Will you be my friend? The Social Network review

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Image by sitmonkeysupreme via Flickr

Today I went to see The Social Network, one of this week’s new releases. If you haven’t heard anything about this movie or seen the trailer at least, say, ten times, I’d be likely to believe you been sent off the earth in a rocket, with earplugs tightly squished in, and a blindfold across the eyes. Undoubtedly it is one of the biggest movies of 2010, one that certainly will be the talking point of a lot of awkward ‘I don’t know what to talk about so I’ll try movies’ conversation parties. After seeing it I am skeptical of exactly how close to the truth it really is. I believe that Mark Zuckerberg was (or is) probably a sociopathic genius. I believe he probably screwed over his contemporaries to get what he wanted. But I don’t believe much else. Only Mark Zuckerberg and Eduardo Saverin are the ones who can attest to a lot of it. Plus the story leaves a lot unresolved; Who really betrayed who? Who was really jealous of who? And so on.

The first thing I was struck by, actually in the first scene, was the speed of the dialogue. It was like watching the West Wing on fast forward with the sound on loud (which isn’t that much of a surprise seeing as these were both written by Aaron Sorkin), and also I hear David Fincher was under contract to make the film around 2 hours long and therefore has confessed he made the actors run through pages of dialogue as quickly as possibly). The pace is constantly speedy; which is good for me, I hate when a film drags unnecessarily. I think Jesse Eisenberg played the character of Mark Zuckerberg with excellence, Andrew Garfield showed why he is one of our rising stars (go Team GB) and even Justin Timberlake gave a performance that didn’t make me hum Sexyback quietly to myself.

Overall I left the cinema with a sense of wonder (at the genius of the concept of Facebook, its meteoric rise to success, and the film’s portrayal of its beginnings) but also at the empty and sort of cruel irony. If what the film portrays is in any part true then the founder of Facebook, the social network of 500 million people and countless friends, is (or maybe was is a better word to use) a lonely person. A lonely person who is now the youngest billionaire in the world yes, but a lonely person none-the-less. This is certainly what David Fincher seems to be trying to get across in the movie and it’s executed smartly and beautifully within that 2 hour 19 minute time slot.

Thumbs up from me!

BFI Film Festival lights up London

 

Mark Romanek, Kazuo Ishiguro and some of the N...

Image by Bex.Walton via Flickr

 

The 54th annual British Film Institute London Film Festival is finally underway and it’s started off with a big fat rainy but quirky bang. The opening gala night showing of Never Let Me Go, a film directed by Mark Romanek, has been eagerly awaited by both those who have read the bestseller book by Kauzo Ishiguro, and by those intrigued by the dynamics of Keira Knightly and rising stars, Andrew Garfield and Carey Mulligan on this blockbuster film.

And from the looks of early reviews (see links below) this film could be a definite go-see.

I’m really interested by the story, a plot revolving around an English Boarding School that’s not quite what it seems and an overall philosophical theme of what it is to be human, (I won’t divulge further just in case there are those that stroll across this post who don’t have enough time to cover their eyes) has success written all over it, scrawled in Keira Knightley’s diamond encrusted hand no doubt. She’s definitely a draw for this movie, I always like to see whether she can actually take her acting any further than the English rose style she’s come to embody. Although… When I think about it, the subject matter doesn’t really see her getting out of her comfort zone,does it? So it’s sure to be same old, same old, hopefully with a little twist… I can but hope right?

Also Andrew Garfield, the new Spiderman, stars, I’ll be waiting to see what he brings to the boarding school table. Hopefully he won’t have us watching something that is the equivalent to eating rancid gruel. Sorry, had to get a reference to boarding school evils in somewhere, you know how it is.
I’m hopefully going to be headed to some of the showings, tickets to Catfish have been booked and I’m keeping a sneaky eye on the BFI website. Just in case some more tickets for the big showings that sold out before I had a chance to say ‘SHABAM!’

Fingers crossed

http://www.bfi.org.uk/lff/films/