1) THE SOCIAL NETWORK
This film manages to do some amazing things. Not only does it make legal procedures and computer programming interesting, it makes it almost accessible. It also makes a film in which their is very little action feel exciting and captivating.It would be easy to tire of a film which solely consists of people talking, but the script is phenomenal. Aaron Sorkin's dialogue is so fast paced and so exhilarating that you quickly become engrossed.
The first scene is a really fast paced conversation that acts a 'sink or swim' initiation to the dialogue, but half way through that scene you get used to the delivery and can just settle in.
The excellent script is then delivered by a group of young actors who are all delivering career best performances.
Special shouts out to Jesse Eisenberg who manages to play a different character without making him either particularly likable or hateable.
Justin Timberlake who is amazing! (specially if you just want to dismiss him because he's JT)
And Armie Hammer, who has a great name and who (beautifully subtly) plays two roles.
All in all, this is a film which feels more like a TV series, in that I would have happily watched those characters deliver that script for 5 or 6 hours.
And, the soundtrack is wonderful - definitely worth listening to!
2) CATFISH
Whilst The Social Network directly examines Facebook, Catfish is more about the general power of Social Networking. It is a film which begins in facebook, but which quickly crosses to other web media.Catfish gets a UK release in December.... and PLEASE - Don't research it. Don't explore online. Don't even go to IMDB. Just go and watch it.
The trailer is probably the most information you'll ever want.
The trailer makes it nice and ambiguous: is it a documentary? Is it a Blair Witch style horror? Is it real?
I'm not saying anything, but I'm confident in saying that you will not guess the ending.
Absolutely brilliant.
And we saw it in screen 3 of the Vue - which has possibly the best leg room ever. It was also followed by a Q&A with the makers of the film.
I wish I could tell you more about the experience. But in this case, ignorance is bliss.

