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Write 3 page essay on the topic Fight Club Analysis.Download file to see previous pages... (Fight Club 1999). when he mentions the growing relationship between Tyler and Marla. and when he talks about
Write 3 page essay on the topic Fight Club Analysis.
Download file to see previous pages...(Fight Club 1999). when he mentions the growing relationship between Tyler and
Marla. and when he talks about the destructiveness of Project Mayhem.
But in many cases too, words of the actual actors take over. In some places, especially
where the narrator is talking, the dialogues are brief and to the point, just added to move
the story forward at that particular point in time. Take for instance the opening scene at
the support centre for men with testicular cancer where Bob Paulson, weeping, chips in
a question to the protagonist, 'Are we still men' (Fight Club 1999), while the
protagonist/narrator's voice, is telling the story in the background.
In other scenes in the movie the dialogues are longer, starting with the time the
protagonist meets Marla Singer, and discovers that she is faking her reason for being at
the therapy session. They hold a conversation after the session. Other longer dialogue
scenes include when the narrator meets Tyler Durden, the time the Fight Club begins,
and the scene in the bathroom where the narrator and Tyler have a talk.
For the fighting in the film, the actors were expected to show real fighting skills.
Light and Colour
Fight Club has good art direction (Linson 2004). The director, David Fincher, gave a
vivid effect to the colour. As a result of this, people appear kind of shiny. Colours were
also added to some nighttime shootings.
A Super 35 format was used in shooting Fight Club. The narrator's scenes without Tyler
Durden, the scenes are casual to look at. Those scenes which have Tyler in them have
more visual effects, looking more real than is normal. Many parts of the film were shot
at night, while those that were taken during the day...
Giroux, H. A. (2001). "Brutalized Bodies and Emasculated Politics: Fight Club, Consumerism, and Masculine Violence", Breaking in to the Movies: Film and the Culture of Politics.