Culture 'American Psycho’ Director Says “Wall Street Bros” Missed Point of Film: “A Gay Man’s Satire on Masculinity” - My media literacy is constant and sharp and I do not hope for better slop for anyone. In fact, I want this slop to be inflicted on others. I want no one to escape.

Article|Archive

American Psycho director Mary Harron said she’s “mystified” by the way the 2000 film has been “embraced by Wall Street bros.”

The filmmaker recently chatted with Letterboxd Journal about the “sigma male” social media phenomenon and how some men have grown to look at Christian Bale‘s Patrick Bateman as a role model.

“I’m always so mystified by it,” Harron said. “I don’t think that Guinevere [Turner, American Psycho writer-actress] and I ever expected it to be embraced by Wall Street bros, at all. That was not our intention. So, did we fail? I’m not sure why [it happened], because Christian’s very clearly making fun of them… But, people read the Bible and decide that they should go and kill a lot of people. People read The Catcher in the Rye and decide to shoot the president.”

However, The Notorious Bettie Page director added that “Wall Street bros” actually missed the overall point of the film, which follows Patrick Bateman, a wealthy New York City investment banking executive who hides his alternate psychopathic ego from his co-workers and friends as he delves deeper into his violent, hedonistic fantasies.

“It was very clear to me and Guinevere, who is gay, that we saw it as a gay man’s satire on masculinity,” Harron explained. “[American Psycho author Bret Easton Ellis’] being gay allowed him to see the homoerotic rituals among these alpha males, which is also true in sports, and it’s true in Wall Street, and all these things where men are prizing their extreme competition and their ‘elevating their prowess’ kind of thing. There’s something very, very gay about the way they’re fetishizing looks, and the gym.”

In Ellis’ novel, Patrick Bateman also idolizes Donald Trump, who is currently serving his second term as the U.S. president. While American Psycho is set during the Reagan era in the ’80s, when the AIDS Epidemic hit the LGBTQ community, the filmmaker was taken aback at how the story has aged over time, as transgender rights are now under attack by the Trump administration.

“It was about a predatory society, and now the society is actually, 25 years later, much worse. The rich are much richer, the poor are poorer,” she said. “I would never have imagined that there would be a celebration of racism and white supremacy, which is basically what we have in the White House. I would never have imagined that we would live through that.”

As American Psycho celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, Luca Guadagnino is set to helm a new film adaptation for Lionsgate.
 
But, people read the Bible and decide that they should go and kill a lot of people.
Could have said the Quran but I guess she was too much of a coward, don't want to risk getting fatwa-ed while living in Canada at the moment
“It was very clear to me and Guinevere, who is gay, that we saw it as a gay man’s satire on masculinity,” Harron explained. “[American Psycho author Bret Easton Ellis’] being gay allowed him to see the homoerotic rituals among these alpha males, which is also true in sports, and it’s true in Wall Street
I can't believe they are trying to destroy the meme by claiming it was all a gay-op. How fucking gay!
 
As American Psycho celebrates its 25th anniversary this year, Luca Guadagnino is set to helm a new film adaptation for Lionsgate.
It's shit. It's gonna be shit isn't it
1744943466237.webp
 
It's shit. It's gonna be shit isn't it
Lucas Guadagnino is the guy who made this movie "Call Me By Your Name", possibly one of the gayest movie ever made.
1744944313888.webp

My guess is, if they do the remake, they will make Patrick Bateman super gay to epically own all the far-right memers who "don't get it"
That will teach teach all these teenagers on tik tok to think it's cool to be a literal nazi
If you like him that makes YOU gay, get it kid?
 
There was only one good (American) woman director and she was literally chased out of directing movies because Ishtar was a closed set due to a fucking civil war on the horizon and journalists don't like being told "no".

Fucking joyless fag hag carpetbagger needs to just suck it up and let her movie be embraced by the crowd that wants to embrace it. They're literally the only reason why the film has managed to remain in pop culture because some people actually want to remember it in the one way they know how: memes. That's too damn bad they're not the "right" people you want as your audience, you cannot choose who remains as your audience once the check clears.
 
I think Christian Bale was doing a lot of the heavy lifting to make Patrick Bateman seem cool. Bateman looks attractive and has success but he’s a maniac who would love nothing more than to kill and maim a everything in sight.

The book really shows his malevolence, casually describing him biting and tearing a woman’s genitals off and then detailing all the features of the camera he’s using to record her torture.
 
Wheres the homophobia? Faggot is said once in that film(and not even randomly to harass a gay) and none of Bateman's victims where killed because of their possible homosexuality.
For a lot of people it was the line "I am simply not there" at the end of the morning routine which made them relate to the character. And this beautiful soundtrack by John Cale (the pianist from the Velvet Underground) named, The Ritual.
IMO I think its more about the fact theres no good positive power fantasies left for men to adore or embrace. Patrick Bateman is the closest we get nowadays so its what we go with.
 
American Psycho (the novel) was written by Bret Easton Ellis. It was just about universally hated at the time of publication. His last explanation of the character of Patrick Bateman is that it was inspired by himself (a gay man) and his self-loathing at the time when he wrote it. The book was generally hated because it really hated on women and in the way really gay man sometimes hate women.

Part of the reason for the flim's survival is that Mary Harron removed alot of the most objectionable stuff from the novel with the (probably unintended) effect of making the main character more appealing.
“It was very clear to me and Guinevere, who is gay, that we saw it as a gay man’s satire on masculinity,”

Which is odd given that the novel is actually a gay man's take on being gay and his patholigicial loathing of women.

But then they take out all the gay stuff and the women-hating stuff and end up with a movie featuring a take-no-prisoners hedonist protagonist who looks good and are surprised that guys on wall street like it?
 
Bro the Crusades were like 1000 years ago, maybe there's a different religion you could criticize.
To be fair, most other religions are really upfront about how you should kill a lot of people. If you finish the Quran and then don't think it was telling you to kill anyone, forget media literacy, you lack literacy period.
If American Psycho really was intended to be a "gay man's satire on masculinity", as written by a lesbian
It's really very impressive, no one on earth should know less about men than a lesbian, and especially gay men, so she's a very good writer.
 
Last edited:
Wow, yeah, ok, the more I think about this, the crazier it gets.

I'm pretty sure the screen-writer is a legit lesbian, and not a tranny:
View attachment 7238164
If American Psycho really was intended to be a "gay man's satire on masculinity", as written by a lesbian (who are notoriously opposed to gay men, and vice versa), then the whole film takes on a genuinely homophobic, fag-hating hue.

Turner's essentially saying "look at all these fruity closeted gay dudes running around, aren't they so vain and vapid! But it's not all fun and games, no! They're MEN, which means they want to kill women and each other! Because competition and masculinity and violence blah blah blah". Which is a fairly standard narrative for radfems, but definitely not something you're supposed to say in leftist circles in Current Year, since it means Committing a Homophobia. (if you want to criticize masculinity, it has to be directed at hetero incels, and/or the kind of dudebro you pined for in school but who stood you up for prom because he liked cheerleaders and not bookish protolesbians like you)

Honestly, if Turner and Harron are telling the truth, then kids co-opting and rehabilitating Bateman may be LESS "problematic" (by lefty standards) than the author's original intent.
Nah, the proper interpretation is that even when they're gay, women love the idea of an attractive man fucking them and then killing them.

1744956084780.webp
 
“It was very clear to me and Guinevere, who is gay, that we saw it as a gay man’s satire on masculinity,” Harron explained. “[American Psycho author Bret Easton Ellis’] being gay allowed him to see the homoerotic rituals among these alpha males, which is also true in sports, and it’s true in Wall Street, and all these things where men are prizing their extreme competition and their ‘elevating their prowess’ kind of thing. There’s something very, very gay about the way they’re fetishizing looks, and the gym.”
They're always pushing to try and make straight, alpha male men gay. It's like when the beta, simp, faggot kid makes fun out of a jock in a TV show for having big muscles and being able to lift weights, while being braindead. In those examples, the big muscly guy runs off, which, in real life wouldn't happen and they would kick the fuck out of the simps.

They think that everyone is gay because they're fucking faggots themselves.
 
Oh, it's the rich white guy version of the "gangsta" sagging pants trend that came from turned-out prison gays? If so, Fleece Johnson is a free man today and might as well get into stock trading if he isn't already. The movie is still incredibly funny though, whereas saggy faggy pants aged about as well as bell-bottoms on the Village People.
 
Back