Dude, who even knows.

29th January 2022

Link reblogged from The Real Numbers: A Math & Shitpost Blog with 4,152 notes

‘Fight Club’ Author Chuck Palahniuk Says China’s Censored Ending Is Actually Truer to His Vision →

antoine-roquentin:

“The irony is that the way the Chinese have changed it is they’ve aligned the ending almost exactly with the ending of the book, as opposed to Fincher’s ending, which was the more spectacular visual ending,” he said. “So in a way, the Chinese brought the movie back to the book a little bit.”

The author also said that he saw the irony in the angry response from many Americans to China’s actions, given that his books are banned in many locations across the U.S.

“What I find really interesting is that my books are heavily banned throughout the U.S.,” he said. “The Texas prison system refuses to carry my books in their libraries. A lot of public schools and most private schools refuse to carry my books. But it’s only an issue once China changes the end of a movie? I’ve been putting up with book banning for a long time.”

He also said that having his work revised in ways he can’t control is nothing new to him.

“A lot of my overseas publishers have edited the novel so the novel ends the way the movie ends,” he said. “So I’ve been dealing with this kind of revision for like 25 years.”

If you’ve never read it, Fight Club the novel is damn near a shooting script for the film aside from the end and I think the scene with threatened castration is more directly against the narrator when he starts asking questions and takes place on a parked bus? Anyway, most authors would kill for that kind of fidelity in screen adaptation

Tagged: screenwritingfight clubchuck palahniuk

12th March 2021

Post with 49 notes

Fight Club’s theme of “fight IKEA-shopping yuppiedom through the power of class-inflected masculine redemptive violence direct action” made so much more sense when I realized it specifically came out of 90s downtown Portland.

For that matter, Palahnuik being gay probably explains how it’s about bros using a woman as a prop to deepening their relationship and building an all-male brotherhood where they construct intricate rituals to touch the skin of other men as a way to call attention to the power and potential of their male bodies

From the perspective of a trans era the way it treated “growing breasts under the influence of pharmaceuticals” and “surgically removing the penis and testicles” is worth meditating on too, I suppose

Tagged: fight clubportlandportlandportlandchuck palahniuk