10 Things You Probably Didn’t Know About American Psycho

Based on Bret Easton Ellis’ 1991 novel of the same name, American Psycho both delighted and horrified viewers when it hit cinemas at the dawn of the new millennium. Starring Christian Bale as New York investment banker Patrick Bateman, this extremely black comedy polarised critics when it debuted at the Sundance Film Festival, but it is, without doubt, a must-watch movie. Below are 10 things you probably didn’t know about Mary Harron’s horror-comedy classic.

Bret Easton Ellis received death threats after his novel was published

It’s an understatement to say that Bret Easton Ellis’ American Psycho novel was controversial, with The Observer writing that “some countries deem it so potentially disturbing that it can only be sold shrink-wrapped.”

Ellis received hate mail and even death threats after it was published, with the book later being named as one of the most ‘banned and challenged books of the 1990s’ by the American Library Association.

Leonardo DiCaprio very nearly played Patrick Bateman

Director Mary Harron and English actor Christian Bale were attached to the project for a number of years during the early 90s until Lionsgate Films acquired the rights to Bret Easton Ellis’ novel in 1997.

Lionsgate brought in director Oliver Stone and actor Leonardo DiCaprio, but the pair weren’t able to come to an agreement about the film’s direction, so DiCaprio decided to star in Danny Boyle’s The Beach instead.

It could have ended with a musical number on top of the World Trade Centre

Another director that was at one time attached to the project was David Cronenberg, who hired Bret Easton Ellis to write a screenplay that ended with a musical number on top of the World Trade Centre.

“I think Barry Manilow’s ‘Daybreak’ was playing, and there’s Patrick Bateman sitting in the park talking to people, and then it ends on the top of the World Trade Center,” Ellis has revealed. “A big musical number, very elaborate. I’m glad it wasn’t shot.”

Christian Bale successfully persuaded Ewan McGregor to turn it down

Mary Harron and Christian Bale were eventually given the green light to begin production, but that wasn’t before Lionsgate offered the lead role to Ewan McGregor.

Apparently, Bale, who had turned down all other film auditions for nearly a year, “personally urged” McGregor to turn down the opportunity, which he did.

Christian Bale took inspiration from a Tom Cruise interview and a Nicolas Cage film

Christian Bale, who spent a number of months training for three hours a day to build his physique, has revealed that he took inspiration from a pair of legendary Hollywood actors whilst preparing for the role.

Bale was inspired by Nicolas Cage’s performance in the 1989 film Vampire’s Kiss, as well as a 1999 Tom Cruise interview with David Letterman, in which Bale noticed the Top Gun and Mission Impossible star’s “energy and intense friendliness with nothing behind the eyes.”

Music legend Phil Collins thought the monologue about him was “very funny”

British music legend Phil Collins is the subject of a Patrick Bateman monologue in both the American Psycho novel and film, something that he eventually found extremely amusing.

“I didn’t read it. At the time, I just thought, that’s all we need, glorifying all this crap, I’m not interested,” the former Genesis frontman was once quoted as saying about the American Psycho novel, before continuing “then the film came out and I thought it was very funny.”

Bret Easton Ellis doesn’t believe his book needed to be adapted into a film

Author Bret Easton Ellis was not a big fan of the film adaptation of his novel, once saying that “American Psycho was a book I didn’t think needed to be turned into a movie.”

The author did however admit that the film “clarified the humor for audiences who mistook the novel’s violence for blatant misogyny,” and also accepted that it introduced his work to a new audience, giving it “a second life.”

A vocal opponent of both the novel and film married Christian Bale’s father

Famous feminist Gloria Steinem was strongly against both the American Psycho novel and film, for the way it depicted violence against women.

And in a curious twist of fate, only five months after American Psycho was released into cinemas, Steinem married Christian Bale’s father, David.

A 2002 sequel bears almost no relation to the original

The fact that a sequel to this critically acclaimed film was released in 2002 may have passed you by, because American Psycho II – also known as American Psycho II: All American Girls – bears almost no resemblance to the original.

The sequel, which starred Mila Kunis and William Shatner, began life as a thriller called The Girl Who Wouldn’t Die, but studio executives made amendments to its script at the last minute to incorporate a weak Patrick Bateman subplot.

A TV series is currently in development

Eight years after it was originally announced, Lionsgate TV chairman Kevin Beggs confirmed in April 2021 that an American Psycho TV spin-off is definitely still in development.

“We’ve just wrapped up Dear White People… Blindspotting is coming up [and] American Psycho is in development,” Beggs revealed in an interview.

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