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  1. May 5, 2020 · Surely, Stillman is the only director to have a yuppie character refer to Scrooge McDuck’s “sexy” qualities in an attempt at flirtation, as Chloë Sevigny so memorably does in The Last Days of Disco. These quirky visions of yuppiedom are suffused with nostalgia. Title cards establish The Last Days of Disco in “The very early 1980s ...

  2. 4 days ago · Ahhh, the 1980s. It was a decade marked by its great music, unique fashion, and, most of all, its insane ambition and excess. Yuppies ruled the culture. The 1960s peace generation grew up and ...

    • Patrick Bateman’s Disguise
    • Yuppie Culture
    • We Are Patrick Bateman
    • Product of The Times
    • Feminist Response to The Film
    • Post Modern Ambiguity
    • Works Cited

    The majority of post modern aspects in American Psychocan be seen through the main character Patrick Bateman played by Christian Bale. This character, though completely human, can be seen almost as a modern day vampire. There is nothing supernatural about him and though he is human the way he thinks makes him anything but as he states, “I have all ...

    The many references to other works of art in American Psycho are another element of post modernism. This is also connected with Patrick’s mask of sanity and his need to fit in. In order to seem normal or have anything ordinary to talk about with his co-workers, as well the escort girls he tries to entertain before killing, he listens to and reads a...

    The anxieties behind American Psycho are of giving in to ones desires and fantasies no matter how horrific they may be. The ‘slasher’ genre of horror fiction as Adam Rockoff Jefferson states, “is not taken very seriously among film historians; film critics and many horror film fans hold it in disdain. Considered the bastard child of the horror film...

    In many respects this film shows a critique of materialism and consumerism as well as, to a further extent, sexism. Patrick is always trying to own expensive things and eat at expensive places, in particular the restaurant Dorsia which he can never get a reservation at. Even right after killing Paul Allan he is shocked to find out that his apartmen...

    This film also garnered criticism from feminist perspectives; many women believing the film and even the original book to be sexist because of its graphic violence towards women. Ironically one of the feminist activists for the books release was Gloria Steinem who is the stepmother of Christian Bale, the man who played Patrick Bateman in the film. ...

    Not being able to distinguish fantasy or dream from reality is another aspect of a post modern film. Throughout the film the identities of the main characters are constantly being swapped around and mistaken for other people as critic Tony Rayns states in his review, “identikit personalities lead to recurrent cases of mistaken identity, intense emo...

    Adam Rockoff Jefferson, Going to Pieces: Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film, Weiner, Robert G, Journal of Popular Culture, November 2004; 38, 2; Proquest, Pg450 Alison Kelly, Imperial Bedroomsby Bret Easten Ellis, The Observer, Sunday 27 June 2010 Brian Lavery, Psycho therapy;Literature, The Sunday Times, 6 November 2005-Jaap Kooijman and Tarja Lain...

  3. Oct 28, 2011 · And, despite the rose-tinted view many hold when recalling movies from that decade as easy-on-the-eye-and-brain formulaic fantasy, comedy and violent action, the cinema of the ’80s actually reflected the complicated culture of its times; it was decidedly diverse, unquestionably interesting and assuredly surprising.

  4. Apr 14, 2020 · Whereas both the American Psycho novel and film are satires of the explosion of yuppie culture during the 1980s, and the consumerism that fueled it, Harron’s movie astutely turns its gaze from ...

  5. Apr 5, 2012 · Back in the 1990s, Whit Stillman wrote and directed what might be regarded as three modern American classics. While independent cinema grew saturated with dysfunctional Sundance dramas and pop culture solipsism, Stillman's so-called "yuppie trilogy" -- Metropolitan (1990), \r\nBarcelona (1994) and The Last Days of Disco\r\n (1998) -- instead offered comedic portraits of hyper-literate ...

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  7. Sep 25, 2012 · That same year Time magazine famously published the obituary of the yuppie. But that was way, way too early. To be sure, the self-confidence of the yuppie was shaken by the crisis of the early nineties, much as it was ten years later by the dot com crash and 9/11, but both times he (or more rarely she) would return with a vengeance.

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