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Theatre

Review: American Psycho

Smith makes a killing in a sophisticated production

January 17, 2014 18:27

ByJohn Nathan, John Nathan

2 min read

Matt Smith packs more defined pecs than you might expect of a former Doctor Who. The ripped torso rises out of the Almeida's stage as smoothly as a cassette ejecting from a high-end, late-20th-century tape deck. Smith is the latest incarnation of Patrick Bateman, who lives in the raging materialism of late-20th-century New York and whose favourite objects include his Sony Walkman and his body.

Resurrected for Rupert Goold's inaugural production as the Almeida Theatre's chief, this is the latest incarnation of Bateman, the serial-killer banker at the centre of Bret Easton Ellis's chilling 1991 novel, and also the movie that followed starring Christian Bale.

Smith's version gets less scary as the evening goes on, not because the actor doesn't convince as the pitiless heart of the show. It is just that, unlike Ellis, Goold is more interested in seducing his audience than in disturbing them.

The murders are easy on the eye. Blood red looks good against the gleaming white minimalism of Es Devlin's set. I don't buy the point made in the programme by Mary Harron, director of the movie version, that the extreme violence of the book is as unsuited to the stage as it is to film. On stage, you don't have to be as graphic as on film. There are subtle ways to show, suggest and describe horror, even when the subject concerns the sadistic use of rats. And the most horrifying of the novel's killings don't make the final cut in Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa's book.