They say that the more "friends" Facebook we possess at least we call as "real life."
since I saw the announcement of this film I knew I had to concentrate on the history of a page that has absorbed many hours of my life. I confess. I stopped smoking, quit and Twitter Formspring , but I can not help Facebook . Thanks Mark Zuckerberg, You Fucked my life!
Interestingly, the beginning of this film that suggests that this page begins with the absurd that we need human beings that we call the three A's: attention, acceptance, approval. We present an internal struggle to be heard, when we have nothing to do or no one to talk, physically, we turn to a page where we meet the various beings who know a time in life and probably never see again.
need to know about us. And this is the beginning of Zuckerberg, whom his high IQ leads him to become the youngest billionaire in history, but who at the same time his poor emotional intelligence does not provide what is necessary to be admitted to a fraternity or social club Harvard University.
And again enters this discussion by discussing the emotional and rational intelligence. A "brainy" Harvard creates a network social. And at the end of not being accepted into the club setting up a network of over 500 million friends. Tell me, Daniel Goleman, what happened here?
Roughly, David Fincher, who has accustomed us to dark sides of human being-the most fun while exploring complex, "in films like Fight Club, Seven, Zodiac, handles so sublime a very simple story line if it had been taken by another director with less attention to human, would have completely destroyed.
addition to managing the story line, coupled with a musical composition by Trent Reznor highly selective, it seems to be almost invisible, but which adds a dark flavor to the film, highlights the assembly acting.
Excellent performances, led by the brilliant casting of Jesse Eisenberg, "Zombieland," the main character is physically very similar to the original Zuckerberg, both verbally and in body.
A perfect film that will have many fans for both activists and opponents of social networks, while scoring more points Fincher is tearing not only the surface but one of the most attractive plots in the middle of the century: how to become more social without becoming asocial. One of the major concepts that seem to emerge again from the philosopher Canadian Marshall McLuhan predicted in the concept of Global Village.
A movie that only shows the rise of network points in a crude way as ambition reaches imaginable limits, and how what starts as a simple idea came to report a fortune for the young Zuckerberg.
Scene not to be missed: the first where the main character reveals the reason that motivates him to create Facebook.
My recommendation: The film can be somewhat lengthy for those not accustomed to the biographies. So limit yourself to enjoy the dialogue and characters.
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