A week ago, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg gave the Newark, N.J., school system $100 million on the same day the movie The Social Network opened at the New York Film Festival. The speculation was that he was trying to burnish his reputation before the movie tarnished it. The film opens across the country today, so … let the tarnishing begin.
The story of how Facebook was invented, almost accidentally, in a Harvard dorm room should have been near-impossible to film — computer geeks, code-writing, legal depositions. But boy does it click along, from the moment Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg as a cold-eyed, awkward boy genius) decides to get back at a girlfriend who dumps him during the opening credits. Zuckerberg’s revenge? He hacks some school photo archives and enlists his best buddy in a dumb, sexist online stunt: They start using complicated mathematics to rank the girls at school.
Their hot-or-not prank gets so many hits, it crashes Harvard’s server, and the dweebs are briefly campus celebs. Zuckerberg is still obnoxious, though, and devious, too: When he’s approached to work on a socializing website for a couple of golden-boy jocks, he stalls and tries to develop one of his own. But it’s all just names and pictures until a roommate comes to him one day with a question that gives Mark a moment of inspiration: The website needs to do something.
Mark is out the door so fast, he doesn’t even realize it has snowed until his socks and sandals are ankle deep in the stuff. It’s a throwaway moment, but the kind that says worlds about the character’s mindset. When people talk about mesmerizing speakers, they often say they’d be happy to listen to them reciting the phone book. Let me just say I’d be happy to watch David Fincher directing the phone book.
With scripter Aaron Sorkin providing the verbal fireworks, Fincher tags and pokes his way through an almost Shakespearean thicket of betrayals and double-crosses. (You expect a Facebook movie to be about friending?) Think again: Zuckerberg’s co-founder, who is given an almost visible conscience by Andrew Garfield, spars with Napster’s creator (played as a snake in the digital grass by Justin Timberlake). Both of them think the cold fish whose approval they’re fighting over actually gives a damn, but his thoughts are ever elsewhere, and sooner or later, almost everyone who meets him can’t stand him, perhaps especially the Winklevoss twins — the jocks who originally asked him to work on their campus-socializing site.