The Banality of American Psycho - Book vs Film

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @nothingandnowherebuthere
    @nothingandnowherebuthere 2 года назад +1266

    There's also a scene in the book where Patrick comes across a homeless man who he blinded. The man holds a sign saying he was blinded in Vietnam. Patrick gets close and calls him a liar or says that's not how it happend. The homeless man instantly recognizes the voice and begins to freak out.

  • @UltimateKyuubiFox
    @UltimateKyuubiFox 3 года назад +3923

    I’m actually glad Gloria Steinem talked DiCaprio out of the role. He would’ve had the same effect Brad Pitt had on Fight Club. He’s the kind of leading man who convinces audiences to be on his side. Christian Bale is a charismatic actor, but he’s also a person you can be objective about. He lets the movie speak for itself, rather than speaking for the movie, in a sense. The only role DiCaprio really disappeared into was Candy in Django Unchained, and I don’t think he was at that acting stage yet when American Psycho was being made.

    • @infinitynight1
      @infinitynight1 3 года назад +382

      Dicaprio didn't look mature enough at that time and had a baby face. Bale was only 27 and looked a lot mature than 27 and fit the role perfect. What i love about Bale's performance is the subtle moments and i don't think DiCaprio could have pulled of a performance like this.

    • @clarapilier
      @clarapilier 3 года назад +74

      She did it because she wanted her stepson to get the role. She is the coolest of the stepmoms.

    • @DanTarrant1
      @DanTarrant1 3 года назад +175

      Bale as Bateman has become such an iconic role it's simply hard to imagine anybody else having played it. Thinking about Leo as Bateman is kind of like trying to imagine Chistian Bale as Jack Dawson in Titanic. It just wouldn't have been the same film at all.

    • @JohnMoseley
      @JohnMoseley 3 года назад +15

      I'd like to have seen it done with a much more anonymously conventionally good looking male star, a model or a soap actor who couldn't really act. I want Batemen to be a lot more flat and bland than Bale seems able to be.

    • @Ares_gaming_117
      @Ares_gaming_117 3 года назад +52

      plus we would never have the Bateman ---> Batman pun about Christian Bale

  • @brianoneill9842
    @brianoneill9842 3 года назад +2323

    For me one of the reasons the book so so effective, is the way the most graphic and horrific violence is described in the the same way as every other part of his material life. There is no "humanity" in Bateman, there is only a observer to our world. soulless and driven only by objects. It really effected my for days after, and is terrifying

    • @pw3229
      @pw3229 3 года назад +70

      Yeah he is definitely sociopathic, and perhaps symbolic of how culture sometimes instills sociopathic behavior in individuals.

    • @zabm141
      @zabm141 3 года назад +37

      this is sooo retalable. i read this book at the age of 15 while having a spleen for serial killer novels. i had just digged through all the hannibal lecter books, talented mr. ripley and such and thought I had a thick skin, but after AP I felt a void lingering above me. at the time I didnt even understand why the book was ao effective at disgusting me.

    • @dylandarcy1150
      @dylandarcy1150 3 года назад +71

      But the thing is, there was soul in Bateman at one time. Throughout the book we're shown how crushingly boring his Wall Street life is- the endless new restaurants, the pointless conversations, the rush to always have something new. And it's all reported in this monotone, cold voice that would make you assume he was heartless. Except towards the end, after he goes on holiday with Evelyn, we start to realise just how crushing this lifestyle really is. The man is so fucking dissociated hes eating sand for god sake. And then with Jean, who seems to be the only person that actually cares about him, the only way he can connect to her is through objects (which is why he sends her all that bullshit on Valentine's). The violence isn't because hes evil, it's the only way he can connect to the world as he slowly loses his mind. But towards the end, as he gets more and more violent, it starts to lose any effect on him. Hes given up his ability to feel anything in favour of the rush for the new. Bateman isn't an evil cruel bastard, hes the victim of an evil cruel system.

    • @DanTarrant1
      @DanTarrant1 3 года назад +60

      ​@@dylandarcy1150 Great analysis as I have also wondered if AP is ultimately a story about boredom as well. But I have a slightly different take: Patrick is bored silly because he "has it all" and for the most part had it handed to him: he was born rich, he's handsome, he has a plush apartment in the high-rent district, he's got a prestigious Wall Street job that doesn't appear to require him to do much work, he eats at trendy restaurants, wears designer clothes, he has a beautiful girlfriend and doesn't have much problem scoring with other women, etc.
      It's the curse of having everything you want without the satisfaction of having earned any of it or had to overcome any challenges along the way. Failure to get into Dorsia is literally what counts as adversity for Bateman...so eventually the fantasizes about and then commits increasingly gory murders. Because it's the only thing that he can do that doesn't bore him.

    • @dylandarcy1150
      @dylandarcy1150 3 года назад +15

      @@DanTarrant1 Yeah! Especially considering we never see him doing work at all in the book, and it's either implied or just outright said (cant remember specifically) that his dad owns the company he works at. I fully agree that one of the main reasons he finds his life so crushingly boring is bc hes quite literally doing nothing. And the fact that he gets so proud over his job where he does nothing is one of the most hateable things about him imo.

  • @jasonblalock4429
    @jasonblalock4429 3 года назад +2175

    Another change from the book: Easton has said that he deliberately wrote the outfits to be as ridiculous as possible. Apparently everything's garish and mis-matched, if you actually know all the clothes involved. Obviously, there's no way they'd translate that to screen, but it would certainly add an interesting twist if everyone looked like a clown rather than a magazine model.

    • @DanTarrant1
      @DanTarrant1 3 года назад +239

      Never heard that but it makes sense. I noticed the very first time I read the book that while Bateman describes in great detail the designers that he and everybody else is wearing, he never tells us more basic details, like what color anything is. Even neckties he doesn't give us much to work with. So unless you happen to know the visual differences between, say, Hugo Boss and Armani sport coats, Bateman's descriptions don't help us visualize much at all as to what the characters actually look like in a given scene.
      Also, of course, it's pretty absurd to think that even somebody obsessed with clothes could instantly identify the designer of every suit, tie, and pair of shoes worn by everybody he meets, even people he doesn't know. Bateman can even perform this amazing feat with womens' outfits as well!
      I think Ellis did this as another clue that Bateman is an unreliable narrator...

    • @Frosting1000
      @Frosting1000 3 года назад +65

      That’s so true abt rich ppl, I used to go to college in nyc and saw the super rich kids wear the weirdest designer stuff. Like, shoes that are shaped like camel toes that are apparently thousands of dollars.

    • @simonmacomber7466
      @simonmacomber7466 3 года назад +81

      I've always thought that Bateman (in the novel) getting the brand names of the outfits he and the other yuppies are wearing wrong was another way to illustrate his detachment from reality. The book opens with Bateman misidentifying the character on the Les Misérables poster. The little girl on the musicals poster is Cosette but Bateman, throughout the book, refers to her as Fantine. He also, after rambling on for several pages about how good a certain recording artist is, (Whitney Houston) admits that he doesn't recognize the songwriting credit in the liner notes of his copy of the tape for one of the songs, even though we, the reader, most likely would. (D. Parton.) Dolly Parton wrote, and performed the song "I Will Always Love You" long before Houston covered it.

    • @kissarococo2459
      @kissarococo2459 3 года назад +29

      same thing with food to make little sense in the real world (except french fries with herbs which is actually delicious).

    • @DanTarrant1
      @DanTarrant1 3 года назад +26

      @@simonmacomber7466 I do remember an interview with BEE where he said that he poured through many copies of GQ in order to come up with the descriptions of the character's outfits. I don't really recall thinking that Bateman was getting any of these "wrong" but it kind of makes sense that he was just bullshitting rather than being able to correctly identify the brand names instantly on sight.
      I will also admit that I wasn't aware that the character on the Les Mis posters was incorrectly identified, but I did notice that Bateman was fond of pointing out every time he saw the poster, which I figured was BEE's commentary on the growing class divide in America.

  • @JG_1998
    @JG_1998 2 года назад +1516

    my favorite part of the book is where patrick microwaves and eats a jellyfish, and also eats sand. hes 100x crazier in the novel, not just in terms of violence.

    • @proselytefever
      @proselytefever 2 года назад +27

      o7 gloyper

    • @starwberrybubbletea6984
      @starwberrybubbletea6984 2 года назад

      😮😊😅😊x😅😊x😊😢😊😮😊🎉😊x

    • @whiterain2546
      @whiterain2546 2 года назад +101

      He be runnin around the streets just screeching

    • @Th3Downz
      @Th3Downz Год назад +49

      God damn it, I just commented something similar 11 months later apparently. He's so absolutely deranged by the end of the book it's equally horrifying and hilarious. Him talking to the bench is something else

    • @happystarz1
      @happystarz1 Год назад +53

      no bc i read that part on a plane and just closed the book and stared out the window for the remaining 5 hours of the flight

  • @rigster35
    @rigster35 3 года назад +1272

    I don’t think ‘boring’ is the best way to describe the book. It is moreso EXHAUSTING and diminishes any potential idolization of the yuppie/psychopath archetype. As other comments have stated, he is completely obsessed with objects and material goods (as well as himself as an object) to such an extent that it is a curse. The droning text by Ellis is the best medium to portray this aspect of his tortured character. It’s immense detail is also extremely illustrative - as pointed out in the video - that it is difficult to read, not in a boring sense but that it is difficult to escape Bateman’s reality (real or imagined, it does not matter).
    Nonetheless I love the movie and Bale’s delivery of his script is just brilliant.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +48

      I didn't find it boring. In fact, the bits where he goes on about skincare or corporate pop are hilarious.

    • @mankytoes
      @mankytoes 3 года назад +10

      I thought it was horribly boring. I rarely fail to finish a book, but I gave up on this one. One of the only books I found more tedious was Less Than Zero, which I also didn't finish. The love for Easton Ellis confuses the hell out of me- sometimes you just have to accept you don't "get" an author, or their style doesn't click with you.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +22

      @@mankytoes If he doesn't work for you, fair enough. I've never understood the big deal over Virginia Woolf.
      I did enjoy the book, I thought it was very dark humour. I'm not one of these folk who just follows fashions. But if someone else didn't enjoy it, that's okay too.

    • @juliewestevents1567
      @juliewestevents1567 3 года назад +23

      @@anonb4632 agreed. I prefer the book. I find his inner monologue hilarious and the movie misses these moments. Like the Tom cruise elevator nose bleed.

    • @fuckingkimura
      @fuckingkimura 3 года назад +24

      Absolutely. You are not meant to be drawn in or understand or appreciate Bateman's fascination with food or fashion. They are meant to show his obsessive neurotic ways of thinking. I.e. while you are thinking about what you need to do about work, he's thinking about all the expensive clothes his buddies are wearing and how they all look shit compared to him

  • @ChrisWood
    @ChrisWood 3 года назад +667

    Films like “American Psycho” open themselves up to a healthy application of headcanon and speculation since what is objectively real is in question. The way I like to read it: Patrick Bateman is a murderer and his crimes (or some of them, anyway) happened. The horror of the story is not the depravity Bateman will indulge in, but the fact that the world around him refuses to acknowledge it. I believe that he did kill Paul Allen, but no one is willing to believe him because he “fits the mould” so well. For Bateman, a psychopath wanting to buck the yuppie trend with horrific nihilistic acts, his personal hell is that he’ll never be acknowledged as “different” from the people he loathes. His crimes will go unnoticed (or unacknowledged) and the world will keep spinning.
    That, to me, is the true condemnation of yuppie culture the book and movie are trying to get at. It’s so up its own ass that it can’t see a serial killer for what they are as long as they are wearing designer shoes.

    • @suddendallas
      @suddendallas 3 года назад +48

      I agree with this, I always thought he truly was murdering people (at least Paul Allen) and that because of his status, it was wiped clean. Even the detective, who was given very obvious clues and flags, just shrugged them off. And I think the ending scene with the lawyer solidifies it: "I had dinner with him twice in London." Almost telling him that's the "story" he needs to commit to. And with the realtor in Paul Allen's apartment who told him to go and never come back. I think they were all in on it and cleaning up his mess, which further exasperated his mental condition

    • @IntrusiveCuckholeGenerator
      @IntrusiveCuckholeGenerator 3 года назад +1

      just go watch blow-up

    • @jonnil1997
      @jonnil1997 2 года назад +22

      To me its really showing how the rich upper class can and will get away with anything.

    • @jamesanderson1819
      @jamesanderson1819 2 года назад +5

      @@suddendallas I don't think its so much about people being in on it and knowing Pat as a murder. What I think the book really tries to hammer home is all these people are interchangeable and maybe to an extent they know this themselves. When he's questioned by Kimbell it may seem like he's giving away he really knows Paul Owen more than he leads on. You hear the same things from, I believe Van Pattern when Pat asked him what the detective spoke to him about. Kimbell I think knows these wall street types to be the same narcissists who obsess over themselves and everyone in their circles that none of Patrick's oddities really stand out to him.

    • @magical5181
      @magical5181 Год назад +2

      How does Patrick want to break the yuppie trend? Doesn’t he enjoy it

  • @fhurley8447
    @fhurley8447 3 года назад +269

    A lot of people misunderstand the book. It’s meant to be tedious and drawn out to display how mundane and meaningless his life really is. It also goes to show that people really don’t matter to Bateman, clothes and brands do. Everyone is interchangeable.

  • @josefk7437
    @josefk7437 3 года назад +839

    The ATM tells Bateman "Feed me a Stray Cat." In the book, a park bench gains sentience and follows him home, making us doubt the reliability of his mind. The way Bateman kills people is so comically ridiculous in both the movie and the book that we can doubt he actually does them. The food the characters eat in the restaurants is also ridiculous stuff that would be inedible if actually served, but the characters are so drugged up that it doesn't matter. There is another youtube video where an expert on business card fonts and production explains what is wrong with the business card scene, with explanations on what debossing is, how raised lettering works, and that Paul Allen's card does not really have a watermark. To me, all those are clues in the book that Patrick Bateman might be too unreliable of a narrator to really be a murderer.

    • @ahealthkit2745
      @ahealthkit2745 2 года назад +30

      My first watch was far more objective, but rewatching the movie again recently, I took the film a lot more lightly and viewed the comical violence as a sort of criticism of the dark nature of hollywood psychopath archetypes, and how when an archetypal psychopath gets what they want, it really just deteriorates their sense of what's real completely, and their obsession becomes a spectacle for the audience. I even viewed the introduction scene as a sort of metaphor for how an actor readies themselves for a role. Bateman repeatedly admitting that he feels more-or-less like a void, it feels like an affirmation that he is portraying an archetype, not a single character. In all honesty, definitely not the angle I think the director intended, but it's the feeling I got watching it.

    • @mackychloe
      @mackychloe 2 года назад +14

      The "Watermark" line is one of my fav's from the movie but oddly does not even get spoken in the novel..... unless there's two credit cards scenes??

    • @plutoh9958
      @plutoh9958 2 года назад +11

      My thoughts during the restaurant scenes were usually wondering how he could possibly get enough calories with all the exercising he's doing and how funny 'being healthy' was then as opposed to now.
      Regarding the business cards, was the RUclips video about the book card scene or the movie card scene? Because from my memory they were very different. I might be wrong but i remember thinking the movie version was especially bizarre and funny since all the cards are exactly the same whereas in the book they are all clearly different.
      Btw, I suppose you can disregard if something just went over my head😅

    • @sbevexlr848
      @sbevexlr848 2 года назад +2

      How is it not edible lol, I don't know much about professional cooking So I need to understand what you mean

    • @championzeme3141
      @championzeme3141 2 года назад +1

      @David Sarmiento yeah i respectfully disagree with the idea that it was all or most of a dream/illusion 😴🚫, sure definitely more than 200% sure of some illusions (like the car exploding at the police exchange in the movie 🚓💥🔫), but bateman is insane in both versions with a little sympathy in the movie 🎥🍿, I haven’t read the novel yet it seems pretty Erie and depressing though, Wish the movie was longer even though American Psycho still is a one of a kind ☝️💝💯

  • @michellejesica
    @michellejesica 3 года назад +421

    ngl, when I put on all my eye cream/moisturizer/expensive face stuff in the morning I deff hear Bateman's monologue in my head all too often.

    • @twiceshy9773
      @twiceshy9773 3 года назад +24

      😂😂😂when my hubby gets all weird about putting on moisturizer/skincare I remember this and comfort myself by thinking ''well that probably means he's not a serial killer then"

    • @twiceshy9773
      @twiceshy9773 3 года назад +13

      But he does appreciate a nice business card too lol lol hmmm....

  • @DrunkenCoward1
    @DrunkenCoward1 3 года назад +689

    Impressive. Very nice.
    Let's see Paul Allen's analysis of the differences between the mediums.

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 3 года назад +12

      I heard that Julia had dinner with him in Rome.

    • @nl3064
      @nl3064 3 года назад +26

      For one thing, his name is Paul Owen in the novel.

    • @Mmm-ww2jg
      @Mmm-ww2jg Год назад

      You clearly never read the book

    • @jakethunderbird8735
      @jakethunderbird8735 Месяц назад

      @@Mmm-ww2jgthat is the quickest way to identify if someone has read the book

  • @FAlock01
    @FAlock01 3 года назад +265

    I’ve always thought that ending was a comment on how the individual doesn’t actually matter in the corporate world. The people are so interchangeable that you can murder and no one bats an eye

    • @phillipclay5287
      @phillipclay5287 3 года назад +48

      You're not wrong. The director herself has went on record as saying that Bateman's killing spree is real, and in the end he meets a man who proclaims to have lunch with one of Bateman's victims. He'll never be caught because no one will ever notice. In the end his confession means nothing

  • @Vxrmatwo
    @Vxrmatwo 3 года назад +497

    Nobody ever talks about Patrick's first 'slip' as he narrates the novel, involving a can of hairspray and a memory of something he did the year before. It catches you by surprise and you begin to realise what a monster he is.... Then nothing happens for a good 50 pages lol. But that makes it even more genius

    • @Vxrmatwo
      @Vxrmatwo 3 года назад +63

      That slip happens a good portion of the way through the beginning, too. And it's delivered in such a brutally casual way

    • @sebastianmunozochoa1485
      @sebastianmunozochoa1485 3 года назад +8

      @@Vxrmatwo what does it describe.

    • @melfry
      @melfry 3 года назад +30

      100% Listened to the audiobook and the hairspray and knife mentions early on were very startling, powerful experiences.

    • @sparklejpropequeen
      @sparklejpropequeen 3 года назад +48

      As well as the bloodied sheets at the dry cleaners. That was the big wake up call for me since up until that point in the book that’s the first more descriptive act of violence that had occurred. The first 100 pages go much slower and mundane than say the first 10-15 minutes of the film which I personally find more impactful. The slower tempo of his deterioration in his day to day life compared to the last 100 pages where there’s violence upon violence.

    • @Vxrmatwo
      @Vxrmatwo 3 года назад +3

      @@sparklejpropequeen oh yeah, very good point

  • @Habubachu
    @Habubachu Год назад +83

    I love the part where he mistakes a college student as a homeless person in the book and puts a dollar bill into her full cup of coffee and then just runs away while panicking 😂

  • @lyssaraine
    @lyssaraine 3 года назад +473

    the “rat” and most of the “girl” chapters had me completely sick at my stomach after reading them. like couldn’t finish a paragraph without taking a break. the movie is just funny to me

    • @siam7094
      @siam7094 2 года назад +91

      im quite desensitised to gore and violence but reading the "girls" chapter with Tiffany and Torri, thats definetely the scene that made me go "what the fuck did i just read?" especially after what he did to Tiffany.

    • @garvinator4861
      @garvinator4861 2 года назад +70

      I want people to read your comment and go “what rat?” then look it up and cry.

    • @miguelpadeiro762
      @miguelpadeiro762 2 года назад +23

      @@garvinator4861 Thanks for stopping me from looking it up

    • @SHITFUCK1999
      @SHITFUCK1999 2 года назад

      what rat and girl

    • @MaMastoast
      @MaMastoast 2 года назад +3

      Yea.. it's pretty dark

  • @sifatshams1113
    @sifatshams1113 3 года назад +137

    Even though it's not really a horror film and more of a dark comedy, the scene with the real estate agent is one of the most subtly eerie scenes I've ever seen in a movie.

  • @timtones75
    @timtones75 3 года назад +194

    I read the book in the nineties and when I heard it would be film I thought it would be a disaster. It is not.
    It is probably the best adaptation of a book to a movie ever, considering the difficulty of the task.
    It is not faithful as the book is very experimental and the narrative is complex, but the spirit is there

  • @augierivera3290
    @augierivera3290 3 года назад +258

    FYI Gloria Steinem is Christian Bale’s Stepmom.

    • @maneet2939
      @maneet2939 3 года назад +10

      Was

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 3 года назад +9

      LMAO
      TIL

    • @mildsoup8978
      @mildsoup8978 3 года назад +15

      She did it so he could get the part lol

    • @ENigma-um8zw
      @ENigma-um8zw 3 года назад +7

      Gloria Estefan is Christian Slater’s friend

    • @JRibs
      @JRibs 3 года назад +7

      FYI I’m your father

  • @brad2299
    @brad2299 2 года назад +72

    SPOILERS FOR THE BOOK:
    The one thing about the cabbie scene though that hints to me that it's just Bateman's imagination is this: he has had full blown hallucinations before where characters are saying things that his mind has made up. Patrick Bateman is the definition of an unreliable narrator.
    The concert scene with Bono comes to mind, and the Tom Cruise scene. Especially the part where he states that Tom Cruise is living in his apartment building currently and yet he only runs into him a single time in the book, when he's riding the elevator with him. That could be just the reality of living in a big apartment building in New York, but Bateman has proven multiple times to make things up and so as the book goes on, his stories start to become less and less believable; especially the murders which get less and less inconspicuous. I'd almost say that past page 140, you almost can't trust anything that he says.
    One of the few things that IS reality is that one of Evelyn's neighbors is decapitated, but again there's no proof that Bateman actually killed her (even in his own mind). In fact, there's more proof that Bateman didn't actually kill her in the fact that he doesn't describe her death in gory detail, which he pretty much always does in the book as he loves to hyperfixate on every horrible detail of someone's murder. He may have attributed her death to himself after Evelyn told him about it.
    The scene with the realtor can also be attributed to him being extremely paranoid. In reality, she could have just been put off by a stranger showing up unplanned to a luxury apartment showing, and simply asking him to leave as she thinks he might be mentally unstable (which he very much is).
    So honestly I can believe that in reality, Bateman had a schizophrenic breakdown in the cab, thinking that the cabbie knows what he's done due to his own fear of being caught for what he thinks he did; then he imagines the cabbie robbing him, when in reality he just gave him his valuables and ran out of the car with no explanation. Let me ask you this: Does Bateman ever see his own wanted poster? Is there any evidence past what a character says? (or at least he thinks they say) No, no he doesn't. Again, you cannot trust a word that he says, since he clearly doesn't even know what's real anymore.

    • @soulbound2
      @soulbound2 Год назад +3

      Interesting I like it I to like the interpretation that it's all in his mind as I feel it could be a interesting metaphor on the mental health crisis

    • @campysnozer5038
      @campysnozer5038 Год назад

      he does mention a frozen head in his fridge though

    • @lifesavapor
      @lifesavapor Год назад

      Why would he make up a reality where he is embarrassed/humiliated by Tom cruise?

    • @ata_bateman793
      @ata_bateman793 25 дней назад

      Novel Patrick is psychosis

  • @CERTAIND00M
    @CERTAIND00M 3 года назад +104

    I still like to leave places in a hurry while ominously muttering, "I have to return some video tapes."

    • @juliewestevents1567
      @juliewestevents1567 3 года назад +4

      It's a must

    • @vice.nor.virtue
      @vice.nor.virtue 3 года назад +12

      ahahah I watched this film about an hour ago and thought to myself that i really must remember that "return som video tapes" line IRL

  • @Reliken
    @Reliken 3 года назад +548

    Please do A Clockwork Orange next! You'd love discussing the implications of the 21st chapter which was omitted from the movie!

    • @sammieleighstyer1447
      @sammieleighstyer1447 3 года назад +21

      Go to 'dominic knoble' or A.K.A 'the dom' he has one of the best breakdown stuff from books to movie and is absolutely hilarious

    • @yigitsezer6696
      @yigitsezer6696 3 года назад +1

      That was the best part of the book.

    • @langundovitale1305
      @langundovitale1305 3 года назад +1

      Agreed

    • @gateauxq4604
      @gateauxq4604 3 года назад +6

      The 21st chapter is the whole purpose of the book. Fun fact-for years the book was printed in the US without the 21st chapter and instead had a dictionary of the Nadsat slang spoken in both mediums. I think the first real US print of the 21st chapter was published in the early 90s.

    • @devilsadvocacypress3151
      @devilsadvocacypress3151 3 года назад

      I would also like some ultraviolence

  • @willk5556
    @willk5556 3 года назад +258

    Without going into detail, "the rat moment" in the book is one of the most uncomfortable things I've experienced, like JESUS CHRIST

    • @astridarideout1864
      @astridarideout1864 3 года назад +24

      omg, yes! i don't regret reading the book, but it's one i will never reread

    • @seannanana84
      @seannanana84 3 года назад +35

      I have read some fucked up horror books and seen a lot of horror films but that was the closest to wanting to vomit I have ever felt while reading. It was deeply uncomfortable and I still don't know how I managed to get through the book. I still have a copy on my book shelf and I know I'm never going to read it again.

    • @Madsovic999
      @Madsovic999 3 года назад +43

      Yeah, the rat in the metal bucket held to a womans abdomen while a candle burns under it, forcing the rat to gnaw its way out though the soft abdomen. It is so completely messed up i had my doubts about Easton Ellis sanity after reading it

    • @mollytovxx4181
      @mollytovxx4181 3 года назад +80

      @@Madsovic999 That's... not quite what he did with the rat. In any case Ellis didn't invent the idea of rat torture. It may have been a historic torture method (jury is still out on the veracity of that), and variations can be found in other works of fiction such as Nineteen Eighty Four and Game of Thrones.

    • @schiz0phren1c
      @schiz0phren1c 3 года назад +12

      Yeah that was fecking horrific,
      I watched a Today I Found Out vid the other day on Ancient torture, and one was the Rat torture and I said NOPE NOPE NOPE!

  • @michellebrowne9100
    @michellebrowne9100 3 года назад +84

    Wisecrack: "the boring descriptions -"
    me: "NO THOSE WERE THE PARTS I LIKED EVERYTHING ELSE WAS EXCRUCIATING, AT LEAST I LEARNED ABOUT FABRIC"

    • @juliewestevents1567
      @juliewestevents1567 3 года назад +5

      Thank you, agreed. If you don't understand Bret Easton Ellis, don't try to discuss his books.

    • @michellebrowne9100
      @michellebrowne9100 3 года назад +10

      @@juliewestevents1567 I mean I don't know if I *understand* the man, but I do know that I'd rather read about twill and pantsuits and high society than gruesome, misogynistic murders. I have a strong stomach, but the cannibalism scenes in the book were really, really gruelling. Like, the movie -pardon the phrasing - was so much more palatable than the book. And I'm a person who actually giggled my way through the Hannibal books, because I found them cheesy and not really scary. American Psycho is one of the most difficult and unpleasant reads I've ever endured, but the descriptions of fabric weren't the problem! At least for me. Art's subjective, and all.

    • @TheMordecai1985
      @TheMordecai1985 3 года назад

      THANK YOU

    • @justink5585
      @justink5585 3 года назад +2

      Yeah, this was one of my favourite books to read, and a big part of that was how in depth we get to know this character. Instead of gliding from beginning to middle to end, this novel gave us in-depth glimpses into how Bateman sees the world, thinks, acts. The book was also incredibly funny throughout, and not boring at all in my opinion. While I enjoyed the film adaptation, as most of the scenes are directly taken from the book (even if they are heavily reduced in length, cut, rearranged and merged) a lot of what made the book great, which is for me Batemans excessive inner monologues, was absent in the movie.

  • @pivotresearchfoundation
    @pivotresearchfoundation 3 года назад +408

    Thug Notes already caught me up on the differences.

    • @diegonei
      @diegonei 3 года назад +75

      I miss Thug Notes.

    • @Hotshot2k4
      @Hotshot2k4 3 года назад +21

      If you take a minute to think about it, you can probably work out why it ended and why it won't come back.

    • @satriaeerlangga
      @satriaeerlangga 3 года назад +2

      @@Hotshot2k4 why?

    • @matthi9384
      @matthi9384 3 года назад +37

      @@satriaeerlangga I think it's about the stereotype of a black gang member.

    • @sirflimflam
      @sirflimflam 3 года назад +40

      @@matthi9384 Most of the interesting series are gone now, like earthling cinema. I think it's just more about the shift in the channel direction more than worrying about stereotyping.

  • @MegaManXPoweredUp
    @MegaManXPoweredUp 3 года назад +43

    Book: Patrick Bateman
    Movie: Patrick Batman

  • @grayk02
    @grayk02 3 года назад +38

    The Bret Easton Ellis novel was the only time the written word has made me feel physically ill…
    The description of the woman he nailed to his apartment floor and tortured with the rat…the words created such a visceral image in my head I had to put the book down

    • @onastick2411
      @onastick2411 9 месяцев назад

      Try "Last Exit to Brooklyn"

  • @Apostateoftheunion
    @Apostateoftheunion 3 года назад +38

    The book was one of the most disturbing works that I've ever read. I put it up there with 'Diary of a Rapist' and 'Lolita.' I was physically nauseous after reading it.

  • @12grain
    @12grain 2 года назад +23

    I really liked the moment in the book where one of his friends try to escape the club they're in by running out of the tunnel (it's a deleted scene in the movie) and not be mentioned for half the book, just to show up later on with no reference to him being gone, especially at the end when Bateman is sitting under the sign of the restaurant that says 'No Exit'. As if the boring, insane Yuppie world is impossible to escape once you're in it which would have contributed towards him becoming the psychopath he is in the first place

  • @MrNemay
    @MrNemay Год назад +15

    For me the biggest difference was his relationship with Jean.. In the novel, there's a chapter of his encounter with her outside work.. It's the only part of the book where Bateman is feeling something beside "greed and total disgust"..

  • @VintageFenrir
    @VintageFenrir 3 года назад +118

    The book was supposed to be boring? I really liked the description of things.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +33

      The "boring" bits were some of the funniest.

    • @chrislogan8643
      @chrislogan8643 3 года назад +32

      This is the first time I've heard anyone say the book was boring.

    • @r011ing_thunder6
      @r011ing_thunder6 3 года назад +2

      @@chrislogan8643 not my first time. You seem the Amazon reviews?

    • @Rad-Dude63andathird
      @Rad-Dude63andathird 2 года назад +3

      It's because it goes on and on and on. Some people don't mind that so much but others do.

    • @GraviticFlux0530
      @GraviticFlux0530 2 года назад +4

      I believe it's supposed to be drawn out to show how much Bateman is obsessed with material objects

  • @ThorsShadow
    @ThorsShadow 3 года назад +40

    6:38 On the picture: "all our products are genderless, vegan & cruelty free". I'm not sure, if that company gets the irony of that statement....

    • @fabioluizalvaresosti7115
      @fabioluizalvaresosti7115 3 года назад +18

      i think you don't get the irony of the company

    • @heartache5742
      @heartache5742 3 года назад +6

      it's got layers

    • @ThorsShadow
      @ThorsShadow 3 года назад +2

      @@fabioluizalvaresosti7115 Well, enlighten me smart guy. Does the company not seriously sell the products they offer?

    • @bilibiliism
      @bilibiliism 3 года назад

      @@ThorsShadow they are ironically selling

  • @bean4513
    @bean4513 3 года назад +116

    For once i preferred the movie over the book: viewing bateman from outside his narrative perspective, harron really drew out how much of a pathetic loser he is rather than the cool suave professional he portrays to be

    • @rabbieburns2501
      @rabbieburns2501 2 года назад

      Trainspotting movie MUCH better than the book too!

    • @vr4836
      @vr4836 2 года назад +2

      Yes indeed, having a perspective of his "wall street career" where his dad "almost owns the firm", this is really pathetic trying to "fit in". And this is the real face of Patrick Bateman - daddy's son. The problem is, that depictured Christian Bale as P.B. is too good for the role of a pathetic loser, so it's giving you a misleading perspective on his character.

  • @FlyingDogz07
    @FlyingDogz07 3 года назад +86

    Seeing a video about books on wisecrack makes me miss Thug Notes. That was the show that made me a fan of this channel. Stayed subbed ever since.

  • @andyn46
    @andyn46 3 года назад +55

    I’d love a comparison of the show “You” versus the novel. In the show even though Joe does some horrible things, we still kind of root for him. In the novel, it’s so interesting to hear 100% of that inner monologue and really hear how sick and twisted he truly is

    • @simonblackwell3576
      @simonblackwell3576 3 года назад +7

      Woah didn’t know “You” was a novel, pretty nifty factoid

    • @andyn46
      @andyn46 3 года назад +6

      @@simonblackwell3576 it’s worth a read for sure, the first book is almost page for page the events of the first season, the second book is where things get really interesting because it’s actually quite different, although still great. You see the show in a totally different way after reading the book, while we get tastes of Joe’s delusions in the show, in the novel we fully experience what an utter psychopath he is

    • @cosmojenkins3020
      @cosmojenkins3020 2 года назад +5

      @@andyn46 Him being so attractive and his voice being so seductive in the show definitely makes it easier to root for him. It says a lot about humanity: We forgive attractive, charismatic people for horrific behavior all the time.

  • @ericsmith3495
    @ericsmith3495 2 года назад +13

    The book is far from boring, Patrick is much more insane in the book, the part in the book where he convinces the one girl to come home with him, the things he does to her are horrific, and it tells it in very graphic detail, in the book, it details his slow decent into total insanity, at one point he believes a park bench is following him, I love the book and recommend it.

    • @jazielalmaraz6922
      @jazielalmaraz6922 Год назад

      Im late to this vid, but I completely agree. He’s far more insane and scarier in the novel. Im reading it rn, i just finished the chapter with the child in the zoo.
      The chapter where he convinced Bethany to come back to his apartment, and the things he does to her are just insane. The way the book goes into detail about everything he does to her is just wow. Obviously very grotesque but intriguing in a way💀 not to sound weird. I def do recommend the book as well

  • @LucidLazarus
    @LucidLazarus 2 года назад +34

    i read the book not along ago and i always tell my friends that movie bateman has some sort of likability for some reason... but the bateman in the book is literally inhuman

  • @spookyshark632
    @spookyshark632 3 года назад +62

    The fact that Bateman doesn't like 70s Genesis is enough to make me hate him.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад

      I hate 70s Genesis too. 😉

  • @BigDaddyZakk420
    @BigDaddyZakk420 3 года назад +210

    The book is infinitely better, honestly.
    The themes really come through a lot better in written form.

    • @bluepajamagamers5704
      @bluepajamagamers5704 3 года назад +6

      Nope

    • @juliewestevents1567
      @juliewestevents1567 3 года назад +10

      100%

    • @punkybrewstar83
      @punkybrewstar83 3 года назад +8

      But I would have never read all of his books, if I had never seen American Psycho.

    • @souljastation5463
      @souljastation5463 2 года назад +4

      Sure, but let's nor forget it's hollywood we're talking about. A non-hollywood movie could have been way more faithful to the book.
      The movie is just a sanitised version of the story, that's all that it is, a fast-food-like entertaining spectacle with predigested morals, that don't work because they're second-hand(we don't actually see what he does), hence the people idolising him. Screen Bateman's violence is harmless, he's almost a Tom and Jerry cartoon character.

    • @geordiejones5618
      @geordiejones5618 2 года назад +5

      I just think it would have been better as like half the size it ended up being. It didn't have enough plot to justify over 400 pages.

  • @Fetjdg
    @Fetjdg 3 года назад +34

    I found the book really hard to read but at the same time it was brilliant. It is really well written from the perspective of a psychopath. All the thought patterns, all the seemingly unimportant things he thinks about (probably to cope with his lethal feelings). If you don't skip the endless paragraphs about designer clothes, you will notice some funny contradictions. But I can't say that it was a pleasure to read. It still is a masterpiece of art.

  • @SunshineSuperstar
    @SunshineSuperstar 2 года назад +22

    DiCaprio is a fantastic actor, but Bale's performance in this role is and was sublime.
    I couldn't imagine a single other actor on the planet would have done this role as much justice as Bale gave it!

  • @FernandoThegreat
    @FernandoThegreat 3 года назад +80

    I laughed so hard at the U2 scene in the book

    • @FlyteDanny
      @FlyteDanny 3 года назад +12

      I completely forgot about that part, that felt very shitpost-y on Ellis's behalf.

    • @FernandoThegreat
      @FernandoThegreat 3 года назад +10

      @@FlyteDanny my Dad is a huge U2 fan. So when he sees Bono as the devil, I nearly died laughing. To be fair Ellis is super into bubblegum pop.

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +1

      Genesis for me. 👍

    • @JohnMoseley
      @JohnMoseley 3 года назад +1

      Which one is the Ledge?

    • @juliewestevents1567
      @juliewestevents1567 3 года назад +20

      And the Tom cruise elevator scene

  • @timtones75
    @timtones75 3 года назад +30

    The most important difference IMO is that in the book those detailed descriptions anchor the initial narrative and gradually go away, leaving the story more and more chaotic.
    You are not sure if the things are really happening AND you are not sure Patrick is getting more crazy or if you are entering more in his mind as the facade of normalcy is abandoned.

    • @dabob878
      @dabob878 2 года назад

      i see what you’re saying but the movie accomplished the same thing

  • @JadyLester
    @JadyLester 3 года назад +19

    It just occurred to me that Patrick might have been confused about Paul Allen's identity while they were having dinner and the rest of the evening, just as Paul Allen thinks he's someone else the whole time.

  • @DeniseDutton
    @DeniseDutton 3 года назад +12

    Dominic Noble has been doing "Lost in Adaptation" video essays for years... But to my knowledge he hasn't done American Psycho yet. So thanks for this!

  • @CiaoRooster
    @CiaoRooster 2 года назад +10

    I didn’t find the lists boring but fascinating. This is where the true psychosis lies. His confusing Eponine with Cosette. The brand names of ties subtly changing without comment. The historiography of the West Side being undesirable. This is where Bateman’s fragmented reality comes to life and is thrilling.
    By contrast the helicopter scene is crazy over the top. It’s where I go-oh, this is just unreal. It’s all a dream. Of Heron wanted otherwise, she could have done with an edit.

  • @OrderRealm
    @OrderRealm 3 года назад +60

    Hi this is paul. Been called away to London for a few days. Ill text you when I get back. Hasta la vista baby.

    • @AminorMorning
      @AminorMorning 2 месяца назад

      That's not in the book and it's anachronistic seeing as as the line was quoting T2 from 1991 and Bateman is recording that answer phone message in the late 80s

  • @shellyenglish
    @shellyenglish 2 года назад +2

    I have to absolutely disagree with the book being boring. The whole point of why Ellis wrote Patrick Bateman’s inner monologue in that dry fashion was to show a true and stark contrast with the joy that he felt by the utter degradation of women and pure bliss he felt while destroying something, anything, himself. Psychopaths do not feel joy or titillation in the same way that everyone else does, so obviously their inner monologue is not going to be bursting at the brim with action, elation, depression, love, fear, etc. I was absolutely enthralled with how Ellis pulled you into the banal drudgery of a psychopaths everyday interactions. The book is SO ABSOLUTELY TRAUMATIZING in its depiction of violence and I was appreciative of the soothing lull that was Patrick’s bored outlook on humans and life in general. Honestly, that is the point I am trying to make is that the book wasn’t boring, we were sharing in Patrick’s boredom. Which…to be honest, I am sure a lot of us can relate with when it comes to our daily lives.
    🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @leen8430
    @leen8430 2 года назад +6

    What I love so much about this channel is that no matter which video I click, whether I know about the themes or media it deals with or not, I am guaranteed to find an entertaining, very-well made, highly interesting and even educational dive into the topic. And no matter who presents it to me, I always enjoy it. Great work guys, thanks so much for all your content. A few weeks back when I first found you I commented you might become my favorite channel, and here you are, already firmly holding in a place in my un-ranked, all-time top three. Thank you!

  • @Alex-df9db
    @Alex-df9db 3 года назад +110

    Nothing beats the rat scene in the book, Jesus Christ

    • @michaelm3691
      @michaelm3691 3 года назад +3

      Rats got to eat too

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +28

      Nah, his discussion of eighties era Genesis in the book is sublime. 😄

    • @dangeloromero3874
      @dangeloromero3874 3 года назад +1

      Would you recommend I buy the book?

    • @thedoomaster14
      @thedoomaster14 3 года назад +4

      @@dangeloromero3874 it's nasty

    • @granolaassasin
      @granolaassasin 3 года назад +1

      @@dangeloromero3874 great book. Highly recommend

  • @PivotDJ
    @PivotDJ 3 года назад +50

    Omg the internet censorship afraid of being demonetized. Ug RUclips is just cable tv now

    • @anonb4632
      @anonb4632 3 года назад +11

      It is fast becoming what people came here to avoid.

  • @margaretsteadman8842
    @margaretsteadman8842 3 года назад +12

    I read this book, several times. I was fascinated and horrified by the ongoing theme of dissonance. There was no particular reason or rational, there was no 'worthy' to live . What I found most amazing is that the killer tries over and over to confess, even going so far as to leave a voice message on his colleges phone. The worst part of the book, for me , was when he killed an old man and the old man's dog, a shar pei. In conversation with the old man, he had just told brett that he was moving to Florida. That's when I realized how arbitrary all this slaughter really was, and it almost made me throw up. What did the poor dog do to deserve to be slaughtered so visciously?

  • @oliviagomesmartins2225
    @oliviagomesmartins2225 3 года назад +9

    I can't remember much of the book because of his extensive rants on superficial things and I think that's kind of the point: he's completely, utterly empty. If I'm not mistaken, one of the characteristics of someone with anti social personality disorder is feeling constantly bored, so those monologues kinda put you in the mindset of being bored out of your skull precisely because that's how he feels all the time. His extremely gory murders are the closest he can get to excitement. It's an absolute hell inside his head.
    One part that really impacted me was that scene when he calls his secretary from a public phone, rambling and yells "just say no!" to some lunch appointment. In the book, the way it's written in such an anxiety inducing way, a few minutes that feel like they last for hours, feel so much like an actual panic attack, you feel like the entire environment is hostile and somehow gives you the feeling of depersonalization. I read that years ago but I remember having to do breathing exercises because I was almost having a panic attack. Overall, I think the author did a fantastic job of portraying the mindset of someone with severe mental issues.

  • @michaeldavis7996
    @michaeldavis7996 3 года назад +14

    As a teacher of a HS course called Literature & Film, I am excited by this new series you have started. So far, though, the two choices--this and Fight Club...books and films--have a lot of similarities. I hope that there is more variety to come. Keep up the good work. (My personal favorite is 2001: A Space Odyssey)

    • @tomasc88
      @tomasc88 3 года назад

      he will say its boring, and that the film is trippy and boring. Fuck this channel. Sub scince thug notes.

    • @lifesavapor
      @lifesavapor Год назад

      If you read this in class you will be imprisoned 😂

  • @dongately2817
    @dongately2817 3 года назад +33

    The book is one of the greatest character studies of all time.

  • @criwall
    @criwall 3 года назад +16

    I'm one of the ones who thought the movie was all in his head when I saw the movie the first time in 2000. In retrospect it might just be that there where a lot of movies around that time with either ambiguous endings or that kind of plot twist, that completely change everything we thought we knew. Sixth Sense, Memento, Fight Club to name a few so the audience was primed into reading too much into that conversation in the end thinking there was a huge plot twist when there really wasn't. I might have to rewatch it, it's been 20 years (damn I feel old....).

  • @brillbillbutstill
    @brillbillbutstill 3 года назад +9

    I love how the book makes Bateman ramble incoherently about music (Whitney Houston). He's exactly what he needs to be

  • @Whofan06
    @Whofan06 3 года назад +10

    I always liked how much more ambiguous the film is at the end cause it says more about how even when a severely mentally ill person is screaming out for help, telling everyone around they are going to or have hurt people, and no one takes them seriously. No one does anything to stop it or help a psychopath before they become violent because its too uncomfortable to address. The film definitely portrays a culture that couldn't address an underlying problem if it was dropped dead in front their noses

  • @chiyo-chanholocaust8143
    @chiyo-chanholocaust8143 2 года назад +56

    17:26 Honestly the cab driver scene still makes me doubt reality. The guy knows Bateman killed his friend yet doesn't call the cops just because there's no reward? That makes as much sense as the real state agent covering up Paul Allen's death to sell the apartment

    • @davidday-muncey5766
      @davidday-muncey5766 2 года назад +26

      It can make sense because almost every character in the novel are as unfeeling and psychotic as Bateman - he's just more sadistic.

  • @danablack7919
    @danablack7919 3 года назад +14

    You're totally right about the book and the movie being two special kinds of animal. I LOVED both but the book has this tendency to page after page of insignificant detail, the movie is a streamlined piece of magic, taking the best pieces from the book and concentrates on the satirical elements and as you said, the more 'Fun' elements. One is a companion piece for the other.

  • @WalldoTheWInner
    @WalldoTheWInner 2 года назад +9

    I really liked the book. Goes from "mean girls with ties" to "Cannibal Corpse lyrics" pretty quick 😂

  • @matthewbarratt6929
    @matthewbarratt6929 3 года назад +19

    The ‘A glimpse of a Thursday afternoon’ chapter is a great indication in my view that Bateman committed every crime. It begins mid sentence in which Bateman seems to have no idea where he is an undergoes some sort of breakdown. The chapter shows that Bateman is capable of losing track of time, enduring these blackouts in which he essentially sleepwalks throughout the day. Therefore, what’s to say that he didn’t endure one of these blackouts, clean the apartment and then return to see the woman there, who is selling the apartment because Allen is presumed missing by the authorities and she wants to take advantage of this. At the same time though, it’s possible that the woman herself cleaned the apartment as in a certain chapter - I don’t remember the name - Bateman’s maid enters his apartment and cleans a bloodstain off the wall will little protest. Doesn’t really matter at the end of the day, but I’m certain that he committed all of the crime in the book at least.

  • @War_Maker
    @War_Maker 3 года назад +19

    I read the book for a literature class when I was 19.. I dont think most students were comfortable or had the stomach for the material at hand. The book is way more graphic than the movie.

  • @Uraniumpage09
    @Uraniumpage09 3 года назад +26

    Mubi is one of the worst company names I’ve ever heard.

    • @suimeingwong2043
      @suimeingwong2043 3 года назад +9

      Better than Quibi, but not much.

    • @schiz0phren1c
      @schiz0phren1c 3 года назад +3

      Sounds like a child asking to see a movie.

  • @kentuckyfriedchildren5385
    @kentuckyfriedchildren5385 2 года назад +7

    I think the cab driver part in the book should have been a scene, it would probably be the most powerful scene in the entire movie and I think it would convey the message of the film best, especially because it doesn't come from a deranged psychopath, but a regular person.

  • @howlingwolf7280
    @howlingwolf7280 3 года назад +13

    In the book, the part with the child and the part with the fluorescent light tube unsettled me in ways I cant begin to describe. The movie didn't really deliver any of the same extremes in emotions. Its a good film, just not the story I read.

  • @FilmBuffBros
    @FilmBuffBros 2 года назад +7

    @6:22 "in the book he's positively inhuman" *What about the Hamptons vacation with Evelyn, or the park bench chapter with Jean? *Not to mention the music critiques. ..
    Bateman might be the most ambiguous character in modern American literature: mind-numbingly materialistic and grotesquely sadistic - however not "inhuman" in the slightest way.

  • @elliotspencer5300
    @elliotspencer5300 2 года назад +2

    In the book the book his family owns the Company he works for, also his brother is a spook or cia, so he could have stuff covered up even though he hates him. Big wealthy family, mummy says look after Patrick??

  • @katarzynaszajkowski8394
    @katarzynaszajkowski8394 3 года назад +20

    I've been obsessed with this movie for as long as I can remember -- in high school, I made my best friend and the two guys we were with watch it and needless to say that maybe wasn't the best first impression

  • @flightofthebumblebee9529
    @flightofthebumblebee9529 Год назад +2

    The book is literally 10x more disturbing than the film. I totally forgot he kills a boy at the zoo, and Paul Owen's (Allen) death scene is way more graphic. He also hooks up jumper cables and battery pack to a hooker's boobs and cooks her alive and eats another hooker's brains (one of many).
    He doesn't KILL the homeless dude like in the film but he does gouge his eyes out and later we see the same dude with a sign saying he was in Vietnam and Bateman whispers "you weren't in Nam".
    Oddly enough, Bateman's role in The Rules of Attraction novel actually shows him as a man who is sad about his father being a vegetable and sad that his brother doesn't care about anything.

  • @Pedrofconde
    @Pedrofconde 3 года назад +9

    The explicit violence of the novel is absolutely fundamental, along with the descriptive sections about music, clothing, furniture, etc. More than a satire about yuppie culture, the book is a commentary about 80s american pop culture in general, and about how frivolous, superficial, explicit, saturated, bombastic and even pornographic it really is. Patrick Bateman lives in a world of high-definition superficiality, he himself is nothing beyond surface. In order to fit in with humanity, he can only only rely on surface appearances, for it is the only thing he knows. This only exacerbates his own madness, leading him to ever greater brutalities against his victims, in an attempt to pierce these surfaces - and alas, finding only more bloody surfaces... Therefore, the violence serves not only as an exacerbated critique of "porno" culture, but it also represents the ultimate consequence of a purely superficial existence.

  • @handoffate7262
    @handoffate7262 Год назад +2

    The book is boring right up until it’s not and then it makes you wanna throw up and cry at what you’re reading. Easton Ellis is truly one of the great modern writers.

  • @stayedthread8822
    @stayedthread8822 2 года назад +4

    I have Asperger's, and as a result I find it very difficult to keep track of names in books and movies, so as a result the theme of 'everyone of these people are the same' was enhanced tenfold

  • @jacemorgan
    @jacemorgan 2 года назад +4

    I think the movie is more relatable whereas the book is terrifying, everyone has thought about killing someone, not everyone thinks about eat someone or ripping out their eyes.

  • @roronoalaw7772
    @roronoalaw7772 Год назад +3

    Always found it interesting in the book where his brother is the only character Bateman doesn’t give a clothing or physical appearance description to. I don’t know what that means but I know it isn’t just because he hates him as he hates a few people and still gave their descriptions.
    Also almost every woman is blonde.

    • @michawrzosek5417
      @michawrzosek5417 9 месяцев назад

      Not sure if it has to do with anything, but Patrick seems to have some kind of inferiority complex towards his brother

  • @SpecterSprite
    @SpecterSprite 2 года назад +2

    I totally disagree with your read on Evelyn. She is portrayed as shallow in the movie too. In the scene where Patrick breaks up with her she starts bawling to make a scene and after Patrick leaves she shuts it off immediately, giving us a look like "Well that didn't go like I wanted it to".
    You guys literally played the clip in this video!

  • @Hukijiwa
    @Hukijiwa 3 года назад +26

    Love that sweatshirt! When are we gonna get a Philosophy of the Grateful Dead video???

    • @alik1986
      @alik1986 3 года назад +2

      Yeessssss please.

    • @phillipclay5287
      @phillipclay5287 3 года назад

      I don't know, when they get a more cohesive theme than heroin

    • @newusernamehere4772
      @newusernamehere4772 3 года назад +1

      @@phillipclay5287 Ngl this is hilarious but only two dudes out of eight that were in the band were on heroin, and that wasn't until after they got big so obviously they had a pretty solid philosophy before that otherwise they wouldn't have had a better life and career than most PEOPLE period. I know it was a joke but some people are stupid and might think you're serious so instead Im making myself look stupid by explaining something obvious that everyone could just google

  • @wiiztec
    @wiiztec 3 года назад +6

    What you describe as boring was like the most amusing material in the film for me and I wish there was more of it

  •  2 года назад +2

    SPOILERS FOR THE BOOK:
    What scene is worse:
    A - the child
    B - the rat
    C - the exploding car battery
    D - some other

    • @Thebigman2.0
      @Thebigman2.0 Год назад

      Don't forget the homeguy AL and Patrick's secretary Bethany

  • @pyrotheevilplatypus
    @pyrotheevilplatypus 3 года назад +8

    Sooo...this is another "movie actually beats the book" I can add to my list? Good, Jaws was getting lonely.

    • @prettypleasewithsugarontop4858
      @prettypleasewithsugarontop4858 3 года назад

      Mash the movie is better and Forrest Gump as well

    • @jewfroDZak
      @jewfroDZak 3 года назад +6

      Nope. This is one of the best books I've ever had the pleasure reading .

  • @tenorenstrom
    @tenorenstrom 2 года назад +3

    Honestly surprised people consider this book boring. I remember not being able to stop reading and afterwards I wrote a couple of short stories in the exact style of BEE because I thought the style was ingenious and made you unable to stop reading. No wonder I didn't get published! :)

  • @WhatsYourGhostStory
    @WhatsYourGhostStory 3 года назад +24

    "Choke" would be an interesting one to cover.... one of the few times I've ever seen a movie try to be too loyal to the book and have it backfire. Great book, cluttered movie.

  • @1marcelfilms
    @1marcelfilms Год назад +1

    The book: boring long text
    The movie: wow he is literally me

  • @JBX07
    @JBX07 3 года назад +4

    I think the book and the movie make great companion pieces. The movie warms you up and when you read the book you look forward to the violence and power through the banality. When you get the violence in the book it's so horrible and viscerally unpleasant that you feel extra bad that you looked forward to it.

  • @dustinarand
    @dustinarand 10 месяцев назад +2

    I don't remember thinking the book was boring. Actually I laughed out loud more reading that book than any other I've read. The digressions where he reviews Whitney Houston or Huey Lewis are satire gold.
    As for whether the murders happened or not, I think the ambiguity is the point. For Bateman, killing in real life and killing in his head are no different, since he feels nothing for his victims either way. It's yet another way of pointing out how the materialist yuppie culture leads to solipsism and nihilism.

  • @krombopulos_michael
    @krombopulos_michael 3 года назад +7

    I think part of why people like movie Bateman more is that he's this handsome stylish guy played by Christian Bale in great shape. He does mention stuff like working out in the book, but it gets far less time than his weird obsession with what brand of clothing everyone in every room is wearing or the drawn out descriptions of torture.

  • @Kaerikillington
    @Kaerikillington Год назад +1

    'On The Patty Winters Show this morning a Cheerio sat in a very small chair and was interviewed for close to an hour.'

  • @connorbooth7207
    @connorbooth7207 3 года назад +7

    I finished the book recently. I was surprised to see that there is a clothing line inspired by the character. Then I learned it’s based off the character in the movie. The character in the book is much more brutal than the movie and not someone to be inspired by in any way. I also skipped some of the chapters, like the Whitney Houston and the Huey Lewis chapters. I understood why they were in the book, but they were just boring haha

  • @MultiverseAsheville
    @MultiverseAsheville 2 года назад +1

    I believe it’s extremely significant as a difference not to name the watch. Someone as brand obsessed as Bateman would waste no opportunity to call attention to the social currency of his luxury items, and so would never choose to refer to them by generic names.

    • @petalchild
      @petalchild 2 года назад

      Rolex didn't give permission for their brand name to be used in the film.

  • @bengolious
    @bengolious 3 года назад +8

    They're both respectively excellent. In a few respects the film is superior, it's pacier and presents more characters with whom we can empathise such that we're more emotionally invested in what happens to them. However, the filmmakers understood that film is a different medium so they wisely toned down the violence and strengthened the connection between the materialism and the misogyny, mirroring the real-world dehumanisation that Ellis was critiquing. Both works are notable and worthwhile when taken on their own terms but I've yet to hear a compelling argument in favour of the novel over the film. Fact is some adaptations are superior to their source material, see also Batman: The Animated Series and The Godfather.

  • @pepesilvia429
    @pepesilvia429 5 месяцев назад

    I love all the excessively long passages in this book and Glamorama, I think they're hilarious and I love picturing Ellis trying not to get bored writing them. In Glamorama there's a section about 5 pages long where a side character just lists celebrities to the main character, who gives a one by one answer like "yes" or "not without Billy Corgan" or "maybe in '87" to each of them.

  • @kirbymarchbarcena
    @kirbymarchbarcena 3 года назад +3

    PATRICK BATEMAN: I am sure there is nothing wrong with me, right?
    BRUCE WAYNE: I dressed up like a bat to fight crime, I guess that's normal?
    TREVOR REZNIK: I lost 62 pounds and couldn't sleep, what's worse than that?

  • @therealpescado
    @therealpescado Год назад +1

    I'm late to the party here but something I really liked in the book was how Bateman was such a hypocrite at times. Like on one page he'd be criticizing his coworker for being rude to a homeless man, being disgusted that he would treat the homeless man like that, and then on the next he'd be calling a homeless person the n word and stabbing them. I think this irony made the novel funny in a dark way sometimes, because you just have to laugh at how ridiculous Patrick is.

  • @antoniomitreski9937
    @antoniomitreski9937 3 года назад +8

    The Shining Book vs Movie.

  • @johnnyconker1176
    @johnnyconker1176 3 года назад +33

    So... is this not just Cinefix's "What's The Difference" series under different branding?

    • @dontmakelemonade
      @dontmakelemonade 3 года назад +8

      We've made those jokes already.

    • @heartache5742
      @heartache5742 3 года назад

      copyright was a mistake

    • @Kaylakaze
      @Kaylakaze 3 года назад +1

      No, it's Dominic Noble's "Lost in Adaptation" series under different branding.

    • @heartache5742
      @heartache5742 3 года назад

      @@Kaylakaze they aren't that similar though

  • @metaldude4563
    @metaldude4563 2 года назад +4

    The book more effectively does what Easton Ellis set out to do, but this also makes it much less enjoyable. It's effective at making you hate Bateman but it's really a slog at points. Also, the sheer depravity of the violence committed against women in the novel really makes you question Easton Ellis' views on women, questions that are only reinforced by a lot of his public statements

  • @KellyClement
    @KellyClement 3 года назад +3

    "This is not an Exit" is how this confusing book opens and closes.

  • @mewxtwo
    @mewxtwo 3 года назад +6

    I am currently reading the book after seeing the movie a few times over the years, and I gotta say it is much more disturbing. The way the reader is just constantly in Bateman's psychotic, overly descriptive mind simply cannot be replicated via film and makes for some twisted shit.

  • @nkesteren
    @nkesteren Год назад +1

    I was 20 reading this on the train back in the 90s. If the book cover title didn't give it away for the person sitting in front of me, I was constantly thinking: 1. why am I reading this? 2. if you only had a clue what I was reading right now, you'd flee.
    That book scarred me for life. Had to get fresh air and stop reading every paragraph so I wouldn't throw up or pass out.

  • @junkytboy
    @junkytboy 3 года назад +7

    I have openly told many people that this is my Patrick Batman year. I’m 27, work out, eat, live alone and do skincare all like Bateman. I’ve read the book, seen the movie several times and this is who I want to be right now.

    • @MsSarahJosephine
      @MsSarahJosephine 3 года назад +1

      And what are your thoughts on Huey Lewis and the News?

    • @doggytheanarchist7876
      @doggytheanarchist7876 3 года назад +12

      Honey, is this a cry for help?

    • @OntologicalCatastrophe
      @OntologicalCatastrophe 3 года назад +1

      Good luck man, have fun killing people and ignore the haters!

    • @killerhitman28
      @killerhitman28 3 года назад +6

      lol, go to psicoanalysis, stop watching Jordan Peterson videos, or you'll regret it.

    • @zabm141
      @zabm141 3 года назад +1

      Why do you need a serial killer as a role model to take care of yourself? just read a biography by someone famous ffs

  • @blake2697
    @blake2697 Год назад +2

    But I think the biggest similarity between the film and the book, is that they're both literally about me.