Fight Club's Utopian Dick
from http://www.popmatters.com/film/fight-club.html
Does
capitalism have you by the balls? If you're feeling
a little limp lately, a little flaccid, emasculated,
or impotent, then David Fincher's Fight Club may
just have your number. This film kicks butt, and in
doing so it also manages to suggest that your need
for it and for other butt-kicking films is a late capitalist
symptom of contemporary psychosis.
In the universe of Fight Club, there are two
options. Either you become an Ikea-Boy seeking your
erotic gratification in the Horchow collection, or
you seek out alternative male community. In this respect
the film reminded me of Nicolas Ray's Rebel Without
a Cause — its creation of intense relationships
and of a hero critical of the social order depends
upon its delimitation of homoeroticism via the narrative-prohibition
of homosexuality.
The narrator, a corporate secretion stunningly played
by Edward Norton, first compulsively attends meetings
of AIDS patients and victims of testicular cancer.
At one point he cries in the huge feminine bosom of
Bob, a former body-builder and abuser of steroids (consummately
rendered by Meat Loaf), who has recently lost his testicles.
But in part because of the disruptive presence of a
phallic woman (Helena Bonham Carter), the cathartic
embraces quickly become beatings. There can be no Fight
Club if male-male desire leads to gay sex. At the
same time, the film suggests that only by blowing his
brains out, or at least half of them, can a man have
a satisfying heterosexual relationship. And given nuclear-family,
two-career monogamy, maybe that's not too far from
the truth.
Fight Club begins with a hyperreal journey
through what first appears to be cosmic outer space
becoming neuronal tissue becoming testicular vasdeferines.
In positing the deep unity of these three elements,
which are, in principle at least, differentiable, Fight
Club organizes the transformation of the narrator
from a white-collar wage slave into the leader of an
anti-capitalist terrorist organization. His transformation,
which involves rediscovering primal masculinity, is
wrought through his identification with alter-ego Tyler
Durgan, expertly played as the long lost rebel by Brad
Pitt. In Fight Club, Pitt is literally the phallus,
the film's image of male power. It becomes exceedingly
clear that the narrator desires this stylized phallic
image to combat the emasculation dealt out in daily
life. Through a truly brilliant organization of image-clusters
and narrative, the film thematizes the problematic
of masculinity by seeing Pitt as the utopian dick he
is.
Tyler has several activities and to each he brings
a unique dickishness: As a waiter he urinates in the
soup of fancy hotels, as a cinema projectionist he
cuts a couple porn-frames of penis into children's
films, as a vandal he furiously drills 1 inch holes
into rows of new computers. What unites all of his
phallic activities (including his formation of a terrorist
army to blow up credit-card companies), and what gives
him his extraordinary charisma, is a profound hatred
of the castrating reality of bourgeois life.
Although the film is cynical, misogynist, homophobic
and violent, with respect to American fantasy it has
the virtue of clarity. It activates a structure of
feeling while making it legible. Tyler's splicing of
subliminal cock-shots into family entertainment (hilariously
answered by reaction shots of various perturbed, aroused
and balling viewers, some of them children, who see
them but don't know they saw them) is the key to understanding
his significance. He is the subversive masculine, internal
to yet undermining the image of commodity culture.
The film cuts to the core of straight white masculinity,
powerfully activating in the space of the theater its
homophobic and indeed racist dimensions and its simultaneous
utopian aspirations for liberation.
The vector of desire sustained between the narrator
and Tyler and thus between spectator and Tyler has
its conditions of possibility in the exclusion of homosexuality
and of an incipient racism (as made manifest by a scene
where an Asian grocer is nearly the victim of "human
sacrifice"), even as it is driven by its hatred of
postmodernity's economic automation and its callous
indifference to individual potentiality. A communist
revolution organized to overthrow capitalist domination,
tomorrow's revolution, not yesterday's, appears as
a legitimate if vexed erotic and political option.
Tyler's army is not composed of mere spectators of
phallic power, but of participants in it. You viewers
aching to cease channeling your desire through designer
dishes and minivans, in order to reach down to the
real man lying dormant in your scrotum, are sick, and
your sickness, according to this film is nothing less
than the castrating anomie of corporate power and its
consumerist disciplinary regime. The film appeals to
you to consider and indeed to grasp the revolutionary
potential of your manhood. Why?
ANOTHER
VIEW
FIGHT CLUB
by Rhonda Baughman
PopMatters Film Critic
e-mail this article
Ahhh,
the mysteries of the male psyche. I'm not just talking
about Brad Pitt and Edward Norton, the stars of David
Fincher's new movie, Fight Club, but Chuck Palahniuk
as well, the author of the novel of the same name.
A brutal and graphic movie to complement the brutal
and graphic novel, it still makes me wonder just what
might be floating in Mr. Palahniuk's and Mr. Fincher's
tap water.
Fight Club is a jolting endeavor, to say the
least, and it packs quite a few punches, literally,
as well as a few surprises. The most surprising aspect,
really, being the fact that this is a wonderful adaptation
of the book — rare is the director who can manage
that task. Fincher does, though, and keeps us riveted
until the end with tricky visuals, plot twists, and
narration. The latter itself is preserved from the
book so well, that not much is lost in the translation
to the big screen. Truthfully, however, the attractive
cast doesn't detract from the film either.
Worker-bee, furniture freak, corporate climber, (Edward
Norton), known only as "Jack," who possesses body parts
and bile, meets nihilistic, group therapy addict, alluring
degenerate, Marla (Helena Bonham Carter), then just
happens to run into anarchist, virile, soap-maker Tyler
(Brad Pitt) on an airplane. Seductive is the atmosphere
that surrounds these major players, and violent is
the circumstances that brings them together. It is
with a look, a drag of a smoke, and a flowery statement
such as "You know, Jack...you're the worst thing that
ever happened to me," that Carter's portrayal of the
lonely waif with "issues" comes out on top, helping
to ease the overkill of manly machismo. Without her,
the movie would lose much of its focus towards inevitable
destruction.
In two interesting roles are "space-monkey" Jared
Leto, who in a particularly brutal scene with Norton
is mangled beyond recognition, while onlookers can
only stare after Norton who merely states, "I just
wanted to destroy something beautiful." Secondly, there
is veteran musician and actor Meatloaf, who is outstanding
as a group therapy member with a certain "condition," who
is just trying to fit in with society. Much of Meatloaf's
career has been about just doing his own thing, and
it pays off for him here as well.
Impossible to predict and a probable choice to be
directed towards the "cult classic" section in ten
years, Fight Club has not done as well at the
box office it seems as studio execs would have liked.
Even in Canton, Ohio, Fight Club barely lasted
two weeks before being ousted by several other films. Fight has
also stirred up a bit of controversy in Brazil, as
well, but then again, most violent movies stir up a
controversy somewhere on the planet, don't they?