Fight Club

Fight Club

Mischief. Mayhem. Soap.

Sinopse

A ticking-time-bomb insomniac and a slippery soap salesman channel primal male aggression into a shocking new form of therapy. Their concept catches on, with underground "fight clubs" forming in every town, until an eccentric gets in the way and ignites an out-of-control spiral toward oblivion.

  • 8.4
  • 1999
  • Released
  • 2h 19m

Edward Norton

Narrator

Brad Pitt

Tyler Durden

Helena Bonham Carter

Marla Singer

Meat Loaf

Robert Paulson

Jared Leto

Angel Face

Zach Grenier

Richard Chesler (Regional Manager)

Holt McCallany

The Mechanic

Eion Bailey

Ricky

Richmond Arquette

Intern at Hospital

David Andrews

Thomas at Remaining Men Together

George Maguire

Group Leader at Remaining Men Together

Eugenie Bondurant

Weeping Woman - Onward and Upward

Christina Cabot

Group Leader - Partners in Positivity

Sydney 'Big Dawg' Colston

Speaker - Free and Clear

Rachel Singer

Chloe

Christie Cronenweth

Airline Check-In Attendant

Tim DeZarn

Federated Motor Co. - Inspector Bird

Ezra Buzzington

Federated Motor Co. - Inspector Dent

Dierdre Downing-Jackson

Business Woman on Plane

Bob Stephenson

Airport Security Officer

Charlie Dell

Doorman at Person Towers

Rob Lanza

Man in Suit

David Lee Smith

Walter

Joel Bissonnette

Food Court Maitre d'

Evan Mirand

'Steph'

Lou Beatty Jr.

Cop at Marla's Building

Thom Gossom Jr.

Detective Stern

Valerie Bickford

Cosmetics Buyer

Peter Iacangelo

Lou

Todd Peirce

First Man at Auto Shop

Mark Fite

Second Man at Auto Shop

Matt Winston

Seminary Student

Joon Kim

Raymond K. Hessel

Lauren Sánchez Bezos

Channel 4 Reporter

Pat McNamara

Commissioner Jacobs

Tyrone R. Livingston

Banquet Speaker

Owen Masterson

Airport Valet

David Jean Thomas

Policeman

Paul Carafotes

Salvator - Winking Bartender

Christopher John Fields

Proprietor of Dry Cleaners

Anderson Bourell

Bruised Bar Patron #1

Scotch Ellis Loring

Bruised Bar Patron #2

Michael Shamus Wiles

Bartender in Halo

Andi Carnick

Hotel Desk Clerk

Ed Kowalczyk

Waiter at Clifton's

Leonard Termo

Desk Sergeant

Van Quattro

Detective Andrew

Markus Redmond

Detective Kevin

Michael Girardin

Detective Walker

Michael Arturo

BMW Salesman. (uncredited)

Greg Bronson

Fight Spectator (uncredited)

Matt Cinquanta

Fighter (uncredited)

Paul Dillon

Irvin (uncredited)

Eddie Hargitay

Chanting Fighter (uncredited)

Phil Hawn

Banquet Guest (uncredited)

Bruce Holman

Waiter in Bridgeworth Suites Corporate Video (uncredited)

Jawara

Fight Patron Saying 'I don't know. What's going on?' (uncredited)

Baron Jay

Waiter (uncredited)

Jim Jenkins

Restaurant Maitre D' (uncredited)

Trey Ore

Fight Club Patron / Guy #2 in Video Store (uncredited)

Louis Ortiz

Fight Spectator (uncredited)

Hugh Peddy

Fight Club Man (uncredited)

J.T. Pontino

Fight Club Man (uncredited)

Chad Randau

Waiter (uncredited)

Marcio Rosario

Fighter (uncredited)

Gregory Silva

Riley Wilde - Fighter (uncredited)

Brian Tochi

Fight Bully (uncredited)

Michael Zagst

Support Group Member (uncredited)

Summer Moore

Marla's Neighbor (uncredited)

Violet Voss

主演

Daniel Stevenson

Support Group Member (uncredited)
Status

Released

Original Language

en

Budget

$63,000,000.00

Revenue

$100,853,753.00

Keywords
  • #dual identity
  • #rage and hate
  • #based on novel or book
  • #nihilism
  • #fight
  • #support group
  • #dystopia
  • #insomnia
  • #alter ego
  • #breaking the fourth wall
  • #split personality
  • #quitting a job
  • #dissociative identity disorder
  • #self destructiveness

Reviews

Geronimo1967
@Geronimo1967over 1 year ago

I wonder just how much of this might have been inspired by the vivid imagination of Robert Louis Stevenson? Edward Norton narrates a story that's essentially about himself. He works nine-to-five, but can't sleep. He can't explain his insomnia and after a casual aside from his doctor - who refuses to prescribe him sedatives - he starts cruising evening support groups. That's when he meets two impor

C
@chosengreatoneabout 2 years ago

This is definitely one of the greatest movies of all time, stylistically, narratively, aesthetically, and creatively. It uses very unorthodox camera angles, cute and effects to fully encapsulate this nihilistic, alternative culture that took over the late 90s and early 2000s. It has very deep views on early corporate capitalism which really arose in the 90s, and it pulls no punches to delive

alksjalksj
@alksjalksjalmost 3 years ago

The best movie i've seen, also my head hurts

K
@katch22over 4 years ago

Madness unbounded. Don't try to make sense of insanity, just ride a wild ride.

Wuchak
@Wuchakover 4 years ago

_**Finding enlightenment thru beating each other to a pulp**_ A 30 year-old man in Los Angeles works the office drudgery, but suffers insomnia (Edward Norton). He’s finally inspired by an unconventional woman he meets at support groups (Helena Bonham Carter) and, especially, a devil-may-care guy who lives on the outskirts of town (Brad Pitt). They start an underground club where men get togethe

R
@rsanekover 4 years ago

I was mostly neutral on this movie until the last third, when things turned psychologically thrilling and gave me American Psycho vibes. The "His name was Robert Paulson" scene specifically was where the film turned from 3 starts to 4.5 stars. Would recommend and I intend to return to this in some time as I feel it has higher rewatchability than many films of this style.

r96sk
@r96skalmost 5 years ago

I didn't enjoy this, pretty much at all, but still kinda appreciate how it all comes together. It's a weird one for me. Overall, <em>'Fight Club'</em> underwhelmed me. I actually knew very little before viewing it, despite hearing about it on a surface level for years and years; well, one 'regulatory' part of it anyway. It's much deeper than I had expected. Unfortunately, I didn't find entertai

M
@msbreviewsabout 5 years ago

If you enjoy reading my Spoiler-Free reviews, please follow my blog @ https://www.msbreviews.com David Fincher’s new film, Mank, is coming soon on Netflix, released six years after his latest installment, Gone Girl. Therefore, this week I’m reviewing five of Fincher’s movies. Se7en was the first one, and now it’s time for one of the most culturally impactful films of the 90s, Fight Club. This

S
@SneekyNutsover 7 years ago

In my top 5 of all time favourite movies. Great story line and a movie you can watch over and over again.

G
@Goddardover 7 years ago

Pretty awesome movie. It shows what one crazy person can convince other crazy people to do. Everyone needs something to believe in. I recommend Jesus Christ, but they want Tyler Durden.

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