American Psycho

  • EntertainmentYahoo Movies UK

    Cinema's most confusing movie endings explained

    Nothing takes the wind out of your sails like a movie that ends on a big fat question mark.

    12-min read
  • NewsYahoo Movies UK

    'American Psycho' producer Edward R. Pressman shares secrets of the cult film on its 20th anniversary

    Producer Edward R. Pressman says he met with David Lynch and Tim Burton before finding the right director.

    7-min read
  • EntertainmentYahoo Movies UK

    Christian Bale's most extreme body transformations from 'Batman Begins' to 'Vice'

    With 'Vice' about to hit cinemas, we take a look back at Christian Bale's most extreme body transformations.

  • NewsMike P Williams

    Christian Bale Exits Michael Mann Movie Over Weight Gain Concerns

    Oscar-winner and 2016 nominee Christian Bale had dropped out of Michael Mann’s Enzo Ferrari movie after concerns over the weight he’d have to gain. In order to portray the iconic carmaker, Bale would have to pile on the pounds to look like the overweight character he was set to play. Back in 2000 he bulked up to play egomaniac Patrick Bateman in ‘American Psycho’, only to turn skeletal for ‘The Machinist’ in 2004.

  • NewsYahoo Movies UK

    10 Really Confusing Movie Endings Explained

    Nothing takes the wind out of your sails like a movie that ends on a big fat question mark. Let us be your guide in decoding the confusing endings of 10 of the most frustrating film finales… ‘Inception’ (2010) The ending: Back in LA, Leo DiCaprio’s dream-thief Cobb spins his totem on the kitchen counter to determine if he’s dreaming, then decides instead to go outside and play with his estranged kids, leaving it spinning – and the camera cuts before we see if it slows or stops. The explanation

  • NewsGwynne Watkins

    'American Psycho' Screenwriter on Patrick Bateman’s Legacy and That Controversial Ending

    It’s been fifteen years since American Psycho opened in theaters, but screenwriter Guinevere Turner still finds herself talking about it all the time. “And I’m like, ‘Are you a serial killer or a dork? Be that as it may, audiences are more in love with Patrick Bateman than ever.

  • NewsGwynne Watkins

    'American Psycho' Designer Gideon Ponte on Patrick Bateman's Killer Apartment

    The satirical horror film American Psycho, about a violent killer hiding in plain sight amid the testosterone-fueled decadence of ‘80s Wall Street, celebrates its 15th anniversary this week. Since the film’s 2000 premiere, certain scenes have become iconic: the axe murder committed by Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale) in his all-white apartment, for example, or the scene in which bankers brandish expensive business cards like weapons. On the 15th anniversary of the cult classic, Ponte — who now