The Social Network
 
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09/13/10 3:44 AM

just finished the script. i'll see the movie. can't wait for the score.

 

09/14/10 6:16 PM

Saw the trailer in a cinema this evening, almost shit myself with the excitement.

 

09/15/10 12:27 AM

I wonder how mnay people are going to see this cuz they're interested in seeing it and not cuz trent scored it... lolz

 

09/15/10 12:07 AM

I'd see it regardless of Trent's involvement. Been a David Fincher fan for years.

 

09/15/10 5:49 AM

I am one hundred thousand million percent interested in this and none of it is due to Trent lol.

When I first heard about the movie like 2 years ago all that was known was that David Fincher was directing a movie about social networks.
And my first thought was "Duuuuuuude this is gonna be so awesome, I bet it is gonna be a thriller. I bet someone is going to get kidnapped cause of the internet and some crazy crazy stuff is gonna happen."
Then I found out it was about Facebook and for some reason that interests me more than a thriller about kidnapping over the internet...


Also on Twitter Trent says we are getting new music this week....



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/15/2010 05:51AM by cadair8.

 

09/15/10 3:18 PM

You guys are queers. I'm so seeing it because TR scored it! tongue sticking out smiley

Not really, it looks interesting and if nothing else decent is playing, I'll probably see it.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/15/2010 02:18PM by Suge.

 

09/16/10 4:47 PM

TOMORRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRROW!



[mashable.com]
Mashable.com posted:
Wanna hear the Trent Reznor-spun score to The Social Network before it hits screens this October? Well, you’re in luck, because Reznor, along with his record company, The Null Corporation, and Sony’s Madison Gate Records has decided to self-release the soundtrack. Five tracks will be available for free download tomorrow.

In addition to checking out a handful of songs from the eagerly anticipated “Facebook Movie,” you can also pre-order the entire record, which drops on September 28. Reznor also informs us via e-mail that he’s partnered with Amazon to make the full album $2.99 on the retail site. You can get the sampler and put in your pre-order from Null Co’s website tomorrow when the link goes live.

“This has been an interesting new discipline for me to work in and I’m pleased with the process and the result,” Reznor says in an e-mail.

 

09/17/10 6:14 AM

I'm excited to get a taste, I really enjoyed the original track he released not to long ago...
And I don't think there's anything wrong with people being more excited about the soundtrack; Is this not a fuckin NIN Forum...who cares if some people don't give a shit about a movie that doesn't appeal to them. There's movies where I liked the soundtrack more than the film itself.

 

09/18/10 11:04 PM

gonzo84 posted:
I'm excited to get a taste, I really enjoyed the original track he released not to long ago...
And I don't think there's anything wrong with people being more excited about the soundtrack; Is this not a fuckin NIN Forum...who cares if some people don't give a shit about a movie that doesn't appeal to them. There's movies where I liked the soundtrack more than the film itself.

Or about almost equally. Lost Highway (coincidence) I thought had one of the best non-instrumental soundtracks I've heard. It has fucking everything, no?

 

09/21/10 7:48 PM

So a friend of mine got to see this over the weekend because he is apart of the writing staff for Temple University newspaper and he went to a screening that included atleast Jesse Eisenberg, and the writer Aaron Sorkin, and he said the movie was amazing. And while telling me how much he loved the movie (now he doesn't listen to NIN or know that I do) and he praised the score.

Knowing all this makes me even more excited.

 

09/22/10 3:57 AM

New York Times
-IN a trailer for “The Social Network” — the new movie about the tumultuous origins of the social networking site Facebook — a cursor makes its way across the modern digital landscape, full of “friends” who may or may not be friends, and strangers smiling in intimate ways. It promises a story that is as sexy and clickable as a seconds-old status update, one about the most modern of subjects in a frantically wired world. Then again, the film — written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by David Fincher — deals in archetypes and conflicts as old as the Bible.

Even while they trade on its currency, as headlines about Facebook’s astounding growth and problematic privacy issues keep coming, the makers of “The Social Network” prefer to dwell on its timelessness.

“We’re not fad hopping,” said Mr. Fincher, sitting in a conference room on the Sony lot late last month. “There’s an ironic story behind this thing that’s about friendship and the need to connect. The fact that it was Facebook brought an interesting context for this simple drama of acrimony.”

Scott Rudin, one of the producers of the film, said that in spite of its thoroughly modern tag line — “You don’t get to 500 million friends without making a few enemies” — “The Social Network” is built on themes that would not be out of place in ancient Rome. “It’s very classic,” Mr. Rudin said. “The men want to kill each other, the women are cruel, and only the fittest survive.”

“The Social Network,” which opens the New York Film Festival on Friday and reaches theaters the following week, describes how Facebook, then “thefacebook,” created an alternative social hierarchy, first at Harvard in 2004, then in the world at large. It is a throw-down among Mark Zuckerberg, Eduardo Saverin and Sean Parker, all founding fathers of a site that allows people to connect seamlessly with old friends and new. Once Facebook takes off, a scrum for credit and lucre begins that ricochets from dorm rooms to depositions to impossibly fabulous parties.

Like the enterprise it chronicles, the movie came together in a big, bad hurry. A proposal for Ben Mezrich’s book, “The Accidental Billionaires,” circulated in early 2009. Mr. Rudin’s scouts saw it, and when they called Sony, found out that Dana Brunetti and Mike De Luca already owned the rights. Rather than fight, they agreed to collaborate. Mr. Sorkin read four pages into the book proposal and immediately called his agent, and was finished with a script before the book even came out. Mr. Fincher, who was looking for a film, was sent a draft by Sony and Mr. Rudin, and agreed to direct as long as “they didn’t wait for eight rounds of development and nine drafts,” he said. “We needed to make it now.” (The book proposal was sold in June 2008, and the movie began shooting in October 2009.)

Plenty of young actors lined up to work on a film directed by Mr. Fincher (“Seven,” “Fight Club,” “Zodiac,” “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button”) and written by Aaron Sorkin (the creator of “The West Wing” for television, and film scripts including “Charlie Wilson’s War,” “Malice” and “A Few Good Men”). Jesse Eisenberg (“Adventureland”) was cast as Zuckerberg, the film’s protagonist; Andrew Garfield (about to be the next Spider-Man) plays Zuckerberg’s spurned wingman, Eduardo Saverin; and Justin Timberlake, big-deal music star, took on the role of Parker, the Internet impresario-genius-huckster.

While the cast clearly went all in for a movie that has all the makings of a prestige project, the movie clearly belongs to Mr. Fincher and Mr. Sorkin.

At first look it seems like a shotgun marriage: Mr. Fincher, an auteur director who creates worlds so expressive that words often seem beside the point, directs “Social Network” from a script by Mr. Sorkin, as much playwright as film writer, whose dialogue seems to emanate from an Uzi and require very little visual context.

But the collaboration is clear from the very first scene. As the film opens, Mark Zuckerberg is having an argument in a loud bar with his about-to-be-ex girlfriend and muse in abstentia (played by Rooney Mara, who has been cast as Lisbeth Salander in the Hollywood remake of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.”) Socially inept, he misses a growing number of signals that she finds his relentless ambition revolting. Ms. Mara’s character waits for an opening and then, with a few well-chosen words, reduces him to tongue-tied misery.

It is classic Sorkin, eight pages of dialogue with two smart humans locked in verbal combat. So what’s the Fincher part? They shot the scene 99 times. And every bystander, clink of the glass and stain on the bar napkin is just so. “Glibly speaking, David Fincher is a perfectionist,” Mr. Eisenberg said. “You hear about people who work tirelessly, meticulously to get what they are after, but David is the real thing.”

Mr. Sorkin acknowledged the odd couple nature of the pairing. “This is not intuitively the perfect marriage of director and material,” Mr. Sorkin said over a dinner at the Sunset Towers here. “What David is most known for is that he’s peerless as a visual director, and I write people talking in rooms. David absolutely welcomed all the language and managed to make it visually beautiful and really emotional.”

The latest of Mr. Fincher’s moody kingdoms is set at Harvard. Using a variety of stand-in locations, Mr. Fincher carefully draws the university as a coliseum as much as a campus. Language, social status, study clubs are fully weaponized even as Mr. Zuckerberg introduces a new element — technology — as the ultimate equalizer. “I think the fact that it was Harvard is by no means irrelevant,” Mr. Sorkin said. “The genesis of the idea was exclusivity, of an outsider wanting to belong.”

Mr. Rudin added, “This is a story about a hacker who morphs into a C.E.O., and I think that David has a deep understanding and instinct about who those kinds of insurgents are.”

 

09/22/10 7:38 PM

holy christ. i can't believe more people aren't talking about this.

[www.rottentomatoes.com]

7 critics reviews so far. 100 percent

i keep hearing Citizen Kane parallels ...this movie may be much better and much more relevant than anyone anticipated.

 

09/23/10 3:47 PM

Free screening in NYC this Sunday!

I know where it's at. It's on at a decent time. Fuck it. I can't resist.










I still hate Facebook, though.

 

09/23/10 5:21 PM

I originally was just going to buy the soundtrack, but I keep hearing so many interesting things about this movie, and the critics are praising it so far. I didn't even know that David Finder also made Se7en and Fight Club O_O. Looks like I'll be taking a trip to the theater!

 

09/23/10 11:11 PM

yeah, i'm not going to allow myself to hear any more music from the soundtrack...because hearing music (especially from a good soundtrack)for the first time in a theater..with thunderous sound..and the visual aspect going with it...nothing beats it.

 

09/24/10 7:06 AM

The movie is fucking awesome. The music is stunning. You will not be disappointed!

 

09/24/10 11:42 AM

I was on a preview this morning... A fantastic film! Awesome screenplay, great and authentic actors and the music is very atmospheric. Thumbs up!

 

09/24/10 2:33 PM

The New York Times
Movie Review
The Social Network (2010)

Millions of Friends, but Not Very Popular
By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: September 23, 2010

[www.nytimes.com]#

What makes Mark Zuckerberg run? In “The Social Network,” David Fincher’s fleet, weirdly funny, exhilarating, alarming and fictionalized look at the man behind the social-media phenomenon Facebook — 500 million active users, oops, friends, and counting — Mark runs and he runs, sometimes in flip-flops and a hoodie, across Harvard Yard and straight at his first billion. Quick as a rabbit, sly as a fox, he is the geek who would be king or just Bill Gates. He’s also the smartest guy in the room, and don’t you forget it.

The first time you see Mark (Jesse Eisenberg, firing on all cylinders), he’s 19 and wearing a hoodie stamped with the word Gap, as in the clothing giant, but, you know, also not. Eyes darting, he is yammering at his girlfriend, Erica (Rooney Mara), whose backhand has grown weary. As they swat the screenwriter Aaron Sorkin’s words at each other, the two partners quickly shift from offline friends to foes, a foreshadowing of the emotional storms to come. Soon Mark is back in his dorm, pounding on his keyboard and inadvertently sowing the seeds of Facebook, first by blogging about Erica and then by taking his anger out on the rest of Harvard’s women, whose photos he downloads for cruel public sport: is she hot or not.

(“The Social Network” opens the 48th New York Film Festival on Friday and opens in theaters next Friday.)

Although the names have remained the same, “The Social Network” is less of a biopic of the real Mr. Zuckerberg than a gloss on the boot-up, log-on, plug-in generation. You don’t learn much about him other than the headlines, beginning with Facebook’s less-than-humble start in 2003. Despite its insistently unsexy moving parts (software, algorithms), the movie is paced like a thriller, if one in which ideas, words and bank books blow up rather than cars. It’s a resonant contemporary story about the new power @#$%& and an older, familiar narrative of ambition, except instead of discovering his authentic self, Mark builds a database, turning his life — and ours — into zeroes and ones, which is what makes it also a story about the human soul.

The price of that ambition, at least as dramatized here, is borne by those around Mark, who remains a strategic cipher throughout: a Facebook page without a profile photo. Charmless and awkward in groups larger than one, he rarely breaks into a smile and, if memory serves, never says thank you. He seems wary at some moments, coolly calculating at others: when his eyes haven’t gone dead, you can see him working all the angles. One of those angles, according to Mr. Sorkin’s script, which follows the outline of “The Accidental Billionaires,” Ben Mezrich’s book about Facebook, was one of the site’s co-founders, Eduardo Saverin (a very good Andrew Garfield), a fellow student of Mark’s as well as his first big check writer and personal chump.

Eduardo strides in early, his collar turned up against the Cambridge winter, and quickly moves in on our sympathies, which Mr. Eisenberg, guided by his supremely confident director, never does. Mr. Garfield can sometimes wilt on screen as if in surrender, but here his character merely sways, held up by an essential decency that makes Eduardo so appealing and such a contrast to the sometimes appalling Mark. (When Mr. Eisenberg makes Mark’s face go blank, the character seems scarily emptied out: it’s a subtly great, at times unsettling, performance.) Mark might be the brains in this unlikely friendship, but Eduardo is its conscience and slowly bleeding heart. Though he knows better, he hangs on even after he’s been cut loose.

The plot thickens after Erica dumps Mark, and he meets a pair of near-comically-perfect supermen, the identical twins and future Olympic rowers Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss. (An amusing Armie Hammer plays both brothers with wit and the aid of different hairstyles, special effects and a body double.) The Winklevosses emerge as unlikely objects of Mark’s interest and, much like Erica, his eventual contempt. The twins and their friend Divya Narendra (Max Minghella), have a Web site idea and need Mark’s programming help. They’ll pay (and how!), but the gig, they grandly explain, will also rehabilitate Mark’s reputation on campus after the hot/not scandal, a patronizing moment that echoes Mark’s breakup with Erica. “You’d do that for me?” he asks the twins flatly, recycling a line Erica once used on him.

The conspicuous paradox that “The Social Network” plays with is that the world’s most popular social networking Web site was created by a man with excruciatingly, almost pathologically poor, people skills. The benign view of Facebook is that it creates “a community,” a sense of intimacy, which is of course one reason it also creeps out some of its critics. As the virtual-reality visionary Jaron Lanier puts it bluntly in his manifesto “You Are Not a Gadget,” Facebook also reduces life to a database. In “The Social Network,” a character lashes out at both Mark and “the angry” who haunt the Internet, but Mr. Lanier takes the view that it’s fear that drives the idolizers of what he calls the “new strain of gadget fetishism.”

Beyond the obvious (money, sex, fame) it’s hard to know what truly pushes Mark, whose personality emerges in furtive smiles, gushes of words and painful pauses. Eventually everyone does pay: the Winklevosses, Eduardo, even Mark. The filmmakers have their ideas about who did what to whom, but they don’t try to fill in all the blanks or, worse, soften Mark’s edges with a Psych 101 back story. You see what turns him on: software, revenge and, in several lightly comic and darkly foreboding scenes, Sean Parker, the flamboyant co-creator of Napster, who’s played by Justin Timberlake as a jittery seducer. Sean oozes into Mark’s life for a piece of the action and instantly dazzles the younger man with his bad-boy ways (coke and Champagne for everyone!), sexy dates and big, brash talk of riches.

Shooting in digital and working with the cinematographer Jeff Cronenweth, Mr. Fincher turns down the lights and tamps down his visual style, deploying fewer special-effects sleights of hand than he did in “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” with its wizened and baby Brad Pitt, while also maintaining the familiar Fincher atmosphere of dread. Harvard has rarely been represented to such dolorous effect as in “The Social Network,” where even the colors seem leached of joy. A restrained, somber palette and the shallow depth of field express the limits of Mark’s world, while the rapid, seamless cutting among different times and spaces — scenes of him creating Facebook are woven together with scenes of him in separate depositions — evokes the speed of his success, giving the narrative terrific momentum.

Mr. Fincher pointedly abandons his smudged browns for a gauzily lighted sequence of the twins rowing at a tony British club that, with the edges of the image blurred and movements slowed, looks like a dream. This is a world of rarefied privilege in which men still wear straw boaters, and royalty blathers within earshot. Mark isn’t invited, not because he’s poor (he isn’t), but because this is a closed, self-reproducing system built on exclusivity and other entitlements, including privacy. (The movie refers to Mark’s being Jewish, and the twins look as if they crewed for the Hitler Youth, but that’s just part of the mix.) Mark doesn’t breach this citadel, he sidesteps it entirely by becoming one of the new information @#$%& for whom data is power and who, depending on your view of the Internet, rallies the online mob behind him.

“The Social Network” takes place in the recognizable here and now, though there are moments when it has the flavor of science fiction (it would make a nice double bill with “The Matrix”) even as it evokes 19th-century narratives of ambition. (“To be young, to have a thirst for society, to be hungry for a woman,” Balzac writes in “Le Père Goriot.”) The movie opens with a couple in a crowded college bar and ends with a man alone in a room repeatedly hitting refresh on his laptop. In between, Mr. Fincher and Mr. Sorkin offer up a creation story for the digital age and something of a morality tale, one driven by desire, marked by triumph, tainted by betrayal and inspired by the new gospel: the geek shall inherit the earth.

“The Social Network” is rated PG-13 (Parents strongly cautioned). The usual college high jinks, drugs, drinking and semi-naked women.

THE SOCIAL NETWORK

The film, to be shown on Friday on the opening night of the 48th New York Film Festival at Lincoln Center, opens nationally next Friday.

Directed by David Fincher; written by Aaron Sorkin, based on the book “The Accidental Billionaires,” by Ben Mezrich; director of photography, Jeff Cronenweth; edited by Angus Wall and Kirk Baxter; music by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross; production designer, Donald Graham Burt; costumes by Jacqueline West; produced by Scott Rudin, Dana Brunetti, Michael De Luca and Cean Chaffin; released by Columbia Pictures. At 6 and 9 p.m. at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center. Running time: 2 hours.

WITH: Jesse Eisenberg (Mark Zuckerberg), Andrew Garfield (Eduardo Saverin), Justin Timberlake (Sean Parker), Armie Hammer (Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss), Max Minghella (Divya Narendra), Josh Pence (Tyler Winklevoss), Rooney Mara (Erica Albright), Brenda Song (Christy), Rashida Jones (Marylin Delpy), John Getz (Sy), David Selby (Gage), Denise Grayson (Gretchen), Douglas Urbanski (Larry Summers), Aaron Sorkin (Ad Executive) and James Shanklin (Prince Albert).
A version of this review appeared in print on September 24, 2010, on page C1 of the New York edition.

 

09/25/10 8:41 PM

LobotomyBaby posted:
yeah, i'm not going to allow myself to hear any more music from the soundtrack...because hearing music (especially from a good soundtrack)for the first time in a theater..with thunderous sound..and the visual aspect going with it...nothing beats it.
I couldn't agree more.

 

09/27/10 1:07 PM

The Making of the Facebook Movie: A TIME Roundtable By Lev Grossman

There are a lot of reasons, pretty good ones, why Aaron Sorkin and David Fincher might have chosen not to make The Social Network. For example, it's a movie about a website. Or to be specific, it's a movie about the creation of a website, Facebook, and how founder Mark Zuckerberg was sued by Eduardo Saverin, his best friend and the company's original CFO, and separately by three Harvard classmates who claimed he stole their idea.

Also, the events in question are only a few years old and are still in dispute. Zuckerberg, a programming genius with famously limited social skills, isn't an especially relatable character. Sorkin (The West Wing) and Fincher (Zodiac) are powerfully idiosyncratic talents who'd never worked together before. And a lot of the action consists of kids typing at computers and lawyers sitting around tables. (See TIME's fall entertainment preview for 2010.)

But Sorkin and Fincher did make The Social Network, which opens Oct. 1. They sat down with TIME's Lev Grossman to talk about it.

TIME: What made you decide that this was the story you wanted to tell right now?

Sorkin: What came to me was a 14-page book proposal that Ben Mezrich [author of The Accidental Billionaires, on which the movie is loosely based] had written for his publisher. I read it, and I said yes very quickly. Faster than I've ever said yes to anything.

It really didn't have much at all to do with Facebook itself. I wasn't on Facebook. I don't spend a lot of time on the Internet, and social networking wasn't really part of my life. But the story itself! There are elements of it that are as old as storytelling: friendship and loyalty, class, jealousy, betrayal — all those kinds of things that were being written about 4,000 years ago. It struck me as a great big classic story. And those classic elements were being applied to something incredibly contemporary. (Read about how Facebook is redefining Internet privacy.)

TIME: It's almost like a Greek myth. There's something tragic about Zuckerberg. He created a new kind of personal connection for everybody else, and yet he cannot himself connect with other people.

Fincher: That was the thing that fascinated us in doing the research about Zuckerberg. I think in a weird way his inability to connect with those next to him — who better to have invented this technology than somebody who needs it?

Sorkin: The first thing I did when I signed up for this movie was, I got a Facebook page. And the thing that struck me most was how much people were enjoying reinventing themselves on the Internet. That if you write a simple post like "Went out to this restaurant with the girls last night, had a seven-course meal, three appletinis, better hit the gym today," you're trying to be Ally McBeal. You sound like a sitcom person, like Mary Richards or Carrie Bradshaw.

And that struck me as something familiar. I also am not terribly comfortable socially. I have a lot of social anxiety. If I could just be in a room by myself and just write and sort of slip the pages under the door to somebody and have them slip me a meal in return, I'd be very happy.

Fincher: I hope that people understand that I have an enormous amount of empathy for Mark Zuckerberg. I know what it is to be in a room, as a 21-year-old, with a bunch of grownups. You're hawking your wares, and they're all looking at you like, "Isn't it cute how passionate he is?" So I really understood his frustration. (See a special on what Facebook users think about the social networking site.)

TIME: And you guys had never worked together before?

Both: Nope.

Sorkin: It was, for me at least, a very interesting and counterintuitive marriage of director and material, because what he is most known for is that he's peerless as a visual director. And I write people talking in rooms. So you wouldn't necessarily think of David first for this.

See photos inside Facebook's headquarters.

See 10 people caught on Facebook.

TIME: It must have been a challenge to make the computer stuff visually exciting — people hunched over keyboards.

Fincher: You show shots of someone typing that are as short as you can possibly make them. But it was contextualized interestingly, in that here is somebody hard at work f___ing with the fabric of the outside world, and here's his fantasy of what the outside world is going through. So you could ping-pong back and forth between those two ideas. But part of it is a fantasy. It extends to the casting of Justin Timberlake. A lot of people said, "That's not who [Napster co-founder] Sean Parker is." And I kept fighting for this. It doesn't matter who Sean Parker is; this character of Zuckerberg has to see him as this. He's got to see him as the guy who's got it wired.

It's not just about the people involved. It's the people involved showing us a bigger truth about the last seven years, and a bigger truth about what it is to be youthful and have a dream and enthusiasm, and how once money gets injected into something it tears up the fabric of all of those idealistic good intentions. (See the top 10 Facebook stories of 2009.)

TIME: It's a balancing act with the Zuckerberg character. At the beginning of the movie, he's not really all that likable.

Sorkin: I think he spends the first hour and 55 minutes of the movie being an antihero and the last five minutes of the movie being a tragic hero. And I know that by the end of the movie, I kind of want to give him a hug, and I think that people are going to feel that way too.

I also think that we understand, pretty quickly, how he got there. He's 19 years old for most of the movie, and if you're somebody who has spent so much time with your nose pressed up against the window of social life, who has been told that you're a loser over and over — I have a hunch we all get told that we're a loser, and how healthy you are as an adult depends on how much you believed it when you were growing up. (See the top 10 Internet blunders.)

Fincher: I really doubt that Mark Zuckerberg was ever told he was a loser. I think he's probably been told he's a f___ing genius for most of his life.

But what does that mean? That's what Harvard is. You're either getting the people who know how to behave, who were genetically created to be in that environment, or you're getting the superfreaks who spiked the graph on one thing. And they're being thrust into this garden party that they never quite signed up for. And I think he's probably the latter. (See photos of the evolution of the college dorm.)

TIME: What kind of research did you do to create Zuckerberg's character?

Sorkin: [Producer] Scott Rudin made as aggressive an effort as you can make to get the cooperation of Mark and of Facebook. In the end, they decided not to participate, which is easy to understand. And to be honest with you, I'm grateful that it worked out that way. I wouldn't want the movie to be perceived as a Facebook production. I was able to meet with, speak with and e-mail with a number of the principals. It was all on the condition of anonymity, so I can't get too far into that.

TIME: Did you know from the start that you wanted Jesse Eisenberg for the part?

Fincher: We saw a lot of people, and one day I got a clip from Jesse's manager of him doing the first scene in the movie, and Aaron and I were working, and I said, "Come here, you've got to see this." I mean, it's not Mark Zuckerberg. Mark Zuckerberg in none of the file footage that I've found talks anywhere near that fast or has that kind of facility. But it was the perfect representation of the character.

See Zuckerberg in the top 10 college dropouts.

See the 100 best movies of all time.

TIME: Mezrich's book was criticized for being too sympathetic to co-founder Eduardo Saverin. Did you worry about that?

Sorkin: There were a number of different versions of the truth coming from three or four or five people. And rather than pick one and dramatize that, I wanted to dramatize the fact that there are three or four or five different versions of the truth. Everybody has their own version, and everybody is right, and everybody is wrong.

Fincher: And when you really get down in it, when I'm directing a scene where there's four people on this side of the table and there's four people on that side, when I'm talking to people over here, I'm saying, "Look at that little asshole! Look what he's done to you! You gave him the germ of this thing, and he fleeced you!" And on the other side, I'm going, "Look at these privileged, entitled guys who couldn't even begin to conceive of what it actually took. If not for you, there isn't $15 billion or $25 billion to divide!" (Read a Q&A with Mezrich on his Facebook book.)

Sorkin: By the way, I've been that guy. I've been the Mark Zuckerberg in that situation, and I have absolute empathy for him. With The West Wing, you'll get somebody who says, "But 10 years ago, I wrote a script about the President, and look at all the similarities! There are scenes that take place in the White House!"

Fincher: "Look at all this stuff in the Oval Office! Page after page!"

Sorkin: Frankly, the line "If you guys were the inventors of Facebook, you would have invented Facebook" — it's what I always want to say to these people. So I had a lot of empathy for Mark. And I will be clear and say I didn't speak to Eduardo at all either. So I'm not just batting from his side of the plate.

TIME: Last question —

Sorkin: Is it about my tie? I'm very concerned I chose the wrong tie this morning.

Fincher: I didn't want to say anything. (Read about how Facebook is affecting school reunions.)

TIME: Does this movie mean that Hollywood is catching up to the galloping digitization of our daily lives? Doing things on Facebook, friending people, checking your news feed — these are so much a part of our daily routines now. But I don't think I've ever seen them onscreen before.

Sorkin: David did kind of a cool thing: it's not indicated in the script that this is the way it should be, but it's not until the last scene, when Mark himself goes onto Facebook, that we see the logo, that we see a Facebook page. (Watch a video revealing some quick and easy Facebook tricks.)

Fincher: You're talking about something so ubiquitous. It was like — you know, look, we're not making a Linda Blair roller-disco movie. We're not here to capitalize on Facebook.

Sorkin: I badly wanted to make a Linda Blair roller-disco movie. And I lost that argument.

Fincher: I know it still hurts.

TIME: So is the sequel the Twitter movie? Am I the 18th person to make that joke?

Sorkin: It's not a joke anymore. I just read yesterday, they're making a movie about the guys who invented Google.

 

09/27/10 6:36 PM

Damn, I'm really looking forward to this film.

 

09/28/10 4:47 PM

I'll take it as an intriguing movie. Fiction with a dash of fact. I love the director and Trent so I'll see it.

 

09/29/10 12:40 PM

What's funny to me is so many who see it will be using facebook to "talk" to their "friends" about it. There's some kind of odd phenomenon going on there...

 

09/29/10 2:54 PM

I'm def going to see this Friday. Although I hate Facebook, never had it, never will. I love fincher and Trent or course. I mean I really dig fight club but I don't make soap...

 

09/30/10 9:27 AM

fuckfacebook-the movie.i just want the soundtrack,which sounds cool as fuck.

 

09/30/10 10:27 AM

God damn it is not Facebook the movie!

Facebook is just the backdrop for everything happening. It's a movie based around greed and corruption.

 

09/30/10 12:09 PM

Tech shows are calling this "anti-nerd bashing by old media."

 

09/30/10 1:27 PM

 

09/30/10 1:41 PM

Found this in the comment section of an Interview article that Trent posted about the Sound Mixing and I think these two really point out something that is very true:

From - [www.ropeofsilicon.com]
Comment: "Hype is the enemy of good movies. Any film can seem not that great depending on how overly hyped it is."


Reply: "Agree with you as well, because The Social Network is a good movie, but the hype is setting up some unrealistic
expectations for folks that buy into it too much."



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/30/2010 01:45PM by gonzo84.

 
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