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- June 21th, 2003
The method
in my madness
Libby Brooks, The Guardian, April 6, 2000.
Christian
Bale began his acting career as a lost little boy in Empire of
the Sun. Now he's a murderer in American Psycho. He tells Libby
Brooks about his battle to get the part - and why it cost him
his teeth.
The devil
is in the dentistry. Christian Bale smiles a newly even smile.
Those suggestively vampiric incisors and the feminising gap between
his top front teeth are gone. And it's all the fault of an American
psycho.
"I liked
my old teeth. I have a moulding of them on a shelf. But with Patrick
Bateman, his physicality is much more important than with most
characters. He deals totally in the superficial, and he's incredibly
narcissistic. I looked at myself in the mirror and it just wasn't
right. I was warned that if I got caps I could get a lisp, and
you might still be able to tell in close-up. So I thought, I like
my teeth, but I'm not so attached to them that I'm going to ruin
this whole movie because I refuse to get them done."
He moves his arm and
a still, buff bicep strains the knit of his tidy jumper. Preparation
for the role of serial-killing 80s alpha-male Patrick Bateman
in the screen adaptation of the Bret Easton Ellis novel required
dumb-bells as well as braces. Just as Bateman's bloodlust is the
amoral mirror of his lust for things, so his bankrupt soul is
the necessary continuum of his empty obsession with bodily perfection.
"Working out took
over my life," says 26-year-old Bale in his nowhere English
accent. "I became fascinated with talking about the body,
and diet, and the gym. It made me very judgmental of other people's
bodies as well." But it is that obsession with surface minutiae
that defines the era and its most extreme literary personification,
American Psycho.
It was a role to perform,
rather than understand, Bale insists, echoing his director Mary
Harron, who says she believes that a degree of detachment was
the only way to prevent a disturbing film becoming an offensive
one. "He's acting in his own life. On paper, of course, he
should be hateful, but he's incredibly entertaining."
Bale's Bateman is a
supremely confident confection, and entirely at odds with the
engaging naturalism of his recent performances in suburban morality
tale Metroland, and Todd Haynes's Velvet Goldmine, in which he
starred alongside Jonathan Rhys-Meyers and Ewan McGregor. Whether
expounding the life lessons to be found in Whitney Houston's The
Greatest Love of All, or spinning into frantic despair at the
sight of his fag friend's better-looking business card, Bale offers
a slicky modulated performance that distills the essence of Bateman,
and the book.
Published in 1991,
American Psycho was Easton Ellis's savage and bloody satire of
late 80s extremity. The material fetishism and moral vacuity of
the money-drenched, Manhattan-dwelling protagonists were gruesome
enough. But it was the lovingly detailed scenes of obscene and
often highly sexualised torture and murder (which may or may not
have occurred in Bateman's own drug-fuelled imagination) that
whipped up a storm of controversy, resulting in accusations of
misogyny and exploitation.
The screen adaptation
is far less graphic. It is the context, rather than the killings
themselves, that creates the horror, argues Bale. "Bateman
is neither an anti-hero nor a typical villain. There's no resolution,
and his only punishment by the end is his own existence. But the
scariness comes from his whole crowd, from that society and their
thought processes. Bateman's very much an idiot, and much of the
humour comes from the difference in perception between how he
views himself and how we view him."
The basic theme of
American Psycho is reason without heart, he says. "It's like
capitalism without any spiritual component. I think that given
the correct situation everyone can drop to levels of extreme depravity.
We train armies to adopt the opposite of the everyday moral code.
It's no wonder that in conflicts you get soldiers out of control,
doing horrendous things, raping. These are ordinary people who,
given the situation, become something else."
Perhaps like Bale himself
- a personable presence who happens to enjoy the immersion of
being someone else. And rather like his first film role as Jim
Graham, a little boy making sense of a big war, in Empire of the
Sun, Stephen Spielberg's second world war epic. Watching the 13-year-old
Bale as he battles for sense and self in a Japanese PoW camp,
it is as though he fell to earth fully formed. It's an astonishing
performance, utterly fearless, wholly acted.
Bale talks about the
experience with the gentle confidence of a hurt resolved. "At
an age when you're supposed to be going out and doing things for
the first time, making your mistakes, suddenly I lost that anonymity.
Adults say you should know better, other kids are jealous, and
you feel like a freak. I became pretty reclusive for a couple
of years. For me, it had been a great experience, but it didn't
sum up my whole life. But it did for everyone else."
In 1992 he moved from
England to Los Angeles, where he has worked quietly but consistently
since, establishing himself as a versatile, if not entirely bankable,
actor. There are two reasons why his transition from child to
adult performer was so painless, he says. "I got a dislike
for what small fame I had early on, so I attempted not to let
it disrupt everything. Also, [Jim] was a very adult, complex part,
that didn't rely on my being cute. I didn't get a shock when I
got older and started getting hair," he concludes, stroking
a lightly bronzed chin that is destined always to look clean-shaven.
He believes he is an
instinctive actor, untrained he reminds me, who works on the principle
that his job is to be unafraid of making a fool of himself. Talking
about acting is one of the most boring conversations you can ever
have, he adds cautiously. Engaging with the minutiae of Being
Bateman, or talking passionately about his commitment to the role,
is when he's at his most interesting. But Bale is big on lack
of pretension - and bigger on being seen to be lacking pretension.
He is not an actor , he emphasises, as though it's evidence of
something unseemly, like ego, or ambition, or consuming passion.
Still, he will describe
Bateman as an ambitious role to take on. "I loved the fact
that, firstly, people thought it was an impossible book to make
into a film, and secondly, that they were telling me it was career
suicide. I wanted to prove it wasn't. I don't want to slip into
that celebrity factor of being scared of taking a role because
it's a nasty character."
The palaver surrounding
the making of the film is well documented: Harron cast Bale, project
owners Lion's Gate wanted box office friendly Leo DiCaprio, Harron
protested and was replaced by the laughably inappropriate Oliver
Stone. Only after DiCaprio bolted to make The Beach did the original
team reconvene.
It was an epiphany
for Bale. "I wanted to get the film made to keep myself convinced
that this was a profession where you could still be an actor.
American Psycho became an issue for me of whether I still enjoy
doing this craft and being in this business"
How did it feel to
be thrown over for the Titanic golden boy? "I was, of course,
very grumpy. But I considered it a confidence boost creatively
because Mary Harron put her own job on the line to make it with
me."
Nevertheless, he must
have recognised that it was potential ticket sales, not talent,
that separated him from DiCaprio. "It was a little bit simple-minded
of me to think that it could all be so ideal. There is a lot of
money involved, and what happened woke me up a bit. It has made
me much more in control of the business side. It's important not
to let that overtake everything, but it is my living."
He shows his newly
even teeth. Nowadays he can smile for Hollywood.
American Psycho
opens on April 21.
Source - film.guardian.co.uk