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affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club
affiche cinéma fight club

Vintage Poster
Fight Club

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Explore the Fight Club Movie Poster and immerse yourself in a unique emotional journey. Immerse yourself in a gripping storyline that uncovers raw emotions, from frenzied excitement to deep anxiety. This visual representation transports you into a disturbing world, where human duality is explored boldly and provocatively. Grab this iconic poster to capture the essence of this legendary film and immerse yourself in a whirlwind of unforgettable cinematic emotions.

  • Paper characteristic:
    • 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
    • By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
    • Size: several choices available . ✅
  • Great UV resistance .
  • Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
  • Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
  • Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
  • FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .

⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️

Description of this Fight Club Cinema Poster

Fight Club is a 1999 American psychological thriller film directed by David Fincher, based on the novel of the same name by Chuck Palahniuk.

The protagonist and narrator, who is not named, works for a major automobile manufacturer in a major American city as a recall coordinator and lives an outwardly inconspicuous life, oriented toward superficial consumption. He hates his job and has suffered from insomnia for some time. To relieve them, he participates in support groups for chronically ill people by pretending to be suffering from an incurable illness himself. The compassion of the group members eliminates the protagonist's insomnia, until he meets Marla Singer there. Like him, she is a malingerer who also participates unjustifiably in support groups. When he realizes this, he feels guilty and uncomfortable and again cannot sleep.

His life changes radically when, during a business trip, he meets dubious soap salesman Tyler Durden on a plane. After the protagonist's condo is destroyed by an explosion, he spontaneously turns to Tyler and meets him at a bar. When the protagonist mentions that he needs a hotel, Tyler suggests that he can just ask him. After persuading him, the protagonist asks him to find him a place to sleep, which he gets. Tyler then asks him to hit him as hard as possible. The result is a strangely friendly fight, during which the protagonist feels strangely alive. As a result, he permanently moves in with Tyler, who has taken up residence in an abandoned and completely dilapidated villa.

After more public fights, they are joined by other men who also seek the thrill of regular fights. Tyler and the protagonist then found Fight Club. The men regularly meet for fight evenings in the cellar of a bar. This kind of secret lodge is for the protagonist the new form of a support group - he is happy. One day, Marla asks him for help over the phone after taking an overdose of sleeping pills. The protagonist ignores it, but Tyler takes care of Marla, which leads them to begin a violent affair. Tyler asks the protagonist to never tell Marla about Tyler, which the protagonist is quick to do. At the same time, the protagonist uses cunning to avoid his dismissal which is looming on the horizon: On the one hand, he blackmails his employer by revealing the truth, namely that he manufactures cars which do not meet safety standards . On the other hand, he fights himself in his superior's office in front of the latter, while accusing his boss, which allows him to continue to receive his salary as an "independent consultant" without having to work.

Meanwhile, Tyler founds, without his roommate's knowledge, the Chaos Project, for which he recruits like-minded Fight Club members and installs them in his house. This strictly organized troop undertakes attacks against public order, until a death occurs in its own ranks. The protagonist, who suffers from insomnia and increasingly significant memory lapses, realizes that he has lost his lucidity about Tyler and his plans. When Tyler suddenly disappears, the protagonist sets out to track him down. He learns that Tyler has created other fight clubs throughout the country in order to overthrow the established order. He then learns, to his great dismay, that everyone mistakes him for Tyler.

After the protagonist talks about Tyler in front of Marla, thus breaking Tyler's rule, the latter shows up in the protagonist's hotel room and reveals the truth about himself and about him: he suffers from a dissociative disorder of identity. He is Tyler Durden himself, who exists as an autonomous person only in his imagination, a sovereign, anarchist person, who is and does everything he could ever be or do. The protagonist himself functioned entirely as "Tyler" when he thought he was "sleeping", sometimes he observed himself as it were when he acted as "Tyler", and sometimes he himself was in control . It was he himself who was fighting in front of the bar then, it was he himself who was blowing up his old apartment and his old life. As "Tyler", he himself was the one who had the affair with Marla and it was in this state that he set in motion a plan that the protagonist is now trying to stop: Exploding the seats of all credit card companies in order to collapse the financial system, cause chaos and allow everyone to start “from scratch”. “Tyler” has everything planned out in case his “alternate self” turns against him: The members of Project Chaos, who can be found everywhere, now stand against the protagonist, and he can only narrowly escape from them.

It is in a skyscraper that the final fight between the protagonist and his other "self" takes place - as before, the protagonist therefore actually fights himself, his "Tyler" side having the upper hand at first . Scenes of the fight seen from a "neutral" point of view by surveillance cameras show that "Tyler" and the protagonist are in fact one and the same person. The protagonist convinces "Tyler" that he is going to kill himself - and therefore both versions of himself. He shoots himself in the mouth, after which "Tyler" is seen falling to the ground with a hole in the back of his head. The protagonist, meanwhile, survives - he apparently simply shot himself in the cheek. However, “Tyler’s” work can no longer be stopped. Along with Marla, who should have fled on a bus but was taken to the skyscraper by members of Project Chaos, the protagonist witnesses the destruction of the financial buildings.

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