Vanity Fairのインスタグラム(vanityfair) - 10月8日 00時17分
The Social Network, directed by David Fincher and written by Aaron Sorkin, was not really about Facebook at all. We watch Jesse Eisenberg's Mark Zuckerberg—an asshole, from the first frame—brilliantly and callously alienate everyone who might care for him, until by the end, in Sorkin’s imagination, he is the youngest billionaire on earth, but alone. "Don’t be an asshole" is the movie’s implicit takeaway.
But, as one V.F. critic argues, Sorkin misses the mark: he is too dazzled by the skills of a tech genius to really blame Zuckerberg for what Facebook has become, instead crafting a script that relentlessly tries to be on his side, despite his atrocious behavior. For the 10th anniversary of the Oscar-winning film, @soniasaraiya lays out her argument for why #TheSocialNetwork ends up missing the point entirely about Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg. Read the full story at the link in bio.
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