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  Review: 'Social Network' epic and intimate at once
 By CHRISTY LEMIRE, AP Movie Critic Christy Lemire, Ap Movie Critic
2 hrs 19 mins ago

Checking into Facebook sporadically while writing my review of "The Social
Network," I notice my hairstylist commenting on how freakishly hot it's been
in Los Angeles, an old friend announcing she's flying back to Dallas from a
business trip in New Jersey and a sports colleague posting a photo of
himself while on assignment in Wales covering the Ryder Cup.

My dog trainer has seven new friends. A classmate from my college newspaper
is celebrating a birthday.

They're all the usual mundane updates and observations that have become
second nature in an age when we must share the meaningless immediately — all
part of who we are and how we live and work. But the origin tale of Facebook
itself is filled with high drama, betrayal and rage — just one of the many
fascinating contradictions that make "The Social Network" so smart, meaty
and compulsively watchable.

Director David Fincher and writer Aaron Sorkin have gotten together to
create an epic tale about how we're able to tell the world about the tiniest
details of our lives; they depict potentially dry, unwieldy topics —
computer coding and competing lawsuits — and they do it in an intimate way.
These are two guys who aren't exactly checking their smart phones constantly
for new friend requests, but "The Social Network" represents the best of
what they do: Fincher's mastery of fluid, visual storytelling, Sorkin's
knack for crisp, biting dialogue. It's sharp, funny and tense, has great
energy and pulsates with the thrill of discovery.

Why we think people are itching to discover so much about us is another
conversation for another time. But at age 19, Harvard student Mark
Zuckerberg figured out that we'd want to do just that, and he determined it
while screwing around on his computer one night in 2003, drunkenly miffed
after his girlfriend dumped him. At least, that's how the story goes;
Facebook itself calls the movie fiction. Still, here we are now, 500 million
users strong worldwide — and here Zuckerberg is, billions of dollars richer.

Zuckerberg himself is the biggest contradiction of all: a socially inept guy
who came up with a revolutionary way for others to connect, a hugely
inventive genius who's also depicted as being small, petty and
back-stabbing. He's coy about his own life and likes but he's become
obscenely wealthy by urging others to divulge theirs. In starring as
Zuckerberg, Jesse Eisenberg rises beautifully to the challenge of portraying
an unlivable protagonist and making us feel engaged by him — or even want to
see him succeed, depending on your perspective. And perspective is
everything, as you'll find in "The Social Network." Eisenberg hones the
awkward intelligence that's become his trademark in films like "The Squid
and the Whale" and "Adventureland," but there's an edge to it now, a
bitterness that makes him the most dangerous nerd ever.

Based on Ben Mezrich's book "The Accidental Billionaires," "The Social
Network" couldn't be more timely, with Trent Reznor's synth-heavy score
contributing to the contemporary, techie vibe. But it's a classic tale of
ambition, greed, ego and self-destruction. It looks like a Fincher film with
its dark, smoky warmth, similar to "Fight Club," "Panic Room" and "Zodiac."
And yet it's his least show-offy film from a technical standpoint (although
how he digitally depicts a set of twins is seamless). "The Social Network"
moves with great verve but it's all about the dialogue. And that's where
Sorkin comes in — his 162-page script packed neatly into a two-hour film
with patter so brisk, especially off the top, it'll make you feel as if
you're watching a 1940s screwball comedy.

Fincher cuts back and forth between the creation of what we now know to be
the juggernaut of Facebook and the depositions in two lawsuits against
Zuckerberg. One is from a group of Harvard classmates, twins Cameron and
Tyler Winklevoss (Armie Hammer and Josh Pence) and Divya Narendra (Max
Minghella), who say Zuckerberg agreed to help them establish their own
on-campus social network, then stole his idea and formed his own. The other
is from his former business partner and only close friend back then,
Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin (Andrew Garfield), who says he was
cheated out of millions after providing the earliest financial backing.

Each is certain of his telling of the events; "The Social Network" lets us
watch them all play out and gives us enough credit to decide for ourselves.
And the performances all around bring these various versions of the truth to
life.

Eisenberg is at the center of it all, but Garfield is just as strong: He's
the realist in the equation, but he's also more emotionally invested. And
Justin Timberlake is, totally unsurprisingly, charismatic as hell as Sean
Parker, the Napster co-founder who encourages Zuckerberg's ambition, as well
as his darker instincts.

Just as you can't stop yourself from checking into Facebook more than once a
day, you'll find yourself drawn to "The Social Network" again and again.
It's easily one of the year's best.

"The Social Network," a Columbia Pictures release, is rated PG-13 for sexual
content, drug and alcohol use and language. Running time: 120 minutes. Four
stars out of four.

___

Motion Picture Association of America rating definitions:

G — General audiences. All ages admitted.

PG — Parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for
children.

PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13.
Some material may be inappropriate for young children.

R — Restricted. Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian.

NC-17 — No one under 17 admitted.
   Copyright © 2010 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.

-- 
PJ C. Reyes

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