BEFORE THE PSYCHOTIC break, the fistfighting, and his life’s eventual devolution into an anarcho-terrorist fever dream, the nameless narrator of Fight Club spends his free time attending support group meetings for diseases he doesn’t have. Lymphoma, tuberculosis, parasites, cancer: It’s not about the condition, but the catharsis of being in a room with people who are suffering and see each other’s suffering. They sip coffee. They make confessions. They hold each other and cry—and then they go home, knowing they’ll be back next week to do it all over again.
In the context of the movie, this is understood to be an absurd spectacle of human pathos. This is, after all, a film whose narrator eventually finds that beating other men to a pulp with his bare hands is a…
