“ *** SPOILERS *** Fight Club is scary. Very scary. Just listen to that opening music and watch the rest of your life become meaningless. Da-da-da-da-da (did you hear the dentist …”
“Here come the flames. An outlet for venting ones agrophobia like hitting a pillow when your angry or even that someone who has a good life somehow doesn't see the forest for the …”
“Fight Club is already so goddamn bizarre. And a remake would suffer for two reasons. Either it would be way too bizarre for some to swallow or it wouldn't be bizarre enough. It …”
“The Big Scene: I can only remember Meat Loaf's character being referred to as "Bitch Tits." So there's a scene when "The Narrator" meets up with "Bitch Tits" on the streets …”
“SPOILER: Who wants to know that Brad Pitt is just Ed Norton's imaginary friend? Well I guess I just killed it for you right there.”
#6 of 10 from
Movies you DO NOT want to hear the spoilers for!
by foboftheyear
“This is the first DVD I ever bought! I had actually never seen the movie before, but I liked the way the packaging looked and then I also ended up loving the movie a whole …”
#8 of 20 from
Quentin Tarantino's Top 20 Films of All Time... A Perspective
by Husher315
FIGHT CLUB is narrated by a lonely, unfulfilled young man (Edward Norton) who finds his only comfort in feigning terminal illness and attending disease support groups. Hopping from group to group, he encounters another pretender, or "tourist," the morose Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter), who immediately gets under his skin. However, while returning from a business trip, he meets a more intriguing character--the subversive Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). They become fast friends, bonding over a mutual disgust for corporate consumer-culture hypocrisy. Eventually, the two start Fight Club, which convenes in a bar basement where angry men get to vent their frustrations in brutal, bare-knuckle bouts. Fight Club soon becomes the men's only real priority; when the club starts a cross-country expansion, things start getting really crazy.
Like Tyler Durden himself, director David Fincher?s FIGHT CLUB, based on the novel by Chuck Palahniuk, is startlingly aggressive and gleefully mischievous as it skewers...