene 23, Pissed-off padre, we witness the destructive results of the Hmoung gangs retaliation on Thao and his family.  Father J and Walt seem to find some sense of commonality in reacting to the grave injustice that they've both witnessed and experienced.  Father J's youth shows through in his advise given based on relativeness and emotion rather than that based on truth and sound judgement.  

Hebrews 10:30-31

30For we know Him Who said, Vengeance is Mine [retribution and the meting out of full justice rest with Me]; I will repay [I will exact the compensation], says the Lord. And again, The Lord will judge and determine and solve and settle the cause and the cases of His people.


In scene 25, At peace, we see Father J's persistence pays off as Walt finally makes it to confession after "forever".  Walt confesses three sins and the Father responses with a "that's it?".  Although small in number, Walt bears that these sins have "bothered me most of my life" and have proven to be massive in weight.  

Acts 5:30-32

30The God of our forefathers raised up Jesus, Whom you killed by hanging Him on a tree (cross).(A)
    31God exalted Him to His right hand to be Prince and Leader and Savior and Deliverer and Preserver, in order to grant repentance to Israel and to bestow forgiveness and release from sins.
    32And we are witnesses of these things, and the Holy Spirit is also, Whom God has bestowed on those who obey Him.

In scene 28, Last rites and wishes, our story comes to a close as Walt serves as a functional savior to Thao and his family as he lays down his life for them so that they would be able to know peace in this world.  We also see the affects of the sermon that Walt saltily preached with his life as Father J admits his shortcomings giving his eulogy.  Although not perfect, Walt's life proved impact full as he seemed to find it just as he was about to give it away.  

Matthew 10:6-8

6But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.    7And as you go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand!
    8Cure the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the lepers, drive out demons. Freely (without pay) you have received, freely (without charge) give.


Friday, April 13, 2012

A Parable of Peace


Gran Torino actually opens in a church.  Walt Kowalski presides with grimaces and growls over his wife's memorial service as the priest homilizes, "Is death the end, or the beginning?"  Meanwhile, Walt's son Steve grouses to his brother that "there's nothing that anyone can do that won't disappoint the old man."

Walt's neighborhood is changing as various dark-skinned ethnic groups replace the white-skinned ethnic-heritage auto workers Walt once knew.  He chafes at the presence of the Hmong family who lives next door, yet hates the gangs that cruise the streets and harass the neighbors even more.  When he breaks out his Korean War rifle to confront them and starts in with his "gooks" and "slants" rhetoric, we're pretty sure we're dealing with a tortured and self-centered cantankerous bigot.  His observation to the priest even tilts that direction: "The thing that haunts a man the most," he intones, is the horrible thing that he does voluntarily.

This all heads toward the inevitable confrontation.  "I knew this was gonna happen," Walt moans.  But as the story progresses and we learn a little more about Walt, his friends, and the ways in which he invests in his neighbors, we conclude that we really didn't know Walt.  In fact, if we find the film's conclusion credible, we have to accept that Walt is not a man to be feared and reviled but a hero to be admired.

Everything in this parable, of course, is the service of Walt.  Sure, we're told why the Hmong celebrate, for instance: "Today is a blessed day, for a child is born."  But it's also blessed because the old man is there, too.  Sure, the old man's children pay him lip service; but they're more scared of him than anything else, and the old man rejects his children in favor of a people who were not his own.

Getting to know Walt is, in a way, like getting to know God.

It's valid to ask questions like, "If God is so good, why does he allow evil to exist?  Why is there so much suffering in the world?"  It's also valid to look at the old testament and think, "Wow, that God ain't kidding when he calls himself jealous. 

What a violent, sadistic bastard!"

It's just as valid to think about what we know about God and what we don't know about God (presuming he exists) and conclude that we're a pretty presumptive creation. Even something as simple as fairy tale is hard to judge on just a wee bit of the story, and yet we don't presume as much about its creator as we do about God.

But I've gotta say: if you want a pretty good picture of finding out a thing or two about issues (or people) you don't understand, pay close attention to Gran Torino.  Eastwood, at least, doesn't deserve to be second-guessed, and neither does Walt Kowalski.  And compare Walt's solution with Christ's!

Greg Wright

Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Spiritual Legacy of Clint Eastwood


Shining a light on the filmmaker's obsession with life and death.

Early in his career, Clint Eastwood established himself as a tough guy with roles like the Man with No Name in Sergio Leone’s The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, and as Harry Callahan in Dirty Harry. But since the early '90s, Eastwood has focused less on acting and more on directing, crafting films that frequently make a big splash during awards season. More than that, though, he’s created a body of work deeply concerned with the the spiritual questions of the value of human life and the grief that follows in death’s wake.


Nowhere is this more apparent than in 1992’s Unforgiven. Eastwood stars as William Munny, a farmer whose past as a notorious killer catches up to him when a young man calling himself the Schofield Kid asks for help killing two men who cut up a prostitute’s face. Munny is reluctant to leave his home and his young children behind, remarking, “It ain’t easy killin’ a man,” but the lure of a $1,000 bounty pulls him and his old partner Ned Logan (played by Morgan Freeman) out of retirement.


Their journey proves to be more difficult than any of them could have imagined, though. After years spent on a farm, his loving wife by his side, Ned can no longer muster the strength it takes to shoot another man. The Schofield Kid, likewise, is left shaken after witnessing his first death. Tearful and drunk on whiskey he admits he’d never killed a man before and then relinquishes his gun. “I won’t kill nobody no more,” he says, “I ain’t like you, Will.”
Not only do these two moments illustrate the trauma involved in taking another life, they also run contrary to the attitudes of the typical Western, which thrives on a “shoot first, ask questions later” mentality. The larger-than-life archetypes of the genre are replaced with ordinary people who only want to live as peacefully and decently as possible in a world of cruelty.


Eastwood turned another genre on its head in 2004 when he released Million Dollar Baby. For the most part, Baby is a standard sports flick about an amateur boxer named Maggie Fitzgerald who rises to the top thanks to Eastwood’s grizzled Frankie Dunn, a legendary cutman and trainer. The twist comes in the third act, when Maggie is severely injured during a title fight and left paralyzed from the neck down. Maggie, distraught over all that she’s lost, asks Dunn to end her life, and everything that happens from that point on—from the festering ulcers on her body, to her attempted suicide—is intended to justify Dunn’s decision to help her.


The audience is manipulated by all this, too. We are forced to either approve of what Dunn does, or take the supposedly less compassionate view that he acted wrongly. There’s something almost unethical about putting viewers in this position, and it’s part of why the movie is difficult for Christian audiences to accept. 

Except that, for all its machinations, Eastwood’s movie doesn’t devalue human life, as some would think; rather, it speaks to humanity’s inherent value. Instead of returning to his old life, Dunn disappears. The last we see of him is through the window of a roadside diner where he and Maggie stopped for a slice of homemade pie one night. The implication is that Dunn will remain haunted by his actions for years to come. If the movie’s intent had been to devalue life, it’s doubtful that killing Maggie would have made such a lasting impression on his soul. Instead, taking a human life is depicted as the difficult and devastating thing that it is.
Equally as effective is Eastwood’s 2003 film Mystic River. Sean Penn stars as Jimmy Markum, an ex-con and the owner of a Boston convenience store. His life is upended when he learns his 19-year-old daughter has been murdered. Overcome with grief, he recruits some local thugs to help him track down the killer. The story becomes even more tragic, though, when the trail of evidence leads him to Dave Boyle, a boyhood friend who was molested as a child and has been acting strangely ever since the recent murder. Jimmy takes this as proof that Dave is the one who took his daughter’s life, and he in turn takes Dave’s.


What makes the message of Mystic River doubly powerful is that the audience knows Dave is innocent (of this particular crime at least) and can only watch as his former friend first stabs him and then shoots him at point blank range. There isn’t a more powerful example of how revenge makes monsters of men in all of Eastwood’s films.


There are plenty of examples, though, for how the director develops similar themes in movie after movie. The elegiac tone of Flags of Our Fathers and Letters From Iwo Jima speak to the scars created on the battlefield in service to one’s country, while Gran Torino promotes self-sacrifice over vengeance as Walt Kowalski, the film's hero, chooses to sacrifice himself to save a troubled youth.


With Hereafter, in theaters today, Eastwood finally had the chance to rip aside the curtain and reveal why humankind has such value. Instead, he does everything possible to brush religion aside. The result is an amorphous version of the afterlife that resembles a cosmic waiting room rather than a paradise ruled by a compassionate God. You could almost think of it as a version of heaven for atheists. But this is unreasonable (to borrow a word from the rationalists). How is it that life can continue after death without the presence of a divine, life-giving entity? It’s a mystery that Hereafter isn’t interested in exploring, and overall, the film casts a slight pall on an otherwise meaningful body of work.
Andrew Welch is a freelance writer from Roanoke, Texas.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Gran Torino


Release Date: Dec. 12 (limited), Jan. 9
Director: Clint Eastwood
Writer: Nick Schenk (screenplay), Dave Johannson 7 Nick Schenk (story)

Cinematographer: Tom Stern

Starring: Clint Eastwood, Ahney Her, Bee Vang
Studio/Run Time: Warner Bros., 116 mins.

Since 2003 Director Clint Eastwood has had a late-career renaissance comparable perhaps only to Phillip Roth’s in literature. Both are recently concerned with how America has delivered—and failed to deliver—on the promise of equality and the American Dream, as well as issues of race and dealing with their own respective deaths. With Gran Torino, Eastwood puts out a brilliant work that balances all of these issues beautifully without coming to terms with any of them or giving easy answers.
Eastwood himself plays Walt Kowalski, a racist, misogynistic, homophobic, alcoholic old man bitter at the world following his wife’s death. He doesn’t understand his family, he hates the Hmong neighbors who’ve taken over his area of town and just wants to be left alone to drink away his memories. Walt’s saving grace is that he’s a person who cannot see someone in trouble without doing something about it, which embroils him in the small-time gang conflicts affecting his neighbors. He ends up mentoring his neighbor Tao (Bee Vang) and gives the young man a new level of self-respect.
Aside from the anxiety between Walt and the Hmongs, there are also Hispanics and black members of his community he struggles to maintain peace with. There’s more racial tension in Gran Torino than in anything this side of Crash (2005), but without any of the normal preachiness that usually gets shoehorned into studio pictures. Both Eastwood’s acting and directing seem honestly unsure of the situation. This isn’t to say that the directing is uncertain—it may be his most beautiful picture since Unforgiven and has a level of polish where every shot and frame feels intentional. This makes the difficulties of its screenplay more poignant, since it’s clearly not a muddle but a purposefully tangled web. Gran Torino is a mature work, self-assured enough to let its audience make sense of the situation. 
The film’s ending points to Eastwood’s difficulties with his own past roles, as Dirty Harry goes out in a pacifist blaze of glory that’s as exultant as it is disheartening. It points back to the issue of age, and as Eastwood looks increasingly towards the past, it is a fitting retirement for an actor whose presence has been an important part of film for the past 50 years. Given that he’s only getting better as a director, let’s just hope he doesn’t plan on retiring from the other side of the camera any time soon.

By Sean Gandert