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American Psycho (2000)
Director Mary Harron's perversely witty, ultra-violent
drama, an adaptation of Bret Easton Ellis' 1991 novel American Psycho,
presented a social satire of the morally-shallow Reagan era with its
portrait of the violent psyche of a misogynistic male -- a loathsome
27 year-old narrator/yuppie New York stock executive broker. He assaulted
both friends and random victims alike in his expensive apartment, although
it was possible that the many murders were only hallucinations in his
psychotic head.
- the film's title screen sequence opened at an expensive
gourmet restaurant on the Upper East Side of NYC in the late 80s, where
decorative delicacies were being prepped on white porcelain plates,
and orders were being taken for a table of young, wealthy, well-dressed
clients. Menu items included squid ravioli and swordfish meatloaf.
Four male VP associates were seated, co-workers of the film's main
protagonist, Wall Street broker Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale), including
the anti-semitic Craig McDermott (Josh Lucas), coke-snorting Van Patten
(Bill Sage), and Timothy Bryce (Justin Theroux). All were carrying
identical, showy American Express Platinum credit cards.
Four VPs of Wall Street's Pierce and Pierce, a Financial
Institution
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Craig McDermott (Josh Lucas)
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David Van Patten (Bill Sage)
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Timothy Bryce (Justin Theroux)
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Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale)
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- afterwards at a nightclub, Bateman chewed out a female
bargirl (Kelley Harron) with violent remarks and a smile - was he serious
or not? ("You're a f--king ugly bitch. I want to stab you to death,
and then play around with your blood"). The next morning in Bateman's
clean, neat, and impeccable 11th floor apartment on W. 81st St., he
vainly viewed himself in the glass reflection of a framed Les Miserables poster
as he urinated. In voice-over, he introduced himself as an avid young
man who was obsessed with his own skin care and facial cleansing regimen
(with 9 lotions), personal grooming, and body worship through daily
physical and stretching exercises.
- the well-tanned
and narcissistic 'hard-body' Patrick entered work late, wearing a Walkman
head set, where he presented himself as an image-conscious, misogynistic
entitled power broker who barked orders to his secretary Jean (Chloe
Sevigny) to schedule dinner reservations for the week at the most exclusive
and hip restaurants. He also insultingly instructed Jean to dress differently: "Wear a dress, a skirt or
something,"
and then flipped on the TV to watch Jeopardy.
- after
work on the way to a restaurant with his self-absorbed, despised and
alleged fiancee Evelyn (Reese Witherspoon), a status and brand-conscious
female who was planning for their extravagant wedding, Patrick admitted
why he remained at his detested job: "Because
I want to fit in." Patrick's friend Bryce was suspected of having
an affair with Evelyn, while Patrick was also having an affair with
Evelyn's engaged, lithium-using best friend Courtney Rawlinson (Samantha
Mathis). During dinner, Patrick provided vacant conversation with some "thought-provoking" political
platitudes (equal rights for women, world hunger, homelessness, etc.).
- at a Chinese dry-cleaner shop, Patrick argued with a
talkative female clerk who spoke broken English, arguing that she couldn't
use bleach on his expensive Cerruti sheets that had big blood-red stains
on them - he claimed it was from Cranapple juice. At home while speaking
on the phone to Courtney, Patrick was watching a porn video. He pressured
her to join him for dinner at the exclusive Dorsia's Restaurant, but
was laughed at by the maitre-d when he asked for last-minute reservations,
so they ended up at an Italian restaurant. Courtney was so drug-addled
that she feel asleep.
- Patrick's main detested
rival associate was handsome and self-confident Paul Allen (Jared Leto).
To impress everyone in a conference room, Bateman pulled out a new
business card - and then his group of homoerotic cronies, including
Van Patten and Bryce, competitively whipped out their cards and compared
card stock, coloring, font, font size and layout. The profusely-sweating
and trembling Bateman was aghast at the perfection of Allen's impeccable
card (given to one of them earlier) when all the cards were comparatively
evaluated: "Look
at that subtle off-white coloring. The tasteful thickness of it. Oh
my God, it even has a watermark..."
The Flaunting of Business Cards
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Patrick's New Business Card
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Compared to Van Patten's Card
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Bryce's Card
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Paul Allen's Card
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- it was the beginning of an intense dislike for successful
yuppie Paul Allen, who was one-upping Bateman at every turn, including
securing Friday night dinner reservations at Dorsia's. Patrick continued
to be irritated that Allen was mistaking him for another colleague
named Marcus Halberstram (Anthony Lemke), and began to scheme how to
eliminate his rival
- on his walk home that night,
Bateman passed a homeless and destitute man named Al (Reg E. Cathey)
in an alleyway, and although he expressed some sympathy, he turned
violently accusative, asked the man why he didn't get a job, and then
pulled out a knife and stabbed the helpless man three times in the
stomach: ("You know what a
f--king loser you are?"), and stomped the man's dog to death.
At a beauty salon during a facial and manicure treatment the next day,
Bateman thought to himself (in voice-over) that he was becoming insanely
homicidal:
"I have all the characteristics of a human being
- flesh, blood, skin, hair - but not a single clear, identifiable
emotion except for greed, and disgust. Something horrible is happening
inside me and I don't know why. My nightly bloodlust has overflowed
into my days. I feel lethal, on the verge of frenzy. I think my mask
of sanity is about to slip."
- at a Christmas party, Bateman suggested that he and Paul
Allen go out for dinner, and soon after, they met at the Texarkana
Tex-Mex restaurant, where Bateman continued the deception by assuming
the identity of Marcus Halberstram. Allen snootily objected to the
decor in the almost-empty restaurant: "We should've gone to Dorsia.
I could've gotten us a table." Bateman facetiously admitted: "I
like to dissect girls. Did you know I'm utterly insane?" Inadvertently,
when Evelyn's name came up, Paul began name-calling Evelyn's fiancee:
("Goes out with that loser Patrick Bateman. What a dork!").
Bateman's dastardly intentions were being fulfilled - Allen was getting
sloppy drunk, and could be lured back to his apartment.
- in a grisly apartment murder scene, as Huey Lewis' 'Hip
to Be Square' played in the background - the tune was critiqued by
the pompous, falsely-sophisticated Bateman, who lectured Paul Allen
(slumped in a chair) while he backed into the living room (with an
80s moon-walk stride) and donned a clear rain-slicker - with a shiny
new axe at his side:
"The whole album has a clear, crisp sound, and
a new sheen of consummate professionalism that really gives the songs
a big boost. He's been compared to Elvis Costello, but I think Huey
has a far much more bitter, cynical sense of humor...In '87, Huey
released this, Fore, their most accomplished album. I think their
undisputed masterpiece is 'Hip to be Square,' a song so catchy, most
people probably don't listen to the lyrics. But they should, because
it's not just about the pleasures of conformity, and the importance
of trends, it's also a personal statement about the band itself."
- Bateman attacked from behind with his new axe after calling
for his drunk victim, associate Paul Allen - to turn around: "Hey,
Paul!" He punctuated the gory hacking with anger: "Try getting
a reservation at Dorsia now, you f--kin' stupid bastard!" as blood
splattered over his face from the impact of the multiple vicious strikes
(off-screen) from his shiny new axe head. Afterwards, he stashed the
body in a blood-soaked black sleeping bag and dragged it through the
lobby of his apartment. He took a cab to Allen's apartment, and packed
one of Paul's suitcases with clothes to make it appear that he was
on an unexpected trip to London for a few days. He also left a message
on the answering machine (in Paul's voice) about his absence.
- the
next morning, Bateman was visited in his office by Detective Donald
Kimball (Willem Dafoe), a private investigator asking about "the disappearance of Paul Allen." The flustered Bateman
mentioned how Paul was "probably a closet homosexual. Who did
a lot of cocaine...that Yale thing." The interviewer strangely
mentioned that Paul may have been seen in London, but it turned out
to be mistaken identity. Kimball was stumped: "It's just strange.
One day someone's walking around, going to work, alive, and then...
people just disappear."
- at his home, Bateman furiously did abdomen crunches while
watching the horror film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre with women
screaming. That evening, the tuxedoed Bateman cruised town in a chauffeured
black limo and picked up blonde hooker Christie (Cara Seymour), and
hinted that he preferred sex with couples, and introduced himself as
Paul Allen. He invited a second redheaded escort named Sabrina (Krista
Sutton) to join them. He entertained them with wine, truffles, and
the playing of another Phil Collins CD: "No Jacket Required."
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With Two Prostitutes Christie and Sabrina, and Posing
Vainly to Admire Himself
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- Bateman conducted a video-taped menage a trois with
the two hookers on his bed while rambling on about the lyrics of Phil
Collins' songs, including his personal favorite "Sussidio",
and making cold and calculating requests of them to dance and perform
sexual acts toward each other. Bateman also vainly posed to flex his
muscles and admire himself in a mirror in order to re-enact his fantasies
from porn films, while having sex. In the middle of the night, he opened
a drawer full of sharp devices (scissors, a razor-blade scraper, a
hammer, a knife, etc.), telling them: "We're not through yet," but
then after an unspecified amount of time - had he tortured them? -
he dismissed them with wads of cash.
- while drinking
with his buddies at the Yale Club, his group of misogynistic males
agreed that "there are no girls with
good personalities" who were also gorgeous. The only ones who
had great personalities were always "ugly chicks" because "they
have to make up for how f--king unattractive they are." In the
upstairs restroom of the club, Bateman attempted to strangle, from
behind, his closeted homosexual colleague Luis Carruthers (Matt Ross)
who had just shown off his new business card to the group. The physical
advance was misinterpreted as sexual by Carruthers: ("I want you,
I want you too..."), causing Bateman to rush out in a panic and
quickly exit from the restaurant.
- Bateman received
a second visit at work from the suspicious Detective Kimball, asking
about his whereabouts on the night of Paul's disappearance, December
20th. Afterwards, Bateman had quickie sex with a depressed Courtney
in her apartment, who then asked: "Will you
call me before Easter?" He tried to divert her attention and special
interest in him: "There's nothin' to say. You're going to marry
Luis."
- at a noisy nightclub with Bryce
after snorting cocaine in a womens' room stall, the two were conversing
with a group of females, when Bateman in the noisy bar area admitted
to dumb blonde model Daisy (Monika Meier) what he did: "I'm
into, uh...well, murders and executions mostly" - she heard
him say: "mergers and acquisitions." They
left the club together in a taxi. At work, where psychopathic Bateman
was twirling a lock of Daisy's cut off blonde hair (a clue to her fate
as another random victim?), he invited his secretary Jean to dinner
(he made a show of making a reservation at Dorsia, although they were
fully booked).
- in his apartment at 7:00 pm
before dinner, he removed frozen sorbet from his refrigerator - noticeably
next to Daisy's plastic-wrapped severed head - and afterwards during
small-talk conversation, he was tempted to murder Jean while fondling
various steak knives and gleaming meat cleavers in his kitchen. He
removed some silver duct tape and aimed a nail gun at the back of her
head. A phone call from Evelyn interrupted his uncontrollable homicidal
impulses as she left a damning message: "I hope you're not out
there with some number you picked up, because you're MY Mr. Bateman.
My boy next door...."
After the call, the "unavailable" Bateman urged Jean to leave
or she might get hurt: "I think if you stay, something bad will
happen. I think I might hurt you. You don't wanna get hurt, do you?" She
agreed:
"I don't wanna get bruised."
Jean's Aborted Dinner-Date with Patrick
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- during a third interview with the Detective during lunch
the next day, Bateman learned that his alibi cleared him of wrong-doing
on the day of Allen's disappearance, although the detective remained
skeptical, as Bateman nervously grinned: "To think that one of
his friends killed him, for no reason whatsoever would be too ridiculous.
Isn't that right, Patrick?"
- that evening
in the same deserted area of town, Bateman again picked up Christie
in his chauffeured limo, although she was very hesitant: "I had to go to Emergency after last time...",
and claimed she might need surgery or a lawyer to press charges. He
paid her off with a check, and then with the additional lure of cash
("Half now, half later"), she was pressured into joining
him in his "new" apartment - Paul Allen's place. They entered
with a second dark-haired prostitute named Elizabeth (Guinevere Turner)
- where he drugged her drink and encouraged the two to make out together,
as he pontificated about Whitney Houston's songs, including "The
Greatest Love of All."
- as the threesome engaged in sex on a bed that he was
videotaping, Patrick stabbed Elizabeth under a bed sheet where the
sheets turned red, and her orgasmic screams turned to loud moans. The
nude and bloodied Bateman chased after the panicked, second fleeing
negligee-clad hooker Christie, who came upon a few dead females hanging
in the apartment's hallway closet and wrapped in plastic bags, and
a wrecked room spray-painted with the words DIE YUPPIE SCUM. He continued
to pursue her, when in the bathroom, both of them came upon another
bloodied female body.
Blood on Patrick's Face After Stabbing Elizabeth
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Wrapped Bodies Hanging in Hallway Closet
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Discovery of Another Bloody Body in Bathroom
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- after Christie kicked him in
the face - he reacted with rage:
"Not the face, you bitch." Christie ran out the apartment's
front door, with Patrick following close behind with a roaring chainsaw
through the apparently empty NYC apartment hallway of the complex.
From the top of the stairwell in the building, Bateman dropped his
chainsaw down upon her - she died face-down when it hit her in the
back a few flights below.
- soon after, Bateman met with Evelyn
in a restaurant who asked for a "firm commitment." He point-blank told her of
his issues. In his own words, he clearly declared his warped paranoid
psychosis amidst the shallow and empty aspects of competitive and consumeristic
corporate culture: "My need to engage in homicidal behavior on
a massive scale cannot be, corrected, but, uh, I have no other way
to fulfill my needs." He abruptly broke off his engagement with
Evelyn: ("It's over, Evelyn, it's all over!"). She reacted
in disbelief and called him "inhuman," as he coldly replied: "You're
not terribly important to me." As he abandoned her, he gave her
his customary excuse for leaving: "I have to return some videotapes."
- by
this point in the film, he now went on a crazed murder spree (a woman
at an ATM, a security guard-officer, a janitor, etc.) and shot at
two police officers and blew up their patrol car on the way to his
office. Believing he was about to be caught, in a sweaty panic, he
called up his lawyer Harold Carnes (Stephen Bogaert) and maniacally
confessed to everything on the answering machine, including numerous
homicides of at least 20 people (of escort girls, homeless people,
his old girlfriend, another man with a dog, plus a girl with a chainsaw,
a model, and the axe-murder of Paul Allen), and also instances of
cannibalism: ("I
just had to kill a lot of people and um, I'm not sure I'm going to
get away with it this time...I guess I'm a pretty sick guy").
- the next morning at Paul Allen's
apartment, he discovered it was freshly painted and a realtor named
Mrs. Wolfe (Patricia Gage) claimed it didn't belong to anyone named
Paul Allen, before she insisted that he leave. He proceeded to join
a group of friends at Harry's Bar to discuss dinner reservations. In
the bar, he encountered his lawyer Harold who called him "Davis," and said that his earlier
call was an "amusing" clever prank that only the "dork...boring,
spineless lightweight" Bateman could have made, even when Patrick
insisted: "I did it, Carnes! I killed him! I'm Patrick Bateman!
I chopped Allen's f--king head off." The lawyer, who felt it wasn't
funny anymore, reported he recently had dinner twice with the 'deceased'
Paul Allen in London 10 days earlier, so it appeared that Patrick's
confession was delusional.
- Jean's perusal of Bateman's leather notebook in his desk
suggested that the homicidal murders, depicted by his crazed doodlings,
were his shocking fantasies of rape, murder and the mutilation of women.
Did the murders really happen, or were they only his own murderous
impulses and cocaine-induced fantasies? Were the murders all in his
imagination, or not?
- the film's twist was presented in a blatant monologue
confession scene (in voice-over) as the camera slowly panned toward
Patrick's face, and called into question what he had actually committed,
as he surrendered to the insanity around him. When his two worlds of
business and sex/hyper-violence came together, it appeared that the
violence was all merely fantasy. He mused to himself about what he
had done in the film's concluding voice-over monologue - and wished
to inflict his pain upon others:
"There are no more barriers to cross. All I have
in common with the uncontrollable and the insane, the vicious and
the evil, all the mayhem I have caused and my utter indifference
toward it I have now surpassed. My pain is constant and sharp, and
I do not hope for a better world for anyone. In fact, I want my pain
to be inflicted on others. I want no one to escape, but even after
admitting this, there is no catharsis. My punishment continues to
elude me and I gain no deeper knowledge of myself. No new knowledge
can be extracted from my telling. This confession has meant nothing."
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Four Identical American Express Platinum Credit Cards
Bateman's Glass Reflection - On a Les Miserables Poster
Removing a Facial Peel Mask
A Typical Day at Work - Watching Jeopardy
Patrick's Fiancee Evelyn Williams (Reese Witherspoon)
Drug-Using Courtney Rawlinson (Samantha Mathis)
Rival Associate Paul Allen (Jared Leto)
In a Tanning Bed: "I think my mask of sanity is about to slip"
Soon-to-Be Victim Paul Allen In Bateman's Apartment
Bateman's (Christian Bale) Axe Murder of Paul Allen (Jared Leto): "Try
getting a reservation at Dorsia now!"
Questioning by Detective Donald Kimball (Willem Dafoe)
Bateman's Misinterpreted Physical Assault in Restroom Upon Luis
Carruthers (Matt Ross)
Courtney Desperate for Patrick's Love
Blonde Model Daisy (Monika Meier) at NightClub
Daisy's Severed Head in Patrick's Refrigerator
2nd Prostitute Elizabeth (Guinevere Turner)
Chain-Saw Pursuit and Murder of Hooker Christie in Stairwell
Patrick's Break-Up With Stunned Fiancee Evelyn: "It's over, Evelyn"
Patrick's Maniacal Confession on Answering Machine to Lawyer
Patrick's Crazed Psychotic, Homicidal Doodlings In His Notebook
Bateman's Monologue Confession
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