The Social Network
 
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09/30/10 1:56 PM

gonzo84 posted:
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."

Agreed. A good example of this would be the hype surrounding Where the Wild Things Are. Even The Dark Knight wasn't as good as some people made it out to be.

Still, The Social Network looks like it will be very good. I think I'll see it tomorrow.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 09/30/2010 01:57PM by RhettButler.

 

10/01/10 12:39 AM

end of film; audience in complete silence.
stayed for the entire ending credits
listening to Soft Trees Break The Fall in a daze.

this will be my last post on here.

 

10/01/10 11:00 AM

I went to the midnight showing for this movie. Given it's lengthy (get comfortable),it's definitely well worth it.

You don't even notice the time because the acting is really good. And believe me, I have a short attention span and this is probably as still as I've ever been. I was just curious on how they would end a movie with all that going on. Anyhow, well done.

Also, it's funny how you notice other fans when you see them point to Trent's name on the screen. Awesome.

The music fit perfectly too, especially "In Motion", imo.

I recommend seeing it.

 

10/01/10 12:24 PM

[www.funnyordie.com]

A parody of The Social Network trailer featuring Zach Galifianakis. Hilarious.

 

10/01/10 12:38 PM

yeah, it's much better if you don't go watching it ..extremely hyped.

although, i try knew i was doing so..and was trying to work jedi mind tricks to settle down my expectations.

it was a very good movie. not the movie of the decade. it does define this decade though.
i do think it's fincher's best work since fight club.
although ..it's more like zodiac than fight club. it simply tells a story based on real events.


it was really funny..if you're smart and or fast enough to get it.

me and my brother were the only one's laughing throughout the movie because there were mostly 40+ aged people in the theater...that probably didn't know very much about the sheer entertainment of watching hitler-dressed cats on the internet growing up.

it's sarcastic, mean, and it covers a lot of emotions in 2 hrs.


the soundtrack was exactly what i expected. it stayed out of the way...only accentuating scenes and moods when needed.

 

10/01/10 5:04 PM

Fuckin amazing movie. Loved every second of it. I also want to violate Rashida Jones's personal space.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/03/2010 01:13PM by CharmlessMan.

 

10/01/10 7:44 PM

Incredible. I will be surprised if I see anything that tops it this year, it's already my favorite film of the year.

And yes it defines the decade. It almost felt like a Bret Easton Ellis novel the way the characters were so amoral and cold. except the characters have intellect that BEE's characters don't always have.

Trent and Atticus's score sets the mood perfectly too.

Will be getting a second viewing as soon as possible.

 

10/01/10 9:41 PM

Just got home from the cinema. The music def sets a great tone. Fincher scores again! Baby you're a rich man...

 

10/01/10 10:53 PM

LobotomyBaby posted:
it was really funny..if you're smart and or fast enough to get it.

I understand you.

 

10/02/10 12:18 AM

This isn't a movie about facebook. This is a movie about the guy who made/stole facebook. Watching the movie, I noticed that there was actually very little visual content or images of Facebook. It could have just as easily been about a multi-million dollar videogame and the content of the film wouldn't drastically change. Nevertheless, I felt the movie was well acted. Eisenberg seems to capture that smug, arrogant, egotistical and completely socially inept (yeah, I know: ironic) characteristic that may not be based entirely on reality but Fincher wanted him to convey. And JT? Yeah, fine: He did the Mickey Mouse club thing. That was maybe fifteen years ago, people. It's time to move on. And in this film, he's not a particularily skilled actor, certainly there's a large list of better people for the role but he does command your attention. He seems to give that 'geek-sheek' essence which is important, since he's supposed to play Zuckerberg's ultra-cool alter-ego: The man Zuckerberg wants to be. The writing, to change topics, was quite well-done. There's a deffinite richness of dialogue which adds to not only the enjoyability of the movie but to the characters and the inner workings of their minds. As well, the occasional heaviness of the film is lightened with the periodic humourous one-liner or comedic banter.
If I was to give this film a negative quality, it would be that when the climax comes, well, one doesn't know it had come until the credits start to role. While the ending is satisfying, I can't help but get the feeling as if there was so much build-up for a very anti-climactic ending. Perhaps that was just an unavoidable issue with the framing device of the trails used or perhaps that simply put, real-life doesn't play out with grandoise climactic endings.

 

10/02/10 1:07 AM

So tonight me and my gf went to see TSN. Aside from the fact that we had to walk to the theater coz my dad did not want to borrow me he's car, and it was raining, the movie was somewhat crap. I honestly expected little more from Davide. Then again I did not expect any thing amazing in the first place judging from the title right. Also I have to add that the movie was little to long and quite boring especially those last few scenes at the end. It seams unnecessary and pointless to end a movie like this. Its about facebook-creator! He has what every man in the world can only dream of, but some how now hes alone, what a rich-asswhole he is with no friends and millions of $$$. As for the sound-track Is was one of the main reasons I went to see the movie and it sure did make me feel closer to god. Then again I relize the movie-title is TSN not se7en

 

10/02/10 3:01 AM

This movie is so awesome.....that the level of awesomeness.....u know wat?

Holy shit.


I saw this movie 10 hours ago..... The more I think about it.....omg



Good night.

 

10/02/10 4:52 AM

Just saw this movie today. Wow was it good.

I honestly was half going to see it because of the music and half because it got good reviews, but wow the movie came out awesome.

Considering there was no explosions and special effects yet the movie still created emotion and appeal was a rare treat for movies today.

And, the music was epic. Lots of ghost tracks/remixes in there too which was awesome.

 

10/02/10 6:06 AM

after listening to the whole soundtrack tonight

it's what i wanted ghosts to sound like. they are similar but TSN is more melodic to me and more provocative too.

i think fincher might bring the best out of trent. i don't know.


i do hope this "new update/news trent is talking about will be the announcement that he's going to do the score to fincher's millennium series as well. (probably not though)

after finishing the original swedish films..trent could definitely bring that shit to the next level with fincher.

 

10/02/10 2:48 PM

Saw it Friday. Loved, loved, LOVED it. My favorite film of 2010. The film is compelling, dark and gives viewers an insight into the entire facebook phenomenon. I saw it in Harvard Square and a lot of the footage was filmed in the Harvard area, which was kind of surreal and interesting.

Trent's score works beautifully with the film and on its own.

 

10/02/10 3:53 PM

I'm heading off soon to see it myself.



Loved it! The music, of course, was perfect, and the acting was superb.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/02/2010 08:12PM by PeedroPaula.

 

10/02/10 5:54 PM

An interesting article from today's Boston Globe.

Facebook film not making friends with some Harvard grads

Liberties taken with characters, motivations, they say

By Joseph P. Kahn, Globe Staff | October 2, 2010

It’s witty and entertaining, with snappy dialogue and memorable performances bound to attract Oscar talk. But for one knowing slice of the audience for “The Social Network’’ — the new film about the birth of Facebook — there is an awful lot less to “like.’’

The movie opens this weekend to rave reviews from critics. For some people who were there during the website’s launch at Harvard University in 2003 to 2004, though, “The Social Network’’ is more than a cinematic revisiting of events and personalities. What’s portrayed onscreen is their own college experience, and that’s getting more mixed reviews regarding the film’s authenticity and accuracy.

On Thursday night, four members of Harvard’s class of 2004 and one 2002 grad watched “Social Network,’’ then gathered afterward to share their reactions. All count themselves among Facebook’s first few hundred subscribers.

One, Steve Grossman, was a fraternity brother of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and knew many of the film’s major players personally. Another, Sam Lipoff, has 1,500 Facebook “friends,’’ many of them holdovers from his Harvard days.

The consensus? While well written and well acted, “Social Network’’ takes ample liberties with the reality they lived as undergraduates. Motivations and character traits have been distorted, the five agreed, sometimes amusingly but often less so.

Grossman, 28, an information technology analyst at Northeastern University, was the most critical of the group. Watching the movie made him physically uncomfortable, he admitted.

“What was driving Mark in the movie didn’t ring true at all,’’ said Grossman, who faulted the movie for linking Zuckerberg’s social network-building ambitions to his feeling shunned by Harvard’s @#$%& final clubs. Pure Hollywood invention, said Grossman. “Mark’s a good person. My fear is, people will leave this movie thinking he’s a royal [expletive]. And he’s not.’’

Elizabeth Burke Cantwell, 28, a career counselor at Boston University, and Lindsay Hyde, 28, who runs a Boston-based nonprofit, laughed at campus dating habits being depicted as a kind of running frat house bacchanal. In one scene, a group of women arrive from off-campus for a night of heavy drinking and striptease dancing at a final club.

“Taking off clothes — I never saw that at any party I went to,’’ Cantwell said. Added Hyde, “The clubs do pose a gender challenge at Harvard, absolutely. But their portrayal far exceeded their prominence on campus.’’

“The Social Network’’ is based on Ben Mezrich’s book “The Accidental Billionaires’’ and was written by Aaron Sorkin, creator of “The West Wing’’ and other dramas. Mezrich has acknowledged that his book re-creates conversations and scenes for dramatic effect and does not always faithfully follow history.

“The book and movie are entertainment vehicles,’’ said Hyde’s husband, Blair Baldwin. “But at the end of the day, the real story is much tamer. To make a good move I guess you have to take some liberties. It’s a great movie, but it’s not a documentary.’’

Onscreen, the action initially unfolds at Harvard, where Zuckerberg uses his programming skills to create a university-specific website that quickly spreads to other campuses and beyond. Zuckerberg and his partners are soon sent on a dizzying ride to global fame and fortune.

Clashes with university officials and jilted business colleagues — Zuckerberg has paid tens of millions of dollars to settle lawsuits — shape the film’s plot. Playing a pivotal role is his friend and business partner Eduardo Saverin, a victim in the end of Zuckerberg’s ego and Facebook’s rapid expansion.

Yet key figures in the site’s creation, notably programmer Dustin Moskovitz, are reduced to cameo roles, to the dismay of Grossman and others who watched its launch from ground zero.

Lipoff, 27, a doctoral candidate in chemistry at MIT, said Zuckerberg’s success derived less from his disdain for campus social snobs than from students’ eagerness to embrace anything as fresh and cool as Facebook. The university’s information technology department had promised its own online version of the college facebook but said it would take a year. Zuckerberg boasted he could do it in a week.

“The best line in the movie was Zuckerberg saying [to the Winklevoss brothers], ‘If you had invented Facebook, you would have invented Facebook,’ ’’ said Lipoff. “It captured his attitude perfectly.’’

The group also agreed that the movie gets many smaller touches just right. For example, the phrase “Facebook me!’’ did became a familiar campus refrain, they remembered. Another scene in which Zuckerberg hacks into Harvard computers to steal student information was also singled out as remarkably authentic.

All five got a kick out of a scene featuring Lawrence Summers, then president of Harvard. Two Zuckerberg antagonists, twin brothers Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, visit Summers’s office to complain about Zuckerberg stealing their intellectual property. Summers brushes them off, suggesting the brothers “go invent something else.’’

Having been to Summers’s office himself a time or two, Lipoff said, “He might have been thinking those things in his head. But even Larry Summers wouldn’t have said them aloud.’’

For Cantwell, the movie stirred memories of a time when Facebook felt local and familiar, not like a global brand with 500 million subscribers. “One thing I really liked about the movie was it made me think about how much Facebook has changed from its initial concept,’’ she said.

For Baldwin, who graduated in 2002 but was on campus, dating Hyde, during Facebook’s launch, it was a reminder of how elegantly simple the site was in its earliest days. “It just seemed natural, which is why everybody started using it,’’ Baldwin said.

Hyde and Baldwin were the only two who had read Mezrich’s book. While hewing closely to its narrative, they said, the film casts Zuckerberg as a socially inept college student, and a much less sympathetic figure, than the book’s portrayal of a ruthlessly ambitious businessman who’s now a multibillionaire. Grossman calls that a tragedy.

“This movie’s going to sell really well, even get an Oscar nod,’’ he said. “But people will walk out of there thinking about a Mark Zuckerberg that doesn’t exist.’’

 

10/02/10 7:30 PM

Just saw this with the Husband. We both liked it. Personally, I liked it a lot. The script was very sharp, the acting was very convincing, and the score really set the tone for the scenes and enhanced the film in a very positive way.

Anyone else smell Oscar nominations?

 

10/03/10 11:32 AM

Loved it so much. Just brilliant all around.

 

10/03/10 12:54 PM

CharmlessMan posted:
Loved it so much. Just brilliant all around.

I think I might have to see it again next week.

 

10/03/10 1:18 PM

I'll be seeing it next week with the family. Wish I could have seen in this weekend but could find no one else who wanted to see it as badly as me. Since I can't just go to the movies on my own, I'll have to wait a bit. It's killing me too, because I haven't listened to the album yet, aside from the EP and Hand Covers Bruise. I wanna be surprised when I see the movie.

 

10/03/10 3:06 PM

I bought my ticket online. Paid for the student price because hey, seriously, I'm learning everyday. But I don't have a printer so I have to stand in line so that the ticket person can run my card and give me my ticket. It's the ten o'clock showing on opening night and there is a line. Just before my turn, a couple of kids step up to the window and an older man from the left walks in through periph. He asks the girl, who was certainly young-enough looking to be a student, what the rating of the movie was and she told him PG-13. The man then informs the clerk that he's the kids father but won't be going in to the movies with him. The clerk is then forced to tell the father that unless he accompanies the children, they can not watch the movie. As the two kids moan in unison, I butt in sayin, "Hey, I'm goin'." The four people briefly direct their attention to myself and then to one another for some sort of non-verbal auth. The clerk tells me that all I have to do is walk through the gate with them when we get our tickets torn. I introduce myself to the father who thanks me and then leaves final instructions with the boys to call him at the end of the movie. The kids run in and I step up to tell the girl that I'd already purchased my ticket online and just need to print it. She tells me that that was a nice thing I did. I thank her. Inside the two kids have their eyes darting across the inside of the place. As we head up to the rope to have our tickets torn, I reintroduce myself and asked them if their a fan of David Fincher, The Director of the Film. The kids look at me with question marks so I mention a couple of his previous works and both recognize "fight club".

I was just so psyched to hear the score in theater sound. It was immense.

Personally, I enjoyed the sense of humor. I also liked the attitude Parker had towards Napster and the consequences it'd had on the modern record industry.

Sure, maybe Fincher's portrayal of Zuckerberg was a bit "hollywooded-up" but in any case, I liked it. Eisenberg's portrait was less true to the real-life person however, what I find interesting, is how true it may be for other's. I know that for a person who's often prone to social ineptitude, this movie got a little bit more than just a little giggle out of me. I was laughing out loud.

 

10/03/10 4:12 PM

BillyReznor88 posted:
I'll be seeing it next week with the family. Wish I could have seen in this weekend but could find no one else who wanted to see it as badly as me. Since I can't just go to the movies on my own, I'll have to wait a bit. It's killing me too, because I haven't listened to the album yet, aside from the EP and Hand Covers Bruise. I wanna be surprised when I see the movie.

I listened to the album, just before going to sleep, the night before seeing the movie (I knew that was going to be my last chance to listen to it, if I wanted to watch the movie the following day)

Well, the reason I'm quoting: Recognizing the score while watching the movie is not a bad feeling...I understand, though, what you mean... but, if you listen to it, at least once; have a good night sleep, and then go see the movie the following day, or so, then it's going to be ok. (In case you want to change your mind)


Edit: Maybe this will help you: Listening to it as an album is one thing, and eperiencing it with the movie = The Social Network.



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 10/03/2010 05:11PM by Richard.

 

10/03/10 4:47 PM

A Bad Review, but does it have a point?

Is it Old Media bashing New?

 

10/03/10 5:14 PM

JoePearson posted:
A Bad Review, but does it have a point?

Is it Old Media bashing New?

I don't even bother reading reviews. If you let others tell you how to feel about something, then....FAIL. What's important is the way you experienced it.

 

10/03/10 5:29 PM

Richard posted:
JoePearson posted:
A Bad Review, but does it have a point?

Is it Old Media bashing New?

I don't even bother reading reviews. If you let others tell you how to feel about something, then....FAIL. What's important is the way you experienced it.

Did you sense what the article is saying though?

 

10/03/10 5:34 PM

JoePearson posted:
Richard posted:
JoePearson posted:
A Bad Review, but does it have a point?

Is it Old Media bashing New?

I don't even bother reading reviews. If you let others tell you how to feel about something, then....FAIL. What's important is the way you experienced it.

Did you sense what the article is saying though?

I didn't read it winking smiley - I experienced TSN, that's enough for me. ^_^

 

10/03/10 5:38 PM

JoePearson posted:
Richard posted:
JoePearson posted:
A Bad Review, but does it have a point?

Is it Old Media bashing New?

I don't even bother reading reviews. If you let others tell you how to feel about something, then....FAIL. What's important is the way you experienced it.

Did you sense what the article is saying though?

yeah, that's not a good review. not that he was saying the movie was bad. but, let me give an analogy why it was a bad review..

if a former army ranger decides to review the movie..Basic and decides to write 4 paragraphs about how certain things wouldn't be like actual basic training for the army rangers...that's a bad review.

for one..yes, they're probably right. but, the army ranger himself only has his experience to gather from. and it's a fucking movie. tell us how the movie was. not could you see this happening in real life.

 

10/03/10 6:07 PM

RhettButler posted:
CharmlessMan posted:
Loved it so much. Just brilliant all around.

I think I might have to see it again next week.

I may see it again as well. This has been quite a year for repeat viewings for me.

 

10/03/10 6:57 PM

Just finished watching The Social Network. I really enjoyed it. Now I need to get around to downloading the soundtrack.

 
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