In the end, Bateman did not give a clear answer in the movie. It is interesting to see this understanding on the Internet:
Bateman went to Paul Allen's original residence near the end, but found that it has been decorated and the remains of the original storage are also mysterious. disappeared. The response of an old woman (which seems to be Paul's family) is puzzling: she found Bateman mysteriously and slightly flustered and asked him to leave quickly, so as not to cause them trouble. The original and common understanding was that the murder was indeed illusory. Paul Allen had indeed disappeared or went to London. The decorated residence and disappeared wreckage just showed that everything about the murder was in Bateman's imagination. But the strange behavior of the old woman has been unable to make sense.
Perhaps all of this should be understood like this: Paul was indeed killed by Bateman, and other murders did happen. His family, who thought Paul was missing, saw so many corpses when they finally cleaned up his room. The first reaction was that Paul was a serial killer. He hid the corpse in his room after committing multiple murders. That is why it is specifically explained in the film that Bateman moved Paul's body elsewhere), and then he tried to escape the law by "disappearing". As family members, they did not want to inform the police of what Paul was supposed to do, which would cause trouble and make their Paul a suspect, so they secretly decorated the apartment and kept it secret. When Bateman came to visit, she immediately ran to see the room where the corpse was stored. The old woman obviously thought that Bateman might know the facts of Paul's murder, so she told her to leave in a tone of warning and persuasion as if she had never been there.
I am inclined towards the illusionist. His YY is expressed with a pen in the book, which corresponds more to the Psycho in the title. I even think the real part of the play is just a bunch of middle-class emptiness from beginning to end. Men booked nonsense in one restaurant after another. Everything is as orderly as the restaurant itself. Recently
, I have watched a lot of these kinds of movies.. Actually I want to say that after I heard Nargaroth's sample in the falling water dog last time At the end, American Psycho heard a familiar monologue. Shining sampled Bale's monologue at the end of the album IV-The Errie Cold’s last song Claws Of Perdition in 2005. No wonder I think these Swedes How come English is so standard.
In addition, the Bale on this poster is really like Mahone.
PS: This movie is really influential in the black metal world. Their American fellow Krieg also published an EP by Patrick Bateman in 2004, which is an impromptu. The record of the creation, the inside page of the record says, this conceptual record was recorded without any rehearsal and specific creation, and there is no song title. It is only marked with I, II, III, IV, V, and some movies are interspersed in the middle. I don’t know if Shining’s move was influenced by Krieg.
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