The Social Network

3.50
    The Social Network
    2010

    Synopsis

    In 2003, Harvard undergrad and computer genius Mark Zuckerberg begins work on a new concept that eventually turns into the global social network known as Facebook. Six years later, he is one of the youngest billionaires ever, but Zuckerberg finds that his unprecedented success leads to both personal and legal complications when he ends up on the receiving end of two lawsuits, one involving his former friend.

    Votre Filmothèque

    Cast

    • Jesse EisenbergMark Zuckerberg
    • Andrew GarfieldEduardo Saverin
    • Armie HammerCameron Winklevoss / Tyler Winklevoss
    • Justin TimberlakeSean Parker
    • Max MinghellaDivya Narendra
    • Josh PenceTyler Winklevoss
    • Brenda SongChristy Lee
    • Rashida JonesMarylin Delpy
    • John GetzSy
    • David SelbyGage

    Recommandations

    • 100

      Boxoffice Magazine

      With a thieves den of borderline-Shakespearian characters, a wickedly literate screenplay, potent direction by David Fincher, an exceptional ensemble cast and subject matter that speaks to a generation and well beyond, The Social Network is mesmerizing.
    • 100

      Rolling Stone

      Keep your eyes on Garfield - he's shatteringly good, the soul of a film that might otherwise be without one. The Social Network is the movie of the year. But Fincher and Sorkin triumph by taking it further. Lacing their scathing wit with an aching sadness, they define the dark irony of the past decade.
    • 100

      The Hollywood Reporter

      The film comes down to a mesmerizing portrait of a man who in any other age would perhaps be deemed nuts or useless, but in the Internet age has this mental agility to transform an idea into an empire.
    • 100

      Variety

      Continues Fincher's fascinating transition from genre filmmaker extraordinaire to indelible chronicler of our times.
    • 100

      New York Post

      Quite possibly the first truly great fact-based movie of the 21st century.
    • 100

      Time Out

      It's a grandly entertaining reminder of everything we used to go to the movies for (and still can't get online): sparkling dialogue, thorny situations, soulful performances, and an unusually open-ended and relevant engagement with a major social issue of the day: how we (dis)connect.
    • 100

      The New Yorker

      Brilliantly entertaining and emotionally wrenching.
    • 100

      Time

      The rewards for paying attention are mammoth and exhilarating. This is a high-IQ movie that gives viewers an IQ high.

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