Why stanford the social network




















A look at the story structure of the Oscar winning movie. One of the best things screenwriters can do to elevate their understanding of the craft is to create a scene-by-scene breakdown of an existing movie.

The value of this exercise:. IMDb plot summary: Harvard student Mark Zuckerberg creates the social networking site that would become known as Facebook, but is later sued by two brothers who claimed he stole their idea, and the co-founder who was later squeezed out of the business.

He expresses his discontent with the system, bitter that despite his superior intelligence he would never be invited to join the Harvard elite. He insults Erica with his arrogance and she leaves, dumping him for good. Eduardo and Mark are flanked by their respective attorneys. The lawyers are going through the events of the Facemash story but Mark is hung up on the details of his interaction with Erica.

Flash-forward and we get a glimpse of the twins across from Mark in a second deposition. Mark displays his arrogance by stating the board should thank him for exposing the weaknesses of their system. Outside, Mark explains to Eduardo he got put on probation. Back at their elite club, they describe Harvard Connection, pointing out the unique thing about their site is exclusivity — only people at Harvard can join. Mark is deflecting all questions by arguing semantics.

Mark pulls him aside to discuss the website idea. Shots of the website being outlined on a white board. Mark programming. Mark discussing the business with Eduardo. Intercut with Eduardo pledging to the club. He runs back to his dorm and meets Eduardo there, he begins putting the final touches on the site and Eduardo sees it for the first time, impressed.

The site goes live. Save FB Tweet More. Pinterest Email Send Text Message. Continued on next slide. He could be doing better. Replay gallery. Pinterest Facebook. It is from the incidental music that Grieg composed in for the original stage production of Henrik Ibsen's poetic fantasy "Peer Gynt". It was also heard in the flop musical film "Song of Norway" It is "Magnetic" on The Social Network soundtrack. This seems to be a matter of some debate.

Mark Zuckerberg claims that the movie is almost entirely fictional except in the broadest sense that he, Dustin Moskovitz, and Eduardo Saverin created Facebook while students at Harvard. In particular he disputes implications that his desire for revenge on an ex-girlfriend or to get into a Final Club influenced the creation of Facebook.

And of course he denies that the Winklevoss twins or Divya Narendra had any hand in inspiring the creation of Facebook. Instead he insists that the real creation story is much more boring and banal—one where the idea for the site was devised over a long period of rumination rather than as part of one creative brainstorm.

Screenwriter Aaron Sorkin and director David Fincher insist that the film is very accurate. Sorkin has even said that it is not fictional at all, merely dramatized. Much of the film is based on testimony given at a number of depositions related to the lawsuits brought by Eduardo Saverin, the Winklevoss twins, and Divya Narendra. To this extent, the film might be considered very accurate. However, as the character Mark points out in the film, people do lie in depositions.

The general outlines of the story are part of the public record. Mark Zuckerberg hacked into various student facebooks while a student at Harvard and created the Facemash. He narrowly escaped expulsion for his prank. One notable change made for the film is that the film totally ignores Zuckerberg's wife Priscilla Chan.

It was good for a documentary but not good for a 2 hour film. The lawsuit inbetween the movie should have gone at the end. Man, at first i thought a movie about FB would be utter fail, but everyone says its good, guess ill have to see it.

Im going to have to go with a 4. It thought it was going to fail, didnt fail as hard as I thought but it was still pretty bad. All the information in the film can be read on for example Wikipedia.

Thank god you're not making movies, as I dont think you even grasp how boring and mind numbing it would have been. EDIT: I think what I liked most was how Zuckerberg was portrayed as someone who honestly didn't care about making billions.

He was that smart guy who was too absorbed with his work to notice or care what was going on around him. Overall, quite inspiring actually, to see something so simple become something so big and apart of most of our everyday lives One question, Wardo says I want Stanford. Later on one of the brothers asks why Stanford and Divya says "why do you think? California is Silicon Valley, aka, a lot of exposure.



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