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Mark Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, has taken his entire workforce to see an unflattering film that charts his life and the creation of the social networking site. Although Zuckerberg - the world's youngest billionaire with a fortune Forbes estimates to be larger than that of Bill Gates' - was reportedly unhappy about The Social Network, he seems to be confronting its existence head on. Jesse Eisenberg, who plays Zuckerberg in the film, says although modern in subject, the themes are Shakespearian. "At heart the movie is about ambition, competition, greed, creativity, intellectual property - all these wonderful themes that are timeless but at the heart something very contemporary," Eisenberg said. Aaron Sorkin, the film's writer who is also behind The West Wing and A Few Good Men, has an inside track on what Zuckerberg really thought of the final product. "As a surprise he shut down the Facebook offices, bought out a theatre and took the entire Facebook staff of four or five hundred to see it. "Jesse, who plays Mark in the film, has a cousin who is a senior staffer at Facebook and he is close to Mark. Afterwards he emailed Jesse to say that Mark really liked the parts of the movie he agreed with," Sorkin said. The idea for Facebook was born in a Harvard dorm room back in 2004. The social networking site which enabled people to "talk" to each other had 22,000 hits in the first two hours - it now has more than 500 million members across 100 different languages. But the battle to the top is culminated in two legal battles over ownership and bad business practices. While Zuckerberg was gaining online friends, in real life he was shedding them. Coinciding with the film's launch, the normally reclusive 26-year-old founder has mounted what cynics are dubbing a charm offensive. He has recently made guest appearances on The Simpsons, Oprah, and donated ÂŁ60m to a school programme for his home state of New Jersey. Is there a subtext to his new-found publicity and generosity? Justin Timberlake, who plays Napster founder Sean Parker and who also has a share in Facebook, does not think so. "If anyone had the opportunity to be on The Simpsons then they would do it - it is a classic TV show and one of the coolest things I've ever done. "And I think a donation that big should be met with thanks rather than why they might be doing it," Timberlake said. The newly released, critically acclaimed film has been called generation-defining and is already tipped for an Oscar. But while the apparently unstoppable march of Facebook continues there are surprising but significant gaps in the plan for world domination. When Sky News asked the film's stars Justin Timberlake, Jesse Eisenberg and Andrew Garfield whether they are users of the networking site, they all said no. Source: Sky News

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.