American Psycho Movie Review
American Psycho Review

"American Psycho" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Mary HarronProducer : Christian Halsey Solomon,Chris Hanley,Edward R. Pressman,Ron Rotholz
Screenwiter : Mary Harron,Guinevere Turner
Starring : Christian Bale,Willem Dafoe,Jared Leto,Reese Witherspoon,Samantha Mathis,Chloë Sevigny
From the opening scene, showing drops of blood on a pristine white surface, we
know we're in for... well, not your ordinary slasher flick. Turns out the
"blood" is a berry sauce being applied to a plate of haute cuisine. And the
mind games of American Psycho have only just begun.
Steeped in controversy and mired in production for years, American Psycho tells
the story of Anybroker Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale), a highest-society late
1980s Wall Street investment banker with a penchant for murder and a bloodlust
that doesn't quit. Think of it as a portrait of Gordon Gecko as a young,
homicidal man.
With knives, axes, guns (bullet and nail), and/or chainsaw, Bateman hacks up
homeless people, hookers, and even a few of his friends, especially if they
talk nasty about him behind his back. Between bouts of rough sex, a rigorous
shower and exercise routine, drinks and dinners with friends and dates, and
listening to his favorite music (Huey Lewis, Phil Collins, and Whitney
Houston), it's surprising that Bateman actually has time to get to work.
And murder's just not enough for Bateman. He's engaged to Evelyn (Reese
Witherspoon) but is boning her sister (Samantha Mathis) and a whole lot of
whores, to boot. Everyone but his assistant (Chloë Sevigny) is getting a piece
of the action. Not that you'd want any, because most everyone who visits
Patrick's apartment ends up in the fridge.
American Psycho has the tendency to be a character in search of a plot, as was
the case with the novel, but director Mary Harron has infused Bret Easton
Ellis's tale with so much twisted and neo-farcical psychosis that she's really
turned a rambling psychothriller novel tinged with comedy into a ribald satire
tinged with thrills. The murders in American Psycho aren't particularly
gruesome, it's the glee with which Bateman carries them out that makes him a
true villain. Even the novel's most gruesome killing (which I won't detail
here, but which involves a bound woman, a starving rat, and a Habitrail) has
been cut from the film.
As for Bale, well, I think we've just witnessed the defining moment of his
career: the role for which he will forever be compared to. (Think Leonardo
DiCaprio (who was rumored to be taking this part at one time) in Titanic.) He
certainly plays Bateman to a T, even if the dialogue he's been given is a bit
flat.
Harron has often described this film as a work of feminism. I don't know about
that. It's scattered and often random (like the novel) and any female point of
view was lost on me. No matter. American Psycho vibrates between being
deliriously funny and just plain delirious. And for some reason, it made me
really want to work on my abs.
The (original) DVD is a solid disc, but it's lacking any extras -- notably a
commentary track or any other mention of American Psycho's alternative
interpretation -- that it was all a dream. Ultimately, of course, it's up to
the viewer to decide what to make of it, but Harron's opinion would have been a
welcome addition.
This weakness is addressed on the new Collector's Edition disc, which does
offer commentary from harron and co-writer Guinevere Turner, deleted scenes,
and a couple of documentary featurettes. The film itself is branded as "uncut,"
which is manifest mostly in slightly more explicit sex scenes (though the
violence is largely unchanged).
Fetish time.
Reviewer: Christopher Null





