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The Essentials: The Films Of David Fincher Ranked

9. “The Game” (1997)
A “Twilight Zone”-y thriller about a wealthy businessman (Michael Douglas) who is engaged in an elaborate, maybe nefarious role playing game by his delinquent brother (Sean Penn), “The Game” is probably Fincher’s most cool-for-coolness-sake pop outing, but also his most hollow. No matter how much Fincher wants to connect the material (written by the geniuses that gave us “Terminator 3”) to themes of loss, regret and legacy (since Douglas’ game begins on the anniversary of his father’s suicide), the movie is too slick and polished, unfolding within too rarefied and un-relatable an environment, to have any sort of resonance in the real world of messy human emotion. It’s a film that seems to be gaining a degree of retrospective rehabilitation, but Fincher fans though we are, that’s a trend we must eschew. Despite occasional glossy pleasures, it’s beneath Fincher to have lavished so much skill on a story so trite and yet so smug; not only does this film cheat you at every turn, but by its close it’s clear that the film’s biggest mark is not Douglas’ millionaire, but the audience who get zero return on whatever investment they may have mustered. Sure, there are plenty of twists and turns and some extremely weird flourishes (like the fact that a large section of the film’s last act takes place in Mexico), anchored by fine performances by Douglas and Penn (in a role written for Jodie Foster, hence his character’s name “Connie”). But the film is at best a trifle with Fincher hardly taxing the flashy boundaries of his music video days, possibly a little stifled by the resounding critical and commercial approval of “ Se7en.” It’s a gift wrapped box beneath a department store Christmas tree: the packaging is exquisite, but there’s nothing inside. Interestingly, Fincher recently mentioned that his wife urged him not to do “The Game,” and confessed “in hindsight, my wife was right. We didn’t figure out the third act…”

Panic Room Foster
8. “Panic Room” (2002)
It’s probably not surprising that Fincher’s biggest hit since “Se7en” came with his least cerebral, most straightforward effort, the slick b-movie “Panic Room.” It should be noted that the film faced a major stumbling block when original star Nicole Kidman stepped aside when a knee injury sustained during the filming of “Moulin Rouge” sidelined her (though you can see some early footage with Kidman on the ridiculously stacked triple disc DVD edition of the film). Luckily, a pregnant Jodie Foster saved the day and was probably a better choice for to play a desperate mother who has to protect herself and her daughter when home invaders crash the posh Upper West Side home she’s just purchased. If the single-setting is pure Hitchcock, so is the Macguffin; a safe full of bearer bonds that are really of no consequence and just there to drive the plot. But as a launch pad for a display of digital virtuosity, it sets up some bravura set pieces (particularly the single-shot, triple-level break-and-enter sequence early in the film which made our list of Best Long Take Scenes), and some clever approaches that open up the static environment (possibly in a way that slightly works against the film’s themes of containment and claustrophobia, but that’s a debate for another time). Otherwise, the film relies to an unusual degree for Fincher on its performances and the actors deliver, particularly Foster, a very young Kristen Stewart and Dwight Yoakam as the delightfully deranged Raoul. Forest Whitaker is solid as the bad guy with a heart but Jared Leto is less convincing as the cocky mastermind. Almost inevitably, the film deflates in its third act, (a recurring problem area for Fincher) and while the nods to “Rear Window” and “The Killing” are nice, the closing shot of the film finds the sympathy that had been building somewhat dissipating. Still, it bears rewatching more than some others here, and feels like it hasn’t aged at all, except maybe the shot of Foster’s already ancient-looking Nokia phone.

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14 COMMENTS

  1. That write up on Benjamin Button shows you how misinformed you are about the film. Shame, people wanted fantasy and Fincher decided to go against the Academy type and make a film about life & death.

  2. So glad to see you chose SE7EN as the #1 film. I totally agree. I know FIGHT CLUB would have been the cool choice, but SE&EN is the complete artistic statement that will stand the test of time, an unqualified masterpiece.

  3. people don\’t fear change, they question it. have you noticed their is less content per page or, in old newspaper terms, per fold? nearly half of each page is devoted to ads. tell me, would you watch a tv show that is half hour program and half hour commercials? that is why people gripe. the new layout is not reader friendly, it\’s mobile device friendly, fit for people who read mostly on their phones while on the run, which i guess is what indiewire is aiming for, but this completely marginalizes us folks who prefer more content and less ad or pic space.

  4. Consequence of Sound also just did a Fincher ranking piece and it\’s quite good. Their rankings are: Benjamin Button, Alien 3, Panic Room, The Game, Dragon Tattoo, Fight Club, Se7en, Social Network, Zodiac. I love the love for Zodiac from both sites. I personally think of it as the JFK for the 2000s. My ranking is: Alien 3, Benjamin Button, The Game, DragonTattoo, Panic Room, Social Network, Zodiac, Se7en, Fight Club. I have a feeling Gone Girl is gonna land either in front of or behind Panic Room.

  5. I\’m sorry I think you guys are dead wrong on the social network. I\’m a fincher head and I actually think it\’s his darkest film. It\’s about the death of relationships as we know them. So yeah it is neither populist nor underdeveloped and it\’s also his best most moving film.

  6. I still think Zodiac is definitely his best film and up there are one of the absolute best of this new century, but the list is pretty spot-on for the most part, although I\’d swap The Social Network and Fight Club personally.

  7. About the redisign: i love it.

    About Fincher\’s ranking: Here\’s how I would rank Fincher\’s films (without having seen Gone Girl):

    1- Se7en
    2- Social Network
    3- Fight Club
    4- The Game
    5- Zodiac
    6- The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo
    7- Alien 3
    8- Benjamin Button
    9- Panic Room

    I would not even consider House of Cards. It\’s surprising to see them that high, but if I were to rank them, I would put them between Tattoo and Alien3.

  8. Regarding \’The Social Network\’ and the assertion that "key relationships [are] underdeveloped", that\’s certainly a good observation, but I\’d also argue that it\’s kind of the point.

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