David Fincher Would Like To Be Your Friend On Facebook

By George 'El Guapo' Roush on June 23, 2009
Since MySpace has gone the way of the dodo and the internet whore who likes to lie across the hood of a Honda Accord while hiding her obvious camel toe, Facebook has emerged as the new social sharing platform.

While I have a Facebook account, I hardly ever use it. I have a MySpace one too but only check it once in a great while. In fact, they're both pretty pointless and stupid. I mostly use Twitter to update readers on stories and things going on with my exciting life. But nobody cares about that either because Twitter is also pointless and stupid.

And while Facebook is growing in popularity like crazy, there are apparently some crazy back stories behind its creation. And director David Fincher might be taking on what should be a made for TV movie about it. Entertainment Weekly has more:

David Fincher is in early talks to direct Aaron Sorkin's Facebook script for Sony Pictures. Sources tell EW that producers are very high on securing the acclaimed director's involvement on the project, which centers on the drama behind the Harvard dorm room creation of Facebook by founder Mark Zuckerberg and his roommates. Producers Scott Rudin, Mike DeLuca, and Kevin Spacey are hoping to get the film into production this year or first thing next year. The movie would mark Fincher's follow-up to last year's Academy Award-nominated The Curious Case of Benjamin Button. The script, supposedly printed on hard-to-photocopy red paper, is being kept tightly under wraps. All parties declined to comment.

Last time Kevin Spacey got his hands on a true life story, it was the movie 21 and he fucked it all up. Let's see if this one is done right. To produce the Facebook movie, It looks like he will once again grab ahold of another Ben Mezrich non-fiction book, this one called The Accidental Billionaires.

accidental

On Ben Mezrich's official website, he has a letter I guess, review, from Kevin Spacey on the project:

I first met Ben Mezrich when I produced and starred in 21, the film adaptation of his great bestseller Bringing Down the House. Ben has a gift for finding high-energy, strange-but-true tales and The Accidental Billionaires is no exception.

You may think you know the story of the Facebook phenomenon, but you haven’t heard the whole story and never like this. Recreating the unbelievable rise of the world’s biggest social network—not to mention the planet’s youngest billionaire, Mark Zuckerberg—Ben tells a captivating story of betrayal, vast amounts of cash, and two friends who revolutionized the way humans connect to one another—only to have an enormous falling out and never speak again.

Eduardo Saverin and Mark Zuckerberg were two geeky, socially awkward Harvard undergrads who wanted nothing more than to be cool. While Eduardo chose the more straightforward path of trying to gain acceptance into one of the school’s ultra-posh, semi-secret Final Clubs, Mark used his computer skills by hacking into Harvard’s computers, pulling up all the pictures of every girl on campus to create a sort of “hot-or-not” site exclusive to Harvard. Though the prank nearly got Mark kicked out of college, he and Eduardo realized that they were on to something big. Thus, the initial concept of Facebook was born; what happened next, however, was right out of a Hollywood thriller.

The Accidental Billionaires is the perfect pairing of author and subject. It’s pure summer fun—a juicy, fast-paced, unputdownable Mezrich tale that adds to his canon of lad lit. And Hollywood has come calling again: I’m currently working with Dana Brunetti, Scott Rudin, Mike Deluca, and Aaron Sorkin on the movie adaptation of The Accidental Billionaires. If the book is any indication, the film is going to be a must see.—Kevin Spacey

Why bother with Facebook when you can
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Source: All over the damn internet apparently.
Tags: The Social Network, News