AMERICAN PSYCHO (director/writer: Mary Harron; screenwriters: based on
the novel by Bret Easton Ellis/Guinevere Turner; Andrzej Sekula; editor:
Andrew Marcus; cast: Christian Bale (Patrick Bateman), Willem Dafoe
(Donald Kimball), Jared Leto (Paul Allen), Josh Lucas (Craig McDermott),
Samantha Mathis (Courtney Rawlinson), Matt Ross (Luis Carruthers), Bill
Sage (David Van Patten), Chloe Sevigny (Jean), Sara Seymour (Christie),
Justin Theroux (Timothy Bryce), Guinevere Turner (Elizabeth), Reese
Witherspoon (Evelyn Williams), 2000)
Reviewed by Dennis Schwartz
Mary Harron ("I Shot Andy Warhol") plays with Bret Easton Ellis's gory
novel and reduces it from a movie mainly about an out-of-control serial
killer to one having more of a surreal black comedy flavor to it. I had
an empty feeling seeing this film from its dripping blood onset, which
was really the drippings from a raspberry sauce being poured over a
fancy poultry dish, to its ambiguous ending (where it is suggested that
all the killings are in the psycho's head), and by the time the trick
finale comes about, my empty feeling is just as prevalent as when I was
bombarded by all the lists of toiletries the psycho prefers, his fancy
squid ravioli with lemongrass sauce and arugula Caesar salads in those
upscale restaurants, and all the butchery that took place during the
course of telling this President Reagan era fable about yuppie greed, a
slight variation on Wall Street's- "greed is good message." I felt I was
tricked once too often in this film, that with all its intended satire,
it still ends up being a rather tasteless film that basically had not
much of a point to it.
This is, to say the very least, a disturbing film, even if it trimmed
down on the novel's savagery and that the grisly killings take place
mostly offscreen. It is a film about someone who is only human through
his vices. While the film tries desperately to catch something about the
psycho that an audience could sympathize with besides his good looks,
but what results is that he can't be put together to look like a real
person. He has become a composite sketch of what a serial killer is
like, touching bases with some of the famous ones like Ted Bundy. He, in
essence, remains an illusionary being, someone who doesn't exist as
himself. And that is what becomes the main problem for the film, it is
both creepy and sickly funny, but it offers no insights into a serial
killer's mind-set that hasn't been said before. Despite the film's
glitzy photography, all the beautiful men in it, its various techniques
used to make this a thought-provoking film, all fail to convince me that
when all is said-and-done, this is not a sensationalized film, reveling
in the subject's sickness and need for pornography and violence and
consumerism. It also makes a blatant attempt in comparing the white men
of corporate America to serial killers. This is a superficial
psychological comparison, and though it might sound good saying the two
are alike, if you take the time to think about what is being said, it
becomes easy to see that there are just as many similarities as
differences between the two groups.
What gives this film an elegance, if that's the right noun to describe
the film's sleekness, this elegance can certainly not be taken from its
turgid story, or what it has to reveal about the era of greed in the
1980s, which is nothing fresh; but, in the mesmerizing performance
gleaned from the energetic Welshman, Christian Bale, as the psycho,
Patrick Bateman, a 27-year-old New York mergers and acquisitions
vice-president who lives for his self-gratification: reservations at the
trendiest restaurants, living at the right address and in a posh
apartment, keeping obsessively physically fit, his obsession with pop
music through Huey Lewis and Phil Collins, and wearing clothing only by
the name designers. His main problem, besides his minor ones-- of being
an arrogant corporate-type, a crybaby wimp, someone people can't seem to
remember, someone who is a control and cleanliness freak-- is his
uncontrollable rage to kill. He appears normal on the plastic surface
but inside he is a misfit, with a modern Jekyll and Hyde personality.
His killing spree, he tells us by the end of the film, is in the range
of 40, but the audience only witnesses the following: the stabbing of a
homeless black man; the beheading of a model he dates; a prostitute and
a pleasure seeking lady acquaintance of his, whom he chainsaws- one to
death and the other he kills by tossing the chainsaw atop her when she
ran screaming down the stairs- after a menage-a-trois; a male look alike
co-worker he pole axes to pieces; an old lady who stops him from killing
a cat, and several policemen who chase him.
When Donald Kimball (Willem Dafoe) comes calling on him at his sterile
workplace, which is similar to his immaculate
all-white-and-steel-colored gadget-filled apartment, Patrick's empty
life is buzzing with delusionary thoughts and he becomes visibly shaken
by the private detective's innocuous questions. Patrick freaks out when
anyone touches him or tries to get too close to him. Kimball has been
hired by the family of Paul Allen (Leto) to look into the disappearance
of Paul. The only other thing that I remember from the detective's role,
is that Dafoe has a deep, rich voice, as his part was miniscule and not
very well thought out.
Reese Witherspoon is the shallow socialite he is engaged to; Chloe
Sevigny is his loyal but unconfident secretary, who is attracted to him
and almost gets killed by him; and, Samantha Mathis, is the attractive
girlfriend of one of his colleagues, who has a drug problem and is
someone he uses coldly as a sex object. These women lend adequate
support in their minor roles as the only people he knows that have any
resemblance to being human beings.
The men in his life, all colleagues and look alikes, seem to be
dressed-up as gentlemen but underneath that veneer, they are
Neanderthals. In one successful scene, that is an amusing satire on
status among the corporate-types, his colleagues compare their business
cards as to the texture of the paper and the quality of the printing.
These fellow workers are Jared Leto, Justin Theroux, Matt Ross and Bill
Sage, and they represent the male as the cold-hearted hunter of his
prey.
American Psycho, on-the-surface, captures the emptiness of corporate
America and the white men who find material success in it; while, it
also depicts a psychopath who is miffed into a frenzy when not noticed
or who is prepared to kill at random when his appetite is whetted. But
the film's drawback, is that it is only about a general person and not
about an individual, despite Bale's tour-de-force performance and the
aims of the director to get more out of the film than the book got. It
still has an unpleasant subject matter to deal with and is only
successful in making passing comments about a way of life that is easy
to ridicule- the "Me" generation.
I might have liked the film better, if it had the balls to stick with
its serial killer story, as difficult a task as that may have been,
which is the heart of the story anyway, instead of yielding to so-called
good-taste and accepting a lame Hollywood cop-out ending (which probably
was a business decision more than an artistic one, since the film will
now at least bring in some profit). The film left me with an empty
feeling, by implying the psycho is still a psycho, even if the killings
are not real. While that might be true to a certain extent, the author
still believed, according to the way he told the story in his book, that
a psycho is really a psycho only when he does kill.
I certainly don't think music or books about serial killers makes them
serial killers or do their repressed thoughts. I believe they are that
way because they are driven by what's inside them that is uncontrollable
and all that could be done in a film that is not made just for
entertainment or exploitation, is to try and see if we can understand
them a little better. I'm not sure if I can say that this film
accomplished that and I'm not sure if I felt wholly entertained by the
film, though the film was to its credit was not an exploitive one. Yet,
an empty feeling is what lingers, even long after I saw the film and try
to recall it. Other than the film looking good, being titillating in
spots, being competently put together and well-acted, I don't think
there is much else to say about it that is thought-provoking.
REVIEWED ON 4/28/2000 GRADE: C
Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews"
http://www.sover.net/~ozus
ozus@sover.net
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