
Bloody hell this looks dark and moody! The Social Network was already one of my most anticipated movie’s of 2010, but after watching the trailer below this has shot to the top of my list, it looks absolutely brilliant.
The Social Network is based off Ben Mezrich’s book The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook – A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betryal. Jesse Eisenberg will play Facebook CEO Zuckerberg, while Justin Timberlake will play Sean Parker, the Napster co-founder who became Facebook’s founding president; and Andrew Garfield will play Eduardo Saverin, the Facebook co-founder who fell out with Zuckerberg over money.
July 15th, 2010

The Daily Mail (I hate that paper) have released the first picture of Justin Timberlake as Sean Parker, the Napster and Facebook co founder in David Fincher’s upcoming film ‘The Social Network’. Buzz online about the screenplay has been great and I’m a big fan of David Fincher, he’s one of the only Directors around who’s films I will check out every time – Se7en, Fight Club and Fight club are three of my favourite films of the last 15 years. The Social Network is based on Ben Mezrich’s book The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook, a Tale of Sex, Money, Genius and Betrayal, telling the story of Eduardo Saverin (Andrew Garfield) and Mark Zuckerberg (Jesse Eisenberg), the founders of Facebook. ‘The Social Network’ is set for release late 2010 by Columbia pictures.
Eduardo Saverin and Mark Zuckerberg were Harvard undergraduates and best friends–outsiders at a school filled with polished prep-school grads and long-time legacies. They shared both academic brilliance in math and a geeky awkwardness with women. Eduardo figured their ticket to social acceptance–and sexual success–was getting invited to join one of the university’s Final Clubs, a constellation of elite societies that had groomed generations of the most powerful men in the world and ranked on top of the inflexible hierarchy at Harvard. Mark, with less of an interest in what the campus alpha males thought of him, happened to be a computer genius of the first order. Which he used to find a more direct route to social stardom: one lonely night, Mark hacked into the university’s computer system, creating a ratable database of all the female students on campus–and subsequently crashing the university’s servers and nearly getting himself kicked out of school. In that moment, in his Harvard dorm room, the framework for Facebook was born.

What followed–a real-life adventure filled with slick venture capitalists, stunning women, and six-foot-five-inch identical-twin Olympic rowers–makes for one of the most entertaining and compelling books of the year. Before long, Eduardo’s and Mark’s different ideas about Facebook created in their relationship faint cracks, which soon spiraled into out-and-out warfare. The collegiate exuberance that marked their collaboration fell prey to the adult world of lawyers and money. The great irony is that while Facebook succeeded by bringing people together, its very success tore two best friends apart. The Accidental Billionaires is a compulsively readable story of innocence lost–and of the unusual creation of a company that has revolutionized the way hundreds of millions of people relate to one another.
December 2nd, 2009