He realised it before this deep down. Eduardo freezing the account tipped him over the edge and he stupidly co-operated with Sean to set Eduardo up. The whole film is Mark being misguided and making the wrong choices because he thinks it will lead to his endgoal.
The line of “I have everything under control” summarizes Sean’s character and personality, he thinks he owns and has everything under his control and everything goes his way, yet he never had control, it was all an illusion and mask. Eduardo was right
The way he says "I wasn't doing anything" is like a child telling their parents when they're caught doing something stupid. He was an entitled mug who was under the delusion he ran every room he was in and when Mark was backed into a corner he had him shot back to the hole of which he came
@@Henlak- Yes, he is just a child in a mask. Entitled, prideful, egotistical, and cynical ... when Sean flinched when Eduardo was going to "hit him", I knew he was the biggest mouth and fake.
Exactly. Eduardo predicted that working with Parker would lead to bad things. Mark may have shown his smarts several times throughout the film, but this one prediction shows that Eduardo was the real smartest person in the room.
@@matthewescudero4287 mark was smart genius but he didnt know people he had no street smarts only book smarts that's where Sean entered and then uses his charm to manipulate mark to his advantage
@@anyoneattheendoftime4932 I don't think that's implied at all. Why would Mark call the cops on Sean if he knew it would lead to bad publicity for the company? He even tried to tell this to Sean multiple times. It is interesting though that the question of who called the cops is touched on in the last scene, when Delpy brings it up as an example of how it could taint a jury's perception of Mark.
@@VIMaggotVIBrainzVIit was implied, sean ask, "do you think it was eduardo?" And mark without thinking it he said "no", then marks says "I'm going to call somebody" like he was already prepared, then the very next scene the lawyer ask why he didn't was at the party? He took a couple of seconds for answering and then he became defensive by saying "do you think i did it?" For me that's implied that mark did it
Well, I mean, if you were the head of a company like Facebook and you found out someone in your company was caught giving cocaine to minors, would you still want them to be associated with your company?
"The Gentle Hum of Anxiety" is a good title for the song. I still can't believe a movie about Facebook was this thrilling to watch. It also has one of the best soundtracks in history. Every song scored for the film makes the movie so much darker than I expected.
I hope they'll do the sequel, sorkin is on board but he wants Fincher to be there too, razor Trent and Atticus Ross would definitely be there for composing...
Michael Corleone is a better person, he is not an insufferable genius who exploits other people. He's just a ruthlessly calculating Don, who originally doesn't want to be in a Mafia business like his family members but he doesn't have choice after a life threatening action on his father. But he's gone way too far. In The Godfather II, the main plot that he is betrayed by his neglected brother Fredo and he gone too far again... ultimately leaving him alone. And in the Godfather III he tried to change as he promised in the Ii, to be legitimate and nice person. He even wants to stay out from business of crime again, handing it over to Vincent. But still at the end, all of those enemies who are all after him ultimately made his life miserable and he lost everything ultimately.. he is left alone again. This time: dying alone, tragically.. unlike his father's death. "When I thought I was out, they pulled me back in!" -Michael Corleone, The Godfather part III
This part of the movie is true during a party in 2005, police entered and searched a vacation home Parker was renting and found cocaine. Parker was arrested on suspicion of drug possession, but was not charged. This event caused Facebook investors to pressure Parker into resigning as company president.
Yup and in a 60 minutes interview with mark zuck he said that the company had trouble generating its own revenue so Facebook’s investors had so much power
the soundtrack of this part is very very special, is like a dream, is like the sound of the nights of the past, jajajaja, it's a very strange sensation....
at 0:11 I was never sure whether to interpret that as Sean telling Mark what happened and we can't hear it or Mark slowly realizing that the worst case scenario just happened.
It’s kind of an obvious detail, but I still love how Sean’s so frantic and making up excuses from anything he can. The juxtaposition between that and how Sean was in every other scene before this is just… *chefs kiss!* Closest we get to how he acts now was in the scene with him flinching at Eduardo trying to scare him. He acts tough, but that’s all it is… an act.
0:43 Sean: It’s cool. I have it under control- Mark: I will get it under control. I love how Mark basically sit Sean on his ass by saying that. It really does show how he’s in charge and that Sean won’t be making Mark’s choices anymore.
Whats ironic is that the room that the lights clicking off in is not only a methaphorical implication that something is wrong and Sean is literally on the way out but its also the same room that Eduardo found out that he was betrayed by Mark, pretty amazing detail, especially when that corner was turned and Mark truly realizes how alone he truly was.
I know Napster didn’t come close to Facebook in popularity, but I thought it would have been interesting to see a prequel movie with Sean Parker’s story of founding Napster
@@Akazainul seems kinda cool actually, the prequel of Sean Parker's Napster, sequel of what Eduardo did afterwards, the spin off of Christy li's deranged adventures but definitely... Most definitely the social network : 2016 and more
Scorched-earth policy all over the place. His girlfriend, his best friend, and Sean...nothing left. Really gives you that Underwood vibe. Cool how this was worked by a few people from HoC and West Wing.
"Remember this isn't accurate to the real story." Uh, no shit. Pretty sure most of us have a decent brain to know that we're watching a movie and not a show from discovery channels 😭
You'd be surprised. Esp now when Zuckerberg & Facebook are in hot water over privacy and disinformation on the platform, people are turning to this movie as some sort of vindication of "yeah zuckerberg's always been like this". Not that zuckerberg's a saint, but the movie's still fiction.
jesus, you really believe that there aren't people who thinks the movie is completely accurate to what happened??? you are cutely and incredibly naive lol
After watching many clips of this movie on TH-cam, it's clear that some viewers have took this movie as if it were 100% true. Remember that Hollywood takes real stories, picks & chooses parts, and creates false or stretches plot points to make it fit better for the movie plot.
@@anjaneyasreetrout2444 it really isn't. It's based of a book, written by someone who consulted Eduardo on what happened. Eduardo had a pretty strong bias against Zuckerberg and tried to portray himself as the victim
David fincher is well known for his horror/thriller genres so he’s good at ploying the elements of surprise and mystery. Pair that with Aaron sorkin’s writing you get this scene. It was so ominous and amazing.
This scene reminds me of the one in Boogie Nights where Jack (Burt Reynolds) is on the phone with the colonel at jail, especially when Sean/colonel says "I didn't *do* anything". He's trying to plead his innocence to get one of his only friends on side but Jack/Mark simply can't believe or trust him anymore.
Mark realizes the moment he made a mistake hiring Sean when Sean asks “Do you think Eduardo is involved”🙂. The smart ass still tries to blame Eduardo for his mistakes.
I have been seeing comments going around suggesting that Mark called the cops on Sean, if that were the case, what would be the reason to call the cops on him?
Zuckerberg probably felt bad on how harsh they were against Eduardo so he wanted to do a little pay-back (even though Zucc was the most mean against Eduardo). Also, I was thinking that maybe Zuckerberg wanted to use this a "little" wake-up call for Sean after all that partying, coke etc. Zuckerberg wanted that they will focus 100% on Facebook while Sean kept partying etc. This is just my opinion, let me know what you think!
x that’s an interesting theory. Honestly I don’t have any idea why he would call the police, it was an interesting thought to me because of the lawyer at the end suggesting that she could convince a jury that Mark called the cops. So I see what you’re saying on how Mark wanted to keep Sean in check. However, I don’t know about him getting even because of what he did to Eduardo because he’s not in a position to do that because he screwed him over as well. But that is an intriguing theory.
Mark didn’t call the police or set Sean up to get fired and Eduardo wasn’t involved either. Sean did that himself. The presence of the cocaine at the party was incidental, but Sean was complicit about the cocaine usage and he wanted to believe he was set up to save face. Sean knew he was getting into bed with trouble; he got what he deserved.
@@astroANNIt was probably Mark. He was clearly annoyed at how Sean spoke to Eduardo showing his true colours, didn’t like the way Sean tried brush off what Mark said afterwards like he didn’t respect his authority and was clearly horrified when he found out that Sean was gonna go to a party with an underage intern. Anyone of those would be enough for Mark to make the call
If Zuckerberg was played by this dude, then brad pitt is playing me when they make my movie for sure "the TH-cam commenter, a story of struggle, humor, intrigue, desperation, and love"
I mean, if you were gaslighted into thinking Sean was your best friend and made you rip contacts from everyone else and in the turns out to be messed up af which will endfsner your baby project... You would shiver too
Pretty much everyone here gets this scene wrong - they see it as Eduardo being correct. It's absolutely the opposite, it's Eduardo not understanding the culture of Silicon Valley. Mark knows that Sean can be quite crazy, but he also knows Sean provides connections and can guide Mark through the way that Silicon Valley works. Sean's suggestions and guidance was crucial in getting Facebook to get the money it needs, and expand and grow. By the time Sean is a liability, Mark is already in a very good position - his company is in a very good position. Mark has the VC capital, and knows how Silicon Valley works and has established himself there. He has already received so much from Sean, and doesn't need him anymore - getting rid of him is simple and obvious.
Well said. I’ll go a step further and say Mark knew Sean was a ticking time bomb from day one and engineered his downfall so that he didn’t damage the company to much.
I think this entire movie was not about portraying Zuckerberg as diabolical but a genius with books but naive with street smarts. He thought he could have a nice guy routine business with his best friend and his idol but when things fall into place it's then he is eventually tasked with pulling a sorta thing like The Founder film starring Michael Keaton as Ray Kroc did. Mark learns that for his vision to be successful he has to treat it as Kroc did and that is as war. Like when Eduardo confronts Mark Mark looks like he wants to cry and make up but he has to fight tooth and nail to be a ceo in a warzone because he has been a nice guy long enough. Same with how he was with Sean. Just my opinion though.
There's such an interesting contrast between the two characters here, which demonstrates why Mark ended up being more successful than Sean could ever be. The two of them have a lot in common, but when the chips are down and things start falling apart, Sean is in a complete state of panic, while Mark is completely cool and collected.
@@SuperNovaJinckUFOI’m not sticking up for Parker here but it’s kinda hard to remain calm and collected when you’ve just been caught red handed with coke and underage interns by police. And it’s easy for Mark to be calm and collected when he’s done nothing wrong AND is the boss
ultimately, this is all the movie wanted to portray: that zuckerberg was the only one really focused, thus deserving success. is it actually true? that's not the point...
They all are extremely successful. Sean's and Eduardo's net worth is about a billion each. Lol maybe not 100 Billion like Zuckerberg but god damn I wouldn't be too salty if I was Sean or Eduardo
@cornking6 This shows on the film that Mark’s character was on that always wanted to be in the “cool” crowd. He never was before, so he saw an opportunity with Sean and took it.
The only real story is that Mark kick out people even closed ones that make Facebook what is it today, he doesn't care unless it serve his own purpose. He use people and after their usefulness, throw them out.
I love this movie, it’s absolutely incredible, but let’s not forget that the script is entirely based off the book that Eduardo wrote so of course he’s gonna make himself look like the hero and everyone else the villain
Facebook is the best social media platform for sure! i know it's have had it's problems but what corporation doesn't?! as I must say I do want to work for Facebook really bad! Glad you met your soulmate! I'm sure i will eventually land a job from there!
Refreshing to hear this instead of always about how social media is isolating people. No technology is inherently good or evil. It's Alla about how you use it.
Can you feel it, Zuckerburg? Closing in, all around you? Karma's justice, has been awakened. The sins of the past, have FINALLY caught up to you. You WILL be called to account. For all the crimes you have committed. The money you stole from honest men and women. And the private information that you sold for profit. Though Eduardo was one of the first to be consumed by your evil, there are billions of others on Facebook, including me, and we cry out for justice. Look now to your situation, Zuckerburg. For the champions of justice gather at your gates!
Personally, I think that Mark did call the cops on Sean. After the fight with Eduardo, he finally realized what Sean is like, and knew he had to part ways with him. He had already allowed himself to be manipulated into destroying his relationship with his best friend, now it was time to part company.
Sean was willing to screw over someone else in order to save his own skin after getting caught. Makes you wonder what else Sean would have done later on down the road given his track record and what he was caught doing then. Second chances are great, but if you don't learn anything from them, you create a bad habit and that's enough to drag a company down a slippery and dark path.
At that moment Mark realized everything Eduardo was talking about was in fact pure truth.
And he lost a good friend down to his own self greed
Greedy stupid douche bag 😏
He realised it before this deep down. Eduardo freezing the account tipped him over the edge and he stupidly co-operated with Sean to set Eduardo up. The whole film is Mark being misguided and making the wrong choices because he thinks it will lead to his endgoal.
@@Mazzattack He still has another best friend, he’s alright.
@@Gr0ot I mean if your're referring to 5 billion peoples private data, then yeah.
Watching Sean Parker break down and deny that any of it was his fault was insane. Dude was so far up his own ass and he didn’t even realize it.
That's narcissistic personality disorder for you
When a spoon fed spoilt douchebag finally gets a dosage of punishment, that’s what happens to them
I hear that he is not nearly this bad in real life though.
@@alecaquino4306 of course not, but it’s still a cool character moment in the movie.
@@benmorgan8890 Oh, I absolutely agree with you on that! Definitely an amazing moment :)
The line of “I have everything under control” summarizes Sean’s character and personality, he thinks he owns and has everything under his control and everything goes his way, yet he never had control, it was all an illusion and mask. Eduardo was right
The way he says "I wasn't doing anything" is like a child telling their parents when they're caught doing something stupid.
He was an entitled mug who was under the delusion he ran every room he was in and when Mark was backed into a corner he had him shot back to the hole of which he came
@@Henlak- Yes, he is just a child in a mask. Entitled, prideful, egotistical, and cynical ... when Sean flinched when Eduardo was going to "hit him", I knew he was the biggest mouth and fake.
“He never had control, THAT’S the illusion!”
@@abon587Yep, masks don't last
@@japtakito8551 in that very scene Eduardo smiling is also him knowing Sean is nothing but a bag of mouth and a wannabe
I love how after Mark kicked out Eduardo, his warning about working with Sean came back to bite Mark.
I think it's implied that Mark himself calls the cops on Sean after how he treated Eduardo.
Exactly. Eduardo predicted that working with Parker would lead to bad things. Mark may have shown his smarts several times throughout the film, but this one prediction shows that Eduardo was the real smartest person in the room.
@@matthewescudero4287 mark was smart genius but he didnt know people he had no street smarts only book smarts that's where Sean entered and then uses his charm to manipulate mark to his advantage
@@anyoneattheendoftime4932 I don't think that's implied at all. Why would Mark call the cops on Sean if he knew it would lead to bad publicity for the company? He even tried to tell this to Sean multiple times.
It is interesting though that the question of who called the cops is touched on in the last scene, when Delpy brings it up as an example of how it could taint a jury's perception of Mark.
@@VIMaggotVIBrainzVIit was implied, sean ask, "do you think it was eduardo?" And mark without thinking it he said "no", then marks says "I'm going to call somebody" like he was already prepared, then the very next scene the lawyer ask why he didn't was at the party? He took a couple of seconds for answering and then he became defensive by saying "do you think i did it?" For me that's implied that mark did it
Sean: commits crime
Mark: “bye bye bye”
Well, I mean, if you were the head of a company like Facebook and you found out someone in your company was caught giving cocaine to minors, would you still want them to be associated with your company?
@@MP-nq9ht The Board of Directors voted him out in real life too. I think he lost all his shares of Facebook also. Karma right?
I'm probably the first guy in the replies to mention NSYNC lmao.
@@arson1tez beat me to it by 5 days
@@aritrartira lmao
The moment when Mark realizes that Eduardo was 100% right about Sean was one of the best scenes in the movie.
"The Gentle Hum of Anxiety" is a good title for the song. I still can't believe a movie about Facebook was this thrilling to watch. It also has one of the best soundtracks in history. Every song scored for the film makes the movie so much darker than I expected.
or even title for the movie still
I hope they'll do the sequel, sorkin is on board but he wants Fincher to be there too, razor Trent and Atticus Ross would definitely be there for composing...
You should check out gone girls soundtrack, just as if not more brilliant and scored by the same people that did TSN
My favorite scene in the whole film. The score is so haunting!
Hands down, this is one of my top 5 best scores of the 2010s.
“Gentle him of anxiety” is the perfect song name
The score ?
Enrique Castillo Its another way of referring to the soundtrack or music in the film.
Done by Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails and Atticus Ross
The turning off of the lights was an oddly emotionally effective move. Each click of the switch went to my heart as this weird sad dread settles.
Mark sitting alone at the end there reminds me of The Godfather Part II, when Michael’s all alone after everything he accomplished
I honestly think that was done on purpose
Exactly he’s won everything but at the same time he has nothing and no one
Good Analyzing; what you're referring to as a consequential downfall of a Tragic Hero.
Michael Corleone is a better person, he is not an insufferable genius who exploits other people. He's just a ruthlessly calculating Don, who originally doesn't want to be in a Mafia business like his family members but he doesn't have choice after a life threatening action on his father. But he's gone way too far. In The Godfather II, the main plot that he is betrayed by his neglected brother Fredo and he gone too far again... ultimately leaving him alone. And in the Godfather III he tried to change as he promised in the Ii, to be legitimate and nice person. He even wants to stay out from business of crime again, handing it over to Vincent. But still at the end, all of those enemies who are all after him ultimately made his life miserable and he lost everything ultimately.. he is left alone again. This time: dying alone, tragically.. unlike his father's death.
"When I thought I was out, they pulled me back in!" -Michael Corleone, The Godfather part III
well...according to the news on the internet, the godfather part II is one of fincher's most favourite movies!
This part of the movie is true during a party in 2005, police entered and searched a vacation home Parker was renting and found cocaine. Parker was arrested on suspicion of drug possession, but was not charged. This event caused Facebook investors to pressure Parker into resigning as company president.
Yup and in a 60 minutes interview with mark zuck he said that the company had trouble generating its own revenue so Facebook’s investors had so much power
The moment Mark realized he made the wrong choice. In addition, today Eduardo is worth about six times as much as Sean.
The Gentle Hum of Anxiety.
the soundtrack of this part is very very special, is like a dream, is like the sound of the nights of the past, jajajaja, it's a very strange sensation....
@Frederic Bastiat Yup, the name is: THE GENTLE HUM OF ANXIETY 👍
at 0:11 I was never sure whether to interpret that as Sean telling Mark what happened and we can't hear it or Mark slowly realizing that the worst case scenario just happened.
At first I thought it was Mark slowly realizing too, but it seems like way too long a silence for Sean not to be saying anything about it
So what??? What happened????
@@Digmer He was caught with cocaine at the party he was holding.
@@Digmer Cocaine at a party, minors were doing cocaine too. Just adds another layer of "you're screwed big time".
@@johnsoapmactavish9921 And they were company interns on top of that.
I love the lights turning off in the background behind Mark, that was definitely symbolic
That soundtrack a minute in is INSANE
You mean the musical scoring? What soundtrack?
Trent Reznor is a genius, the music makes this scene so much better.
I love how Mark knows Eduardo did nothing and sat Sean down fast
it’s more probable that Mark was the one who set the trap himself
@@martin5963i was think the same😅,first eduardo, then sean.
@@mtasnimxira yeaa would make sense dont see him as someone who shares things or trusts people
It’s kind of an obvious detail, but I still love how Sean’s so frantic and making up excuses from anything he can. The juxtaposition between that and how Sean was in every other scene before this is just… *chefs kiss!*
Closest we get to how he acts now was in the scene with him flinching at Eduardo trying to scare him. He acts tough, but that’s all it is… an act.
0:43
Sean: It’s cool. I have it under control-
Mark: I will get it under control.
I love how Mark basically sit Sean on his ass by saying that. It really does show how he’s in charge and that Sean won’t be making Mark’s choices anymore.
Whats ironic is that the room that the lights clicking off in is not only a methaphorical implication that something is wrong and Sean is literally on the way out but its also the same room that Eduardo found out that he was betrayed by Mark, pretty amazing detail, especially when that corner was turned and Mark truly realizes how alone he truly was.
Eduardo warned Mark from the beginning…
Honestly? The only morally righteous thing Mark did in the entire movie.
Can we just talk about how Justin was so good in this movie
I know Napster didn’t come close to Facebook in popularity, but I thought it would have been interesting to see a prequel movie with Sean Parker’s story of founding Napster
make somekind of social network cinematic universe? lol
@@Akazainul seems kinda cool actually, the prequel of Sean Parker's Napster, sequel of what Eduardo did afterwards, the spin off of Christy li's deranged adventures but definitely... Most definitely the social network : 2016 and more
@@priyachoudhary9896then we could have Tom Cruise make a Mission Impossible style movie about how TikTok was made… in China…
Scorched-earth policy all over the place. His girlfriend, his best friend, and Sean...nothing left. Really gives you that Underwood vibe. Cool how this was worked by a few people from HoC and West Wing.
"Remember this isn't accurate to the real story."
Uh, no shit. Pretty sure most of us have a decent brain to know that we're watching a movie and not a show from discovery channels 😭
You'd be surprised. Esp now when Zuckerberg & Facebook are in hot water over privacy and disinformation on the platform, people are turning to this movie as some sort of vindication of "yeah zuckerberg's always been like this". Not that zuckerberg's a saint, but the movie's still fiction.
@@Fbiguy I mean he did use the original version of Facebook to stalk a girl
jesus, you really believe that there aren't people who thinks the movie is completely accurate to what happened??? you are cutely and incredibly naive lol
Even the discovery channel’s stuff are fake and have a narrative tho
After watching many clips of this movie on TH-cam, it's clear that some viewers have took this movie as if it were 100% true. Remember that Hollywood takes real stories, picks & chooses parts, and creates false or stretches plot points to make it fit better for the movie plot.
Maybe, but still..... This movie was surprisingly accurate in many ways......
Your right
It’s much worse in real life.
Zuckerberg is an asshole irl too.
@@anjaneyasreetrout2444 it really isn't. It's based of a book, written by someone who consulted Eduardo on what happened. Eduardo had a pretty strong bias against Zuckerberg and tried to portray himself as the victim
@@higg71 Pretty much.
1:23 at this moment he realized it wasn’t worth it to lose his only friend
David fincher is well known for his horror/thriller genres so he’s good at ploying the elements of surprise and mystery. Pair that with Aaron sorkin’s writing you get this scene. It was so ominous and amazing.
I truly think justin Timberlake was phenomenal in this scene he doesn't get enough credit for being tremendous actor
The score in this scene is unreal
Sean is trembling with fear talking to Mark. That itself tells that he has done something wrong
A room full of cocaine and underage girls is not a room you want to be in when the cops come. Sean knew that.
@@latinolawdog5067at any moment really, but when you are president of a huge world changing startup? Silly move
This scene reminds me of the one in Boogie Nights where Jack (Burt Reynolds) is on the phone with the colonel at jail, especially when Sean/colonel says "I didn't *do* anything". He's trying to plead his innocence to get one of his only friends on side but Jack/Mark simply can't believe or trust him anymore.
Mark realizes the moment he made a mistake hiring Sean when Sean asks “Do you think Eduardo is involved”🙂. The smart ass still tries to blame Eduardo for his mistakes.
All the actors in this movie did a spectacular job.
Tale as old as time. The man who wished for everything got everything, but at what cost?
I love the soundtrack in this scene
And I thought I was a potential dirtbag.
There's always a bigger fish.
The music in this movie is so good
I love the parallel that Mark Zuckerberg in the film creates a platform that ultimately connects people, only to be alone in the end.
I have been seeing comments going around suggesting that Mark called the cops on Sean, if that were the case, what would be the reason to call the cops on him?
Zuckerberg probably felt bad on how harsh they were against Eduardo so he wanted to do a little pay-back (even though Zucc was the most mean against Eduardo). Also, I was thinking that maybe Zuckerberg wanted to use this a "little" wake-up call for Sean after all that partying, coke etc. Zuckerberg wanted that they will focus 100% on Facebook while Sean kept partying etc. This is just my opinion, let me know what you think!
x that’s an interesting theory. Honestly I don’t have any idea why he would call the police, it was an interesting thought to me because of the lawyer at the end suggesting that she could convince a jury that Mark called the cops. So I see what you’re saying on how Mark wanted to keep Sean in check. However, I don’t know about him getting even because of what he did to Eduardo because he’s not in a position to do that because he screwed him over as well. But that is an intriguing theory.
Mark didn’t call the police or set Sean up to get fired and Eduardo wasn’t involved either. Sean did that himself. The presence of the cocaine at the party was incidental, but Sean was complicit about the cocaine usage and he wanted to believe he was set up to save face. Sean knew he was getting into bed with trouble; he got what he deserved.
This didn’t actually happen. You know that right?
@@Chris-0703 I think we are just talking about the movie not what happened in real life.
"Sean's the little devil on his shoulder and Eduardo's the little man"
"you don't think eduardo was involved do you ?" what an ass*ole ! I really wanted to slap him during the whole movie
As Eduardo diagnosed him, he's paronoid
who called the cops then??
@@astroANN the neighbors probably did. Remember it was a loud ass party they were throwing.
@@astroANNIt was probably Mark. He was clearly annoyed at how Sean spoke to Eduardo showing his true colours, didn’t like the way Sean tried brush off what Mark said afterwards like he didn’t respect his authority and was clearly horrified when he found out that Sean was gonna go to a party with an underage intern.
Anyone of those would be enough for Mark to make the call
0:11 The light goes out on Mark's opinion of Sean.
1:04 the moment that mark realised everything Eduardo said about Sean was true
Remember, the movie and the real story is quite different (esp with Eduardo)
If Zuckerberg was played by this dude, then brad pitt is playing me when they make my movie for sure
"the TH-cam commenter, a story of struggle, humor, intrigue, desperation, and love"
And he would play it so damn well
@@priyachoudhary9896I want Denzel to play me 😁
This is gonna ruin the tour.
He is shivering at 1:23
That’s what happens when your soul is cold
I mean, if you were gaslighted into thinking Sean was your best friend and made you rip contacts from everyone else and in the turns out to be messed up af which will endfsner your baby project... You would shiver too
What type of phone is the one Jesse uses in this scene,looks dope
Motorola
1:23 I just noticed the address on the card. lol why did they change it to 3156?
Did mark dilute the shares?
Pretty much everyone here gets this scene wrong - they see it as Eduardo being correct. It's absolutely the opposite, it's Eduardo not understanding the culture of Silicon Valley. Mark knows that Sean can be quite crazy, but he also knows Sean provides connections and can guide Mark through the way that Silicon Valley works. Sean's suggestions and guidance was crucial in getting Facebook to get the money it needs, and expand and grow. By the time Sean is a liability, Mark is already in a very good position - his company is in a very good position. Mark has the VC capital, and knows how Silicon Valley works and has established himself there. He has already received so much from Sean, and doesn't need him anymore - getting rid of him is simple and obvious.
Well said. I’ll go a step further and say Mark knew Sean was a ticking time bomb from day one and engineered his downfall so that he didn’t damage the company to much.
I think this entire movie was not about portraying Zuckerberg as diabolical but a genius with books but naive with street smarts. He thought he could have a nice guy routine business with his best friend and his idol but when things fall into place it's then he is eventually tasked with pulling a sorta thing like The Founder film starring Michael Keaton as Ray Kroc did. Mark learns that for his vision to be successful he has to treat it as Kroc did and that is as war. Like when Eduardo confronts Mark Mark looks like he wants to cry and make up but he has to fight tooth and nail to be a ceo in a warzone because he has been a nice guy long enough. Same with how he was with Sean. Just my opinion though.
Sean is Frankenstein and he created a monster
“Go home, Sean.”
Says it all. You’re done. You’re done with this platform. You’re done with Facebook.
He said it like how Sean would say it to an intern who caught feelings for him… haha nice touch
Fricking love this scene
where is the part where Mark fires Sean? i didn’t hear any firing
He didn't personally fire him, the board did afterwards
IS THIS NEW SOUNDTRACK MUSIC VIDEO OF SPIDERMAN VS LUTHOR FEATURING SMASHING PUMPKIN
Honestly I hated Sean so much I was really happy that this happened.
What goes around comes around, Sean.
Did mark set shawn up ??
Yes it’s heavily implied
How is this monetized? I hope you're getting paid.
I've seen this movie a few times. This scene isn't in the movie
There's such an interesting contrast between the two characters here, which demonstrates why Mark ended up being more successful than Sean could ever be. The two of them have a lot in common, but when the chips are down and things start falling apart, Sean is in a complete state of panic, while Mark is completely cool and collected.
Huh, that's two adjectives I have never heard being used to describe the Zucc
@@Marcus-gw4bb I'm just talking about the character in the movie
@@SuperNovaJinckUFOI’m not sticking up for Parker here but it’s kinda hard to remain calm and collected when you’ve just been caught red handed with coke and underage interns by police. And it’s easy for Mark to be calm and collected when he’s done nothing wrong AND is the boss
Great movie
Fuckin Sean pulled some BILL CLINTON shit lol 😂
ultimately, this is all the movie wanted to portray: that zuckerberg was the only one really focused, thus deserving success. is it actually true? that's not the point...
They all are extremely successful. Sean's and Eduardo's net worth is about a billion each. Lol maybe not 100 Billion like Zuckerberg but god damn I wouldn't be too salty if I was Sean or Eduardo
@@davidsbeandip and the Winklevoss twins that Zuckerberg stole the idea from are also each worth over a billion dollars.
@@davidsbeandipthe sad thing is that all 3 men were comfortably wealthy (by any normal persons metric) before they stepped foot in Harvard…
lets see paul allens card
Cool
The tasteful thickness of it. Oh my god.
What actually were in the small packages that he got??
"I am CEO, bitch." Cards.
@@psibarpsi Iconic moment after firing Sean since he is the one who asked him to make those cards.
At first I think that was cocain to frame Sean. Anyone has the film insight can confirm this?
@@TieulinhHOTA2 lol i also thought the same i think it was a card lol
I never thought a movie could make me hate Justin Timberlake - but TSN did.
He stabbed his best friend in the back and shacked himself up with a complete tool who had a penchant for underage girls. I have no sympathy for him.
@cornking6 This shows on the film that Mark’s character was on that always wanted to be in the “cool” crowd. He never was before, so he saw an opportunity with Sean and took it.
I would love to see a sequel to this movie!
Did he fire him ?
Yes
I think there was pressure for Parker to resign which he did in 2006 (this incident took place in 2005).
I think Mark saying “Go home Sean” was his way of saying “You’re fired”
@@59771006 no lol its just him saying go home
No
does anyone know where i can get his fleece
Probably on a social network props auction lol jk
I missed the part where he fired him
Me too.
Meanwhile me:
What phone is Mark using?!
Nope, not going to be fine.
milf
@@b0zay calm tf down
They made this look like an episode of Degrassi LOL
did Sean parker actually set up eduardo
Brilliant movie
Movie still so good even if facebook and zuckerberg have turned into a dystopian clown apocalypse
Sean still owns like 5% of the company btw. lol
55 million shares.
cautionary tale, don't do business partnership with a party guy
Or do what mark did. Be aware that he is a liability, extract all you can from him and dispose when he inevitably crashes out…
Sean just got zucced
So who called the cops
I love how Sean Parker is a coke addict 😂
He didn’t fire him bro
Too many emotions for mark the robot.
The only real story is that Mark kick out people even closed ones that make Facebook what is it today, he doesn't care unless it serve his own purpose. He use people and after their usefulness, throw them out.
That's Facebook nowadays
I love this movie, it’s absolutely incredible, but let’s not forget that the script is entirely based off the book that Eduardo wrote so of course he’s gonna make himself look like the hero and everyone else the villain
Don’t think he is actually firing the guy.
0:44
Thx for create facebook... i met my soulmate because of it
No one cares
Facebook is the best social media platform for sure! i know it's have had it's problems but what corporation doesn't?! as I must say I do want to work for Facebook really bad! Glad you met your soulmate! I'm sure i will eventually land a job from there!
It's okay. I just hate the video player. Can't compete with TH-cam.
@@e13kid True i agree Facebook and Google do have good's and bad's but i respect your opinion! sir
Refreshing to hear this instead of always about how social media is isolating people. No technology is inherently good or evil. It's Alla about how you use it.
Can you feel it, Zuckerburg? Closing in, all around you? Karma's justice, has been awakened. The sins of the past, have FINALLY caught up to you. You WILL be called to account. For all the crimes you have committed. The money you stole from honest men and women. And the private information that you sold for profit. Though Eduardo was one of the first to be consumed by your evil, there are billions of others on Facebook, including me, and we cry out for justice. Look now to your situation, Zuckerburg. For the champions of justice gather at your gates!
Personally, I think that Mark did call the cops on Sean. After the fight with Eduardo, he finally realized what Sean is like, and knew he had to part ways with him. He had already allowed himself to be manipulated into destroying his relationship with his best friend, now it was time to part company.
“I’m CEO, bitch.”
Wait he fired him because of drugs
It was the only logic present. Anytime that an employee abuses drugs, they are a threat to the company
you mean to tell me, you would have it any other way? if he risked your company being exposed with deeds you had nothing to do with?
He fired him because of statutory rape, possessing cocaine.. and trying to blame Wardo.
He was pressurized by other investors as well
Sean was willing to screw over someone else in order to save his own skin after getting caught. Makes you wonder what else Sean would have done later on down the road given his track record and what he was caught doing then. Second chances are great, but if you don't learn anything from them, you create a bad habit and that's enough to drag a company down a slippery and dark path.