Internet Amused By China's Police-friendly Recut Of Fight Club's Ending
Who could forget the ending to 1999's cinematic classic Fight Club, when, after many mind-bending plot twists and escalating tension, a black screen shows up with a message reading that the police solved everything and the protagonist went to a mental institution.
Okay, that's not what actually happens at the end of Fight Club, but you might get that impression if your first viewing of the film was on the Chinese streaming site Tencent Video. According to a recent report by Vice, the recut ending was aggravating Chinese social media users.
China has stringent restrictions when it comes to media, including censorship online, as media generally must align with the image that the communist government wishes to uphold.
If you've seen the actual ending of Fight Club, you're likely aware that it's very anti-state. The hasty, clumsy retconning of David Fincher's film was enough to get social media chuckling at the desperate attempt to invalidate its message in order to be shown in China.
It's hardly the first time Chinese distributors have radically altered films in attempts to support the state. Vice points to the Nicolas Cage film Lords of War, which, in China, ends with Cage's arms dealer protagonist confessing to all crimes and serving life in prison. In the actual film, Cage evades the police and returns to arms dealing.
Chinese social media users were ticked off at the new ending, as Vice noted that commenters expressed that hasty edits like these are why most Chinese moviegoers prefer to seek out bootlegs of international releases.