Tom Cruise Inspired Christian Bale’s Performance in ‘American Psycho’ 1129
The Big Picture o4q5z
- Christian Bale drew inspiration from Tom Cruise’s intense friendliness with « nothing behind the eyes » for his portrayal of Patrick Bateman in
American Psycho
. - Both Tom Cruise and Patrick Bateman strive to fit in and conform to societal expectations.
- While Cruise has never played a character exactly like Bateman, his other roles showcase similar qualities and an understanding of Bateman’s personality makeup.
Christian Bale is one of Hollywood’s finest actors. If there’s any actor that has continued the legacies of Paul Muni and Daniel Day-Lewis by being true acting chameleons, it’s him. With one of the most one-of-a-kind metabolisms in human history that allows him to truly take on whatever shape he needs to, from a scrawny racer in Ford v Ferrari to the big gut and bald-headed Dick Cheney in Vice, few actors have been as shape-shifting as him. American Psycho is the role that officially made him a star and forced people to take notice of him. It wasn’t just his chiseled body and empty commercialized voice that made his performance a revelation, but also the behavioral traits he stole from an actually not-all-that-surprising source that helped him unlock Bateman from within.

American Psycho 2l2s4b
In New York City in 1987, a handsome, young urban professional, Patrick Bateman (Christian Bale), lives a second life as a gruesome serial killer by night. The cast is filled by the detective (Willem Dafoe), the fiance (Reese Witherspoon), the mistress (Samantha Mathis), the coworker (Jared Leto), and the secretary (Chloë Sevigny). This is a biting, wry comedy examining the elements that make a man a monster.
- Release Date
- April 13, 2000
- Director
- Mary Harron
- Runtime
- 102
- Main Genre
- Crime
- Studio
- Lionsgate Films
Who Is Patrick Bateman in ‘American Psycho’? 5r1y73
As Bateman says at the beginning of American Psycho, there is an idea of who he is, but he is simply not there. While many have tried to argue that this is meant to be read on a deeper level as insight into a once-good man who’s been fully consumed by capitalism, the reality is that it’s probably far more literal than anyone thought. If you look across interviews with original book authorBret Easton Ellis and film co-writer and director Mary Harron, they attest that the book and subsequent film could only truly work when viewed as a dark satirical comedy skewering the fragility of the male ego in an ultra-capitalist society.
With that logic in mind, it makes more sense to view Patrick Bateman as less a human being with traditional motivations and more like someone impersonating a human being. When Bateman tries to do « normal » things like talk about important issues to think about in the current world or describe why he loves his favorite music albums, his voice slips into the default state of an « as seen on TV » sales rep as dictated by a teleprompter. So, with all that said, when Christian Bale took on this assignment and understood that he was playing a humanoid creature that can only simulate what it’s like to be truly human, who did he turn to for inspiration? Tom Cruise.
How Did Tom Cruise Inspire Christian Bale’s Patrick Bateman? 421032
Yes, Tom Cruise. The death-defying, cinema-saving icon himself inspired American Psycho‘s Patrick Bateman. In a 2009 interview with Mary Harron, she said that Bale once called her and said that he had a light bulb moment. In trying to nail how « Martian-like » Bateman was and how he was « watching what people did and trying to work out the right way to behave, » Bale stumbled upon a conversation between Tom Cruise and David Letterman. Bale made note of how Cruise « just had this very intense friendliness with nothing behind the eyes, » and he was inspired by this energy. She didn’t elaborate much beyond this, but it’s still a goldmine.
Cruise has garnered a lot of respect throughout the years, being consistently touted as both a supremely talented and versatile actor and one of the nicest, most magnetic people you could possibly be around. But that reputation has always been underlined with this unspoken acceptance that he seems… let’s just say « intense. » It’s too easy to pin this all on the couch-jumping incident and his « I am the last true movie star and I will fight for that title with my dying breath » energy. The way he throws himself into everything he does with too much energy is a bit jarring. the time he got water sprayed in his face at a red carpet event for War of the Worlds and mercilessly chewed the prankster out by constantly asking « Why’d you do that? » all while smiling the biggest smile he could possibly muster? Or how eager he is for us to see him jumping off the top of a mountain or dangling off of a plane in midair? Yes, it’s a little… strange.
Tom Cruise and Patrick Bateman Both Want To Be the Best 6584a
With this in mind, it makes the black humor of Patrick Bateman even funnier than it already was. You start to look more closely at American Psycho for Tom Cruise-shaped Easter eggs, seeing if Bateman does something that can create a direct link. The way Cruise talks on talk shows, especially when he’s going into sales rep mode, is most evident when Patrick goes on one of his signature speeches about the wonders of his mediocre taste in music. The Huey Lewis rant has been picked apart to death and is arguably the most manic of his outbursts, but the Cruise-ian element is how unwavering he is once he gets going.

Tom Cruise Made a Blink-and-You-Miss-It Cameo in a Brat Pack Western 2h1m43
Tom Cruise plays a Western villain! But only for a few seconds…
Paul Allen (Jared Leto) asking if he’s wearing a raincoat does absolutely nothing to stop Bateman from preaching the wonders of conformity, or capping him with an ax, for that matter. It calls to mind the way Cruise can hold an audience under his spell, be it when he’s convincing Rod Tidwell (Cuba Gooding, Jr.) to keep him as his agent in Jerry Maguire, or how he holds the attention of an entire audience of men’s rights activists when he’s lecturing them in Magnolia. Outside his music monologuing, the other big thing about Bateman that fits Cruise’s sensibility is summarized in his assertion, « I want to fit in. » By all s, Cruise’s entire life has been devoted to making himself the biggest star in the world, and doing what it takes to maintain that position.
At almost every turn, he made the right choice in shifting sets to satisfy what audiences wanted from him. He’s worked with auteur directors like Tony Scott and Francis Ford Coppola in the ’80s, then aligned himself with the Mission: Impossible franchise. He’s also stretched his dramatic acting muscles with films like Jerry Maguire and Magnolia in the ’90s and has committed himself to being the biggest action star in the world in the 21st century with projects like Top Gun: Maverick. With some notable exceptions (we do not speak of Knight and Day), Cruise has a knack for morphing into what audiences would respond to at the moment. Patrick Bateman’s whole philosophy is fitting himself into whatever the culture around him tells him is cool.
Tom Cruise Has Played Characters Similar to American Psycho’s Patrick Bateman 554a4y
Although Tom Cruise has never given a performance quite like Bale’s in American Psycho, you can find Bateman-esque qualities in other roles. In Collateral, he was a sociopath assassin who funneled his philosophy of life into murder. In Magnolia, he was a charismatic public speaker masking a deep-seated insecurity over his relationship with his father. Jerry Maguire features him as a powerful white-collar agent questioning his sense of what’s important in his life. Cruise has the ability to imbue his characters with a sense of clear focus and intensity that can communicate an undertone of rumbling anxiety and wavering conviction, much like how Bale can communicate Bateman’s progressing crumbling of self.
Tom Cruise’s Dedication to His Work Only Intensifies 2c6d5z
American Psycho‘s legacy has only grown in recent years, thanks in no small part to Christian Bale going on to have such an incredible career. The character of Patrick Bateman has been analyzed and misrepresented, becoming a poster boy for things he wasn’t supposed to. It feels like he has become somewhat divorced and distorted from the relatively straightforward consumerism satire from which he was born.
In a similar vein, Tom Cruise’s career also feels as if it has evolved from what he once was. Long gone are the days of him as a cocky underdog with an unexpected empathetic undercurrent, and instead we have a man who constantly risks his life on-screen for our pleasure. As the behavioral layers gradually peeled away to uncover Bateman’s deep existential insecurity and narcissism in American Psycho, so too, did the acting layers gradually peel away to reveal Tom Cruise’s film choices and priority to please all audiences. It goes to show how far a killer work ethic and unbridled ion can take you — for better or for worse.
American Psycho is available to watch on Peacock in the U.S.