Summer 1998. A friend and I were driving past the Beverly Wilshire when he started. ‘Look, there’s Sean Penn!’ I turned to see. Slouched on bench behind red sunglasses, wearing white sweat socks and comfy slippers, he was casually fiddling with a baseball bat. But it definitely wasn’t Sean Penn—nor was the curly-haired guy sitting next, for that matter, whom I realised only later was director David Fincher. My friend was obviously more knowledgeable about NBA players than actors, and I was just the opposite, though on one thing he was right—the semi-pyjamaed demigod lounging there, probably waiting for his driver, was the actor from Seven Years in Tibet. At Ale’s command, I snapped a cheap paparazzi photo with our disposable Kodak camera and that was it—one more for the album of our crazy time at UCLA.
A few days after the surreal encounter we were wandering around Downtown as we stumbled upon a film set. Not an unusual sight in LA, except this was clearly bigger than the average we had seen around, so we got closer and approached a guy with enough communication devices on his body to seem a reliable source of information. Between a walkie-talkie buzz and another he was kind enough to reply, even caring to embellish the title with an article—The Fight Club. At that point, I had no idea that such a film was in the works, but when I eventually saw it about a year later, something struck me indelibly—the fragments of practical filmmaking I had hardly glimpsed on the streets against what the art of cinema had made of it.