ren_klyce

This week, the Fight Club starts again with the release on Blu-ray of a tenth anniversary edition of David Fincher’s fan favourite. Every frame of the film was scrutinised by the director, or so it says here, in order to ensure the transfer was reflective, finally, of the ideal realisation of the film. That sentence alone has probably shifted a skip full of copies. What’s likely to shift a heap more are the innovative interactive special features.

After the break you can view my interview with Ren Klyce, the film’s sound designer. As well as collaborating with Fincher since Se7en, he most recently earned the credits of supervising sound editor and sound re-recording mixer on Spike Jonze’ Where the Wild Things Are. He’s just the man to be out there plugging this new Fight Club disc too, as the best of the new special features revolves around his work in the sound department.

Tucked away in the range of supplements there’s something called A Hit in the Ear. This allows you, after an introduction from Klyce, tinker about with the sound mix in four of the film’s scenes. It’s obviously only a toy, but it’s a good one. There’s an amazing amount of flexibility allowing you to select different recordings for different effects and to mix them as you see fit between the surround sound speakers. I expected that it would have to work from a series of pre-mixes that you select through a decision tree but, having fiddled and faddled with it a good amount, I’m thinking that it’s actually doing the mixing on the fly.

If Blu-ray is not only about HD picture and uncompressed, uncompromised sound but also interactivity, which some of us at least hope it can be, then this feature is a good demo for the capabilities of the format.

Here’s Klyce and myself talking about sound design, both in general and in the case of this film. The scene I refer to specifically is the so-called Kudzu Vine scene, and is one of the four you can select to play with on the Blu-ray.

For the record, I’m no fan of Fight Club. I find it quite simplistic, occasionally condescending, routinely juvenile and it really doesn’t have the courage of it’s own convictions. This didn’t stop me wasting a good while playing with the disc’s special features, of course. The Blu-ray also does a great job of presenting Jeff Cronenweth’s superb cinematography and the film certainly never looked this good when I first saw it projected from 35mm.

The opening menu on the disc is interesting too, taking a trick from the Monty Python playbook. I wonder how many consumers it will go running back to the shop for a money-back? If you want to know what happens, here’s a little bit of inviso-text to give it away:

The menu appears to be for Never Been Kissed for a while, before it breaks up and is replaced with a Fight Club menu influenced by the Ikea-labelled sequence in Jack’s apartment near the start of the film. I think Drew Barrymore stays on screen just long enough for the most twitchy to have ejected the disc.

This 10th Anniversary Blu-ray of Fight Club is out there in stores from this week in the US and next week in the UK.

  • fan
    I just don't understand why you would think any of us care what you think of Fight Club. Aside from the fact that most of us probably disagree with you, it just doesn't have anything to do with the story. I want it to be clear that nobody reading this gives a shit. I've always found so much bullshit in all of your posts. You should feel embarassed even doing what you do. You talk to great and talented people who actually contribute something to the world and then you turn around and piss on their films. That's the best you can do. There is no reason to show off or bash on Fight Club and, in fact, it just makes you seem more pathetic. You can't just say something like that without explaining yourself especially when nobody cares.

    p.s. It's called an elavator.
  • And naturally the first post is Connelly hating. Though there hasn't been a lot of this recently.

    And for the record since we're already going there I agree with Connelly. Fight Club is about as subtle as using an atom bomb to kill a mouse.
  • Octoberist
    it's still probably Fincher's best works. I know that people say Zodiac is probably his most mature, I think Fight Club is the definite Fincher film, along with Se7en.
  • fan 2.0
    I just don't understand why you would think any of us care what you think of Brendon Conelly. Aside from the fact that most of us probably disagree with you, it just doesn't have anything to do with the article. I want it to be clear that nobody reading this gives a shit. I've always found so much bullshit in all of your posts. You should feel embarassed even doing what you do. You talk to great and talented people who actually contribute something to the world and then you turn around and piss on their articles. That's the best you can do. There is no reason to show off or bash on Brendon and, in fact, it just makes you seem more pathetic. You can't just say something like that without explaining yourself especially when nobody cares.

    p.s. It's called an opinion .
  • starscream9289
    Oh, you.
  • BrendonConnelly
    Your very last comment reveals something very telling about yourself.
  • fowlmowth
    I wonder if you would be so bold if you were sitting across the table from Connelly or weren't hiding behind a guest avatar. Doubt it.
  • Octoberist
    I love Fight Club but everyone has their opinions. I don't think Branden meant to start a flame war but it was just his take on it. Don't confuse his opinion as the general consensus, since the movie is well beloved. Don't worry about that.
  • jeffe
    Brendon can have his opinions. I don't care if he likes or dislikes a movie. But I kinda agree with "fan" that he likes to give said opinion when nobody ever asked for it. He knows that once people start reading one of his articles they're pretty much caught til the end and then he pushes his opinion and "refined" taste on them.
  • BrendonConnelly
    That's part of my job description.
  • SFFilm
    Portraying nihilism as a juvenile philosophy is kind of the point of the story...
  • BrendonConnelly
    I'm two steps ahead of that, though. It's pull-back is juvenile too.
  • Nick1
    /Film is lucky to have have Connelly, this is precisely the kind of interview I think people want. We've heard all the production anecdotes, we know everyone is great to work with, what about the filmmakers' philosophies on how their contribution to the film affects the end product. I wish this was longer and more of a discussion because I sense from the preperation and knowledge that you'd have quite a bit to discuss. I hope we see more video interviews with Connelly and filmmakers of all types, whether they be sound engineers or cinematographers or directors or costume designers, well done.
  • Tom
    Well put Nick1.

    That interview was really interesting Brendon. Far better than 99% of similar ones that you might see on TV for instance, because obviously you're deeper in to film than someone from BBC Breakfast, and ask questions that people on this site are interested in hearing. You should definitely do this more!
  • Octoberist
    long live fight club
  • THANK YOU for providing a Blu-ray review before Tuesday!!!! Any advance reviews on purchases help so much (not that I wouldn’t get this anyway, but any help is much appreciated).Anyway, excellent review! I was focused mostly on the PQ and AQ and from your review, it seems worthy of a DVD upgrade.I also want to THANK YOU for having a Screencap of the “Cigarette Burn”…it’s now my Desktop!!! A++ Film!!!
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