Kids Shop Boxsets Shop Animation Shop BBC Shop Dr Who Shop Sci Fi Shop Retro TV Shop CSI Shop Comedy Shop Blu ray Shop HBO Shop Anime Shop
Fight Club

    Fight Club Blu-ray

    RRP: £21.99 You Save: £6.28

    Blu-ray £15.71 Free Delivery

    Buy Now

    Release Date: 23 November 2009

    Availability: In stock | Usually dispatched within 24 hours

    Trailer

    More Details

    Certificate:
    • 18
    Region:
    • Region B
    Sound Information:
    • Dolby Digital
    Number of Discs:
    • 1
    Main Language:
    • English
    Dubbing Languages:
    • English ; French ; Spanish ; Portuguese
    Subtitle Languages:
    • English for the hearing impaired ; Spanish ; French ; Portuguese ; Danish ; Finnish ; Dutch

    Cast List:
    Director:

    Description

    First Rule: You do not talk about Fight Club.

    Second Rule: You do not talk about Fight Club.

    Third Rule: When someone says "Stop" or goes limp, the fight is over.

    Fourth Rule: Only two guys to a fight.

    Fifth Rule: One fight at a time.

    Sixth Rule: No shirts, no shoes.

    Seventh Rule: Fights go on as long as they have to.

    Eighth Rule: If this is your first night at Fight Club, you have to fight...

    Brad Pitt (Seven, Snatch) and Edward Norton (American History X, Primal Fear) deliver knockout performances in this stunningly original, darkly comic film from David Fincher, the director of Seven. Norton stars as Jack, a chronic insomniac desperate to escape his excruciatingly boring life. That's when he meets Tyler Durden (Pitt), a charismatic soap salesman with a twisted philosophy. Tyler believes self improvement is for the weak - it's self destruction that really makes life worth living. Before long, Jack and Tyler are beating each other to a pulp in a bar parking lot, a cathartic slugfest that delivers the ultimate high. To introduce other men to the simple joys of physical violence, Jack and Tyler form a secret Fight Club that becomes wildly successful. But there's a shocking surprise waiting for Jack that will change everything...

    Pitt and Norton deliver knockout performances in this stunningly original, darkly comic film from David Fincher, based on the controversial book by Chuck Palahniuk.

    Special Features

    # New HD Master Supervised step-by-step by director David Fincher
    # Exclusive to Blu-Ray:
    # A Hit in the Ear: Ren Klyce and the Sound Design of Fight Club
    # An interactive experience introduced by the sound designer Ren Klyce, in which the user can mix the sounds of selected scenes of the movie.
    # Insomnia Mode: I am Jack's search Index
    # A new navigation mode, that allows the user to tag any topics during the movie and access to all content available in the disc that refers to the tagged topic.
    # Flogging Fight Club
    # Backstage at the Spike TV Awards: Hangout with Brad Pitt & Edward Norton in the Green Room shortly after being inducted into the Spike TV 'Guy Movie Hall of Fame'.

    FIGHT CLUB is narrated by a lonely, unfulfilled young man (Edward Norton) who finds his only comfort in feigning terminal illness and attending disease support groups. Hopping from group to group, he encounters another pretender, or "tourist," the morose Marla Singer (Helena Bonham Carter), who immediately gets under his skin. However, while returning from a business trip, he meets a more intriguing character--the subversive Tyler Durden (Brad Pitt). They become fast friends, bonding over a mutual disgust for corporate consumer-culture hypocrisy. Eventually, the two start Fight Club, which convenes in a bar basement where angry men get to vent their frustrations in brutal, bare-knuckle bouts. Fight Club soon becomes the men's only real priority; when the club starts a cross-country expansion, things start getting really crazy.
    Like Tyler Durden himself, director David Fincher's FIGHT CLUB, based on the novel by Chuck Palahniuk, is startlingly aggressive and gleefully mischievous as it skewers the superficiality of American pop culture. Outstanding performances by Norton and Pitt are supported by a razor-sharp script and an arsenal of stunning visual effects that include computer animation and sleight-of-hand editing. One of the most unique films of the late 20th century, FIGHT CLUB is a pitch-black comedy of striking intensity.

    Reviews