Fight Club

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In 1996, Chuck Palahniuk released his best known Novel; Fight Club. In 1999, The award winning novel was adapted to film. Palahniuk is know for his unique, and sometimes dark writing. The unnamed main character works in the liability department of a major (also nameless) car company. He fly’s all around the country to investigate car accidents and other problems his company’s cars may have. He is the one who determines whether or not a recall is necessary. Necessary as in, if it’s going to cost the company more money to do a recall or settle out of court with the family’s that their defective cars have killed or injured. He meets an intriguing stranger on the way home from one of his business trips. They end up developing an underground Fight Club. So how does the film compare to Chuck’s novel ?

Of course, the main storyline is the same. It’s the story of a man who is bored with life and has a severe case of insomnia. The he meets Tyler. Tyler changes the Narrator life. Tyler makes the Narrator see how materialistic the world really is. They start an underground Fight Club in which men can take out their aggression. The To get the full experience and really appreciate the whole story, you need to see it from both points.

The book gets into much more detail and more inside the characters heads. We get to see how truly unpredictable Tyler is. On the other hand, the movie hits just as hard with seeing the bruises and blood. Not to mention the look on the men’s faces after they fight. You would expect it to be pain, but its relief. This is the way they vent. How they get away from their empty lives of working just to live. Away from the dead end jobs and people being condescending all day long. I would assume it’s sort of...

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...grees that he “know, not fear, that someday you will die”.

So how does Fight Club do with the transform Novel to Film? Based on the response, Very well. When Fight Club was released back in 1999, it had a developed a mass following. A cult following if you will. The director, David Fincher, went above and beyond to capture the heart of Chuck’s writing style and contemptuous look on the material lives most people live today. The clever things the characters say seem endless, and always amusing. Most may be dark, but they always make sense. Chuck uses great analogies most people would never think of, but everyone Understands. Needless to say, Fight Club with keep it’s following and attract more fans for years to come.

References:

Chuck Palahniuk (1996) Fight Club (The Novel)

 Jim Uhls (Screen Play) David Fincher (Director) (1999) Fight Club (The Film)

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