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    Menil Time

    Controversial author swears he's no Internet troll: Inside the warped mind of Bret Easton Ellis

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 28, 2013 | 12:44 pm

    Does the great artist ever owe his audience self portraits, and if so, how like life must they be? This was the question that struck me as I gazed at celebrated Belgian artist Luc Tuymans’s “Self Portrait, 1994” in the Tuymans exhibition Nice. at the Menil Collection, while I thought about the novels and internet presence of bestselling and ever controversial author Bret Easton Ellis.

    I stood amid the sometimes distant, yet always startling portraits of Nice. because I would soon be having a conversation with Ellis about his upcoming conversation with Tuymans at the Menil.

    The Menil describes this talk as a meeting between two “social and cultural provocateurs,” while touting the commonality of the two men’s “distinctively dark and dispassionate world views.” Yet, as I studied the green shaded figure in “Self Portrait” as he looked in profile away from the viewer, I kept thinking on the constant portraits of self the world now requires of artists.

    Ellis seemed a bit resigned that there would always be those who think he’s “a douche” who is “just trolling on the Internet.”

    Bret Easton Ellis seems to be a writer who enjoys creating versions of himself for readers and followers. He’s constantly in Internet trouble for statements he makes about everything from his objections to the possible casting of Matt Bomer in Fifty Shades of Grey to calling the Nobel Prize for literature a joke after the announcement of Alice Munro’s win. To read an interview with Ellis is to read about an interviewer who is paranoid that whatever Ellis says he will immediately contradict in the next interview.

    And perhaps in the ultimate act of a writerly distorted self portraits, in his 2005 novel Lunar Park, author Bret Easton Ellis makes very bad things happen to his first-person narrator, a man named Bret Easton Ellis, author of the bestselling novels Less Than Zero and American Psycho.

    Not an Internet Troll

    When I talked to Ellis, I had to ask if he would consider the provocateur moniker accurate.

    “I’m a real opinionated person,” he admitted. “That’s it. I feel I’m pretty authentic. I’m not out to get anybody. I don’t believe in hate speech. I do believe in free speech. I don’t believe in personally attacking people. I get a lot of flack because I have opinions that aren’t popular, but they’re only opinions.

    "It’s a normal part of being human to want to look at yourself, investigate, and comment on it. Now you can also condemn that as total narcissism, but I guess it really depends."

    Later in our conversation, Ellis seemed a bit resigned that there would always be those who think he’s “a douche” who is “just trolling on the Internet.” Still he insists that provoking is not a motivating force behind any of his writing.

    Ellis believes if he set out to intentionally be a provocateur, it wouldn’t work. “If you’re consciously out to shock people or provoke people, it gets old so fast. I don’t operate at that level,” he explained.

    At the same time, Ellis doesn’t believe in an “invisible, polite” literary persona for writers. “I don’t know why in this age when you can just express yourself, why people wouldn’t.”

    Perhaps these types of ideas led Luc Tuymans to pick Ellis for this unique painter/writer conversation, which will be the first in-person meeting between these two fans of each others’ work.

    Menil Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art, Toby Kamps, explaining the genesis of the event said: “This is Luc’s idea. He’s a voracious reader and — I think — is fascinated with our national psyche (or psycho, in the case of Bret Easton Ellis).”

    Not an American Psycho

    When I asked Ellis if he thought of his work as representing our national psyche or psycho, he wasn’t so sure.

    “I feel that I write much more personal work than these kind of sweeping sociological studies," he said. "Every work that I’ve done comes from personal space, usually one of pain, something’s bothering me or I’m dreadfully obsessed over something that’s going wrong in my life, and then I begin to explore it in fiction and put it into a fictional context." He finds writing can be a kind of therapy.

    Even Ellis most famous, revered (and reviled by some) novel, American Psycho, was somewhat therapeutic to write. The novel, which became a cult hit film starring Christian Bale before he was Batman and is now set to become a West End musical starring Matt Smith after he’s The Doctor, perhaps made a statement that Ellis never set out to make.

    Ellis noted that many people thought the novel was some “sweeping indictment of yuppie culture,” but these many years later Ellis sees the novel as really about his “frustration as a young man entering adulthood and finding adulthood and society really false and filled with poses and mask. It’s just a book about me kicking and screaming into adulthood.”

    The Artist as a Portraitist

    And as Ellis spoke about how personal some of his fiction is, I flashed back to the Tuymans “Self Portrait” and had to ask Ellis if, in a way, that’s what he was doing with words instead of paint. Is the writer also a self portraitist?

    “I felt that ever since I first started writing. It was a way of understanding myself,” he affirmed and went on saying, “Every book was sort of an investigation of where I was at a certain point in my life. People ask me: ‘Why haven’t you ever written a memoir?’ and I say I have, I have written a memoir.

    “I think it’s normal. Why do you think probably 90 percent of pictures taken now are selfies. It’s a normal part of being human to want to look at yourself, investigate, and comment on it. Now you can also condemn that as total narcissism, but I guess it really depends on how you approach it. It’s not as if Luc as been doing hundreds of self-portraits and not as if I’m wholly writing about Bret Ellis, but it seems natural to me.”

    So what does the artist owe the audience?

    “Just to be an authentic person. True to themselves and true to their art. Just to be an honest artist,” was his reply.

    The Bret Easton Ellis & Luc Tuymans Conversation and Book-signing begins at 6 p.m. Tuesday at The Menil. The event is sold out, but will be broadcast outdoors for guests seated on the the north lawn.

    Novelist Bret Easton Ellis

    Bret Easton Ellis head shot
    Photo by © Jeff Burton
    Novelist Bret Easton Ellis
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    Movie Review

    New horror movie Faces of Death puts a modern twist on cult classic

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 10, 2026 | 4:00 pm
    Dacre Montgomery in Faces of Death
    Photo courtesy of of IFC Films
    Dacre Montgomery in Faces of Death.

    True horror fans will likely be familiar with the 1978 cult film Faces of Death, which purported to be a documentary showing real-life killings in gory detail. It didn’t, of course, but that didn’t stop rumors from continuing to spread for decades. Now, almost 50 years and multiple sequels later, comes a new version of Faces of Death, an actual movie that pays homage to the original in interesting ways.

    Margot (Barbie Ferreira) works at a YouTube-like company called Kino as a content moderator, flagging videos that violate the company’s policies. This means her job often involves seeing some truly despicable things from all manner of depraved people. One day, though, she comes across a video that seems a little too real, and after seeing more similar videos, she starts to believe they’re genuine murders.

    Going against her company NDA, she starts to investigate the videos on her own, which puts her on the radar of Arthur (Dacre Montgomery), who is actually kidnapping people and killing them on camera through methods seen in the original Faces of Death film. It’s not long before Arthur tracks her down, with a plan to make her one of his next victims.

    Written and directed by Daniel Goldhaber (How to Blow Up a Pipeline) and co-written by Isa Mazzei, the film is not so much scary as it is creepy, with the occasional gross-out sequence. The idea of having someone emulate the killings in the cult film is a good idea, and pairing it with the modern-day attention economy — in which content creators go to increasing lengths for clicks — is a clever twist on a concept that other films have done.

    The film as a whole is a commentary on how social media and video sharing sites have often decided to prioritize profits over the well-being of their users. Margot is shown allowing videos involving violence and sexual assault to stay on the site while nixing ones depicting how to use Narcan or demonstrating putting on a condom on a banana. Josh (Jermaine Fowler), Margot’s boss, is even explicit in the company mandate that outrageous videos drive views.

    While Arthur has the makings of a good villain, there are few attempts to make him seem truly diabolical. His kidnappings often seem more spur-of-the-moment than calculated, and even though he has a well thought-out dungeon at home, the house’s location in the suburbs seems to make him vulnerable to easy discovery. Goldhaber and Mazzei leave more than a few unanswered questions along the way that take away from the intensity of the story.

    Ferreira is yet another actor from Euphoria who’s capitalizing on her exposure from that show. She plays Margot’s increasing anxiety well, and when the action ratchets up in the final act, she meets the moment in a satisfying way. Montgomery returns to the vibe he had while playing the evil Billy on Stranger Things, and even though his character doesn’t fully live up to his potential, Montgomery sells his evil for all it’s worth.

    The new Faces of Death may not be what some are expecting given the reputation of the previous films, but it’s a solid horror/thriller that uses the brand as a launching pad into something different. It doesn’t make much of a dent in the scare department, but it does give its violence and gore a degree of relevance in today’s often desensitized world.

    ---

    Faces of Death is now playing in theaters.

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