You don't get to 500 million friends without making a few enemies.
Overview
In 2003, Harvard undergrad and computer programmer Mark Zuckerberg begins work on a new concept that eventually turns into the global social network known as Facebook. Six years later, Mark is one of the youngest billionaires ever, but his unprecedented success leads to both personal and legal complications when he ends up on the receiving end of two lawsuits, one involving his former friend.
Ratings
Curator score: 8.7/10
IMDb: 7.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.93/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 96%
Metacritic: 95
TMDB: 7.4/10
Director
David Fincher
Production
Columbia Pictures, Relativity Media, Scott Rudin Productions, Michael De Luca Productions, Trigger Street Productions
Cast
Jesse Eisenberg, Andrew Garfield, Armie Hammer, Justin Timberlake, Rooney Mara, Max Minghella, Brenda Song, Josh Pence, Rashida Jones, John Getz, David Selby, Denise Grayson, Douglas Urbanski, Bryan Barter, Dustin Fitzsimons, Joseph Mazzello, Patrick Mapel, Toby Meuli, Alecia Svensen, Jami Owen
Curator Review
Verdict
A sharp, propulsive drama about ambition, status, betrayal, and the emotional cost of building something world-changing. It’s as much a breakup movie and a power play as it is a tech origin story, with Fincher’s precision and Sorkin’s dialogue making the whole thing feel electric.
Best for
Viewers who like fast, dialogue-driven dramas
People interested in ambition, startups, and power dynamics
Fans of tense friendship-to-rivalry stories
Audiences who appreciate polished filmmaking and strong performances
Skip if
You want a warm, inspirational tech success story
You dislike dense dialogue and rapid-fire legal/business scenes
You prefer movies with clear moral heroes
You’re looking for a light or emotionally comforting watch
Overview
The Social Network turns a familiar rise-of-a-billionaire story into something colder, sharper, and more emotionally bruising. What could have been a standard tech biopic becomes a study of exclusion, envy, invention, and the way success can hollow out the people chasing it. The movie moves with relentless confidence, and every scene feels like it’s adding another layer to the damage.
Worth noting
Fincher’s control is a huge part of the appeal: the framing is exact, the pacing never slackens, and the film has a sleek, almost metallic tension. Aaron Sorkin’s script gives the characters language that cuts like a blade, while the performances make the relationships feel messy and human underneath the wit. Jesse Eisenberg’s Mark is brilliant but deeply alienating, and Andrew Garfield gives the film its aching emotional center.
Bottom line
What lingers most is how the movie understands that power and loneliness often grow together. It’s funny, bitter, and strangely sad, with a modern myth quality that makes the story feel bigger than its specific subject. Even if you know how it ends, the movie keeps you locked in on how badly everyone wants to matter.
Top Letterboxd reviews
sree (5★) · 24081 likes
me: i should get some sleep i have a lot to do in the morning
my brain: hey remember when eduardo's shares were diluted down to 0.03%?
Lucy (5★) · 20633 likes
rooney mara absentmindedly adding "good luck with your... video game" after verbally ripping his ass to shreds in front of an entire restaurant is EASILY one of the best lines of dialogue in the last decade of cinema
sree (5★) · 18417 likes
literally why did david fincher turn the plot of the invention of facebook into a gay drama like what was the reason
Wes (5★) · 16924 likes
david fincher i DEMAND to know what you did with the second armie hammer
sree (5★) · 15839 likes
jesse eisenberg's super punchable face really elevates the whole experience
2013 · Crime, Drama, Comedy · 3h · R · Curator 7.9/10 (5.7M ratings) · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential, AMC+, Philo, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A manic rise-and-fall story about greed, charisma, and self-destruction in the modern era.