Kenneth Turan, LA Times
Friday, October 15, 1999
www.latimes.com
"Fight Club," a film about men who like to fight, is an
unsettling experience, but not the way anyone intended. What's
most troubling about this witless mishmash of whiny, infantile
philosophizing and bone-crunching violence is the increasing
realization that it actually thinks it's saying something of
significance. That is a scary notion indeed.
Director David Fincher, with "Alien3," "The Game" and
"Seven" in his past, is one of cinema's premier brutalizers,
able to impale audiences on meat hooks and make them like it.
So it's no surprise that "Fight Club's" level of visceral
violence, its stomach-turning string of bloody and protracted
bare-knuckles brawls, make it more than worthy of an NC-17 if
the MPAA could ever work up the nerve (don't hold your breath)
to give that rating to a major studio film.
What is a surprise is how much of "Fight Club" is simply
tedious. It's not just the crack-brained nature of its core
premise, that what every man wants, needs and appreciates in
his heart of hearts is the chance to get kicked, gouged and
severely beaten by another guy. It's also the windy attempts
at pseudo-profundity in Jim Uhls' adaptation of Chuck
Palahniuk's novel, the feeble dime-store nihilism on the order
of "It's only after you've lost everything that you're free to
do anything."
"Fight Club" opens with its two protagonists in a moment
of crisis: Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt) has shoved a revolver down
the throat of the nameless narrator the film sometimes calls
Jack (Edward Norton) as both men occupy what Jack calls "front
row seats for the theater of mass destruction."
An extensive flashback is clearly in order, and it begins
with Jack's numbing life as a bland, robotic numbers-cruncher
for a major auto maker whose job it is to determine how many
deaths it takes to make it financially prudent to call for a
product recall. (Protean actor Norton can disappear into
anyone, but the spectacle of him disappearing into a
barely-alive nobody is not particularly gratifying.)
Living in an apartment tower he characterizes as "a
filing cabinet for widows and young professionals," Jack
divides his time between two preoccupations. He compulsively
shops for home furnishings ("We used to read pornography; now
it's the Horchow Collection") and, unable to sleep, he attends
touchy-feely support group sessions for people with
life-threatening diseases. Here he meets Marla Singer (Helena
Bonham Carter, as far as you can get from her Merchant Ivory
past), a fellow faker with ratty hair and a rattier,
cigarettes-and-cheap-jewelery lifestyle who lives as if, yes,
"we might die at any moment."
These initial parts of "Fight Club" are structured in
part as satires on the modern mania for consumerism and the
cult of New Age sensitivity. Certainly these areas are ripe
for sending up, but this film is so contemptuous of anything
human, so eager to employ know-it-all smugness, that the cure
plays worse than the disease.
It's on an airplane that Jack runs into Durden, a
primeval savant whose business is soap but whose wild red
jacket and matching sunglasses mark him as a kind of walking
id. Durden, we admiringly come to discover, spends his spare
time splicing frames of pornography into family films (how
brave! how iconoclastic!) and serving as "a guerrilla
terrorist in the food service industry," fouling various foods
with his own bodily fluids. Is it any wonder both the film and
Jack view him as a truth-telling avatar of compelling
frankness?
Soon the two men are living together in a dilapidated
hovel (no consumerism for them) that looks like a slum the
Addams family happily abandoned and Jack is absorbing Durden's
bracing bons mots about the state of the American male,
variously called "a generation of men raised by women" and
"slaves with white collars." "Our great war," Durden all but
preaches, "is a spiritual war, our Great Depression is our
lives."
(In one of the more curious footnotes to modern culture,
"Fight Club" plays at times like the bombastic World Wrestling
Federation version of Susan Faludi's "Stiffed," also a
treatise on men who have "lost their compass in the world" and
suffer from "the American masculinity crisis.")
Tyler's answer to this malaise is Fight Club, where
strangers find that savagely beating each other is such a
cathartic, practically religious experience that guys are,
well, fighting to get in. While both Tyler ("I don't want to
die without any scars") and Jack ("You weren't alive anywhere
like you were there. . . . After fighting everything else in
your life is like the volume turned down") are capable of
extended neo-macho riffs on the virtues of Fight Club, that
doesn't prevent the whole concept from playing like the
delusional rantings of testosterone-addicted thugs.
Tyler keeps upping the ante for the men he recruits,
turning Fight Club habitues into an organized mob of
nihilistic bad boys wrecking havoc on our puny, emasculated
civilization. Though the film employs dubious plot twists to
quasi-distance itself from the weirder implications of a
philosophy the Columbine gunmen would likely have found
congenial, it's to little effect. Aside from the protracted
beatings, this film is so vacuous and empty it's more
depressing than provocative. If the first rule of Fight Club
is "Nobody talks about Fight Club," a fitting subsection might
be "Why would anyone want to?" |