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Fight Club (1999)

Posted By: edi1967
Fight Club (1999)

Fight Club (1999)
A Film by David Fincher
DVD9 | VIDEO_TS | PAL | 2.35:1 | 16:9 | 720x576 | 02:13:43 | 5% recovery | 7.81 GB
Languages Available: English, Italian 5.1 AC3 | Subtitle: Italian
Extra: Scene Selection, Menù, Trailers, Backstage, Videoclip, Filmography and Notes
Genre: Drama

The unnamed narrator (Norton) is a traveling automobile company employee who suffers from insomnia. His doctor refuses to give him medication and advises him to visit a support group to witness more severe suffering. The narrator attends a support group for testicular cancer victims and, after fooling them into thinking that he is a fellow victim, finds an emotional release that relieves his insomnia. He becomes addicted to attending support groups and pretending to be a victim, but the presence of another impostor, Marla Singer (Bonham Carter), disturbs him, so he negotiates with her to avoid their meeting at the same groups.

IMDB Rating: 8.9/10

Fight Club (1999)

After a flight home from a business trip, the narrator finds his apartment destroyed by an explosion. He calls Tyler Durden (Pitt), a soap salesman whom he befriended on the flight, and they meet at a bar. A conversation about consumerism leads to Tyler inviting the narrator to stay at his place; outside the bar he requests that the narrator hit him. The two engage in a fistfight, and the narrator subsequently moves into Tyler's dilapidated house. They have further fights outside the bar, and these attract a crowd of men. The fighting moves to the bar's basement where the men form a "fight club".

Fight Club (1999)

Marla overdoses on pills and telephones the narrator for help; he ignores her, but Tyler answers the call and saves her. Tyler and Marla become sexually involved, and Tyler warns the narrator never to talk to Marla about him. More fight clubs form across the country, and under Tyler's leadership, they become the anti-materialist and anti-corporate organization called "Project Mayhem".

Fight Club (1999)

The narrator complains to Tyler that he wants to be more involved in the organization, but Tyler suddenly disappears. When a member of Project Mayhem is killed by the police during a botched sabotage operation, the narrator tries to shut down the project, and follows evidence of Tyler's national travels to track him down. In one city, a Project member greets the narrator as Tyler Durden. The narrator calls Marla from his hotel room and discovers that Marla also believes him to be Tyler. He suddenly sees Tyler in his room, and Tyler explains that they are dissociated personalities in the same body. When the narrator has believed himself to be asleep, Tyler has in fact been controlling his body.

Fight Club (1999)

The narrator blacks out after the conversation. When he wakes, he discovers from his telephone log that Tyler made calls during his blackout. He uncovers Tyler's plans to erase debt by destroying buildings that contain credit card companies' records. The narrator tries to contact the police but finds that the officers are members of the Project. He attempts to disarm explosives in a building, but Tyler subdues him and moves to a safe building to watch the destruction. The narrator, held by Tyler at gunpoint, realizes that in sharing the same body with Tyler, he himself is actually holding the gun.

Fight Club (1999)

He fires it into his mouth, shooting through the cheek without killing himself. Tyler collapses with an exit wound to the back of his head, and the narrator stops mentally projecting him. Afterward, Project Mayhem members bring a kidnapped Marla to him, believing him to be Tyler, and leave them alone. The explosives detonate, collapsing the buildings, and the narrator and Marla watch the scene, holding hands.

Fight Club (1999)

Fight Club is a 1999 American film based on the 1996 novel of the same name by Chuck Palahniuk. The film was directed by David Fincher and stars Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, and Helena Bonham Carter. Norton plays the unnamed protagonist, an "everyman" who is discontented with his white-collar job. He forms a "fight club" with soap maker Tyler Durden, played by Pitt, and becomes embroiled in a relationship with him and a dissolute woman, Marla Singer, played by Bonham Carter.

Fight Club (1999)

Extra Features:

• Trailers
• Backstage
• Videoclip
• Filmography and Notes

From Wikipedia


General
Format : DVD Video
Format profile : Program
File size : 82.0 KiB
Duration : 2h 13mn
Overall bit rate mode : Variable
Overall bit rate : 84 bps

Video
ID : 224 (0xE0)
Format : MPEG Video
Format version : Version 2
Duration : 2h 13mn
Bit rate mode : Variable
Width : 720 pixels
Height : 576 pixels
Display aspect ratio : 16:9
Frame rate : 25.000 fps
Standard : PAL
Compression mode : Lossy

Audio #1
ID : 128 (0x80)
Format : AC-3
Format/Info : Audio Coding 3
Duration : 2h 13mn
Channel(s) : 6 channels
Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
Compression mode : Lossy
Language : Italian

Audio #2
ID : 129 (0x81)
Format : AC-3
Format/Info : Audio Coding 3
Duration : 2h 13mn
Channel(s) : 6 channels
Sampling rate : 48.0 KHz
Compression mode : Lossy
Language : English

Text
ID : 33 (0x21)
Format : RLE
Format/Info : Run-length encoding
Bit depth : 2 bits
Language : Italian




ORIGINAL TITLE: Fight Club
CINEMA RELEASE: 29/10/1999
GENRE: Action, Drama
DIRECTOR: David Fincher
Screenplay: Jim Uhls
ACTORS:
Edward Norton, Brad Pitt, Helena Bonham Carter, Meat Loaf Aday, Zach Grenier, Jared Leto, David Andrews, Ezra Buzzington, Christina Cabot, Tim De Zarn, George Maguire, Rachel Singer, Richmond Arquette
Cast

PHOTOGRAPHY: Jeff Cronenweth
ASSEMBLY: James Haygood
MUSIC: The Dust Brothers, Tom Waits
PRODUCTION: Fox 2000 Pictures, New Regency Pictures
DISTRIBUTION: Medusa Film
COUNTRY: USA 1999
DURATION: 135 Min
FORMAT: Color


Recovery Volumes (.rev)

Recovery volumes or .rev files are special files which can be created by WinRAR/RAR and allow you to reconstruct missing and damaged files in a volume set. They can
only be used with multi-volume archives.

This feature may be useful for backups or, for example, when you post a multivolume archive to a newsgroup and some of the subscribers did not receive some files. Reposting recovery volumes instead of usual volumes may reduce the total number of files to repost.

Each recovery volume is able to reconstruct one missing RAR volume. For example, if you have 30 volumes and 3 recovery volumes, you are able to reconstruct any 3 missing volumes. If the number of .rev files is less than a number of missing volumes, reconstructing is impossible. The total number of usual and recovery volumes must not exceed 255 and the number of recovery volumes must be less than the number of RAR volumes.

WinRAR reconstructs missing and damaged volumes either when clicking on .rev file, or when using rc command or automatically, if it cannot locate the next volume and finds the required number of .rev files when unpacking.

You may use the "Recovery volumes" option in the Archive name and parameters dialog or a similar option also appears in the Protect archive command to create recovery volumes. In the command line mode you may do it with -rv switch or rv command.

Original copies of damaged volumes are renamed to *.bad before reconstruction. For example, volname.part03.rar will be renamed to volname.part03.rar.bad.

From Win-rar.com





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Fight Club (1999)