Audio: English: 1 DTS HD Master Audio, Dolby Surround / Spanish: 1 Dolby Digital / French: 1 DTS Language: Dubbing: English and French / Subtitle: English, French and Spanish
In the devil novel "The Fight Club" by Chuck Palahniuk, readers can experience the twisted adventure built in the fight club. The first rule about the fight club is that you are not talking about the fight with the club. The letters Taylor Deden, Malasinger and the narrator formed the dynamics of the novel. The second rule of the fight club is that you are not talking about club fighting. The narrator woven a big story between his lifestyle and a little glimpse of his relationship. The third rule of Fight Flub is to fight two men per game. Throughout the novel, an unnamed narrator placed himself in the work of Taylor Deden and his fellow fight club. The fourth rule of the fight club is a fight. It becomes a game, follows rules and tries to bottom out. The fifth rule of the fight club is that there are no shoes and no shirt is fighting. The sixth rule of the fighting club is that the fight will continue as long as they need to.
The first rule of the fighting club is as follows. You do not talk about fighting clubs. The second rule of the battle club is that you are not talking about the club you fight. The third rule of the battle club is "The battle is over when someone says to say" stop "or to stop it. The fourth rule is that only two people can fight. Fifth rule - One war at a time. Rule 6 - I do not have shirts or shoes. Rule 7 - as long as they have to keep fighting. Eighth and last rule - If this is the first night at the fighting club, you have to fight. Interestingly, the fighting club is not about winning or losing. This is not a gladiator's struggle. Our goal is not to defeat your opponents, but to knock down someone to beat it to achieve it - the goal is to use primitive things - to find the truth. In the fight in the support team basement, Norton compared the experiences of fighting clubs and religious rhythms. "Like Pentecostal churches, hysterical cries are in dialects.