Bret Easton Ellis: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Content added Content deleted
m (trope=>work)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{creator}}
{{creator}}
[[File:Ellis.jpg|thumb|300px|Bret Easton Ellis in 2010]]
Los Angeles-born writer who rose to fame in [[The Eighties]] as one of the "Literary Brat Pack"-- and probably the most successful of this group. Works include:
'''Bret Easton Ellis''' is a [[Los Angeles]]-born writer who rose to fame in [[The Eighties]] as one of the "Literary Brat Pack"-- and probably the most successful of this group. Works include:


* ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]]'' (1985)
* ''[[Less Than Zero]]'' (1985)
* ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]'' (1987)
* ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]'' (1987)
* ''[[American Psycho]]'' (1991)
* ''[[American Psycho]]'' (1991)
Line 13: Line 14:


----
----
{{creatortropes}}
=== This author's works provide examples of: ===

* [[As Himself]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]'' is narrated in first person by Bret Easton Ellis, the successful writer of ''[[American Psycho]]'' and other novels. At the beginning, it sounds autobiographical, but then completely descends to fiction.
* [[As Himself]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]'' is narrated in first person by Bret Easton Ellis, the successful writer of ''[[American Psycho]]'' and other novels. At the beginning, it sounds autobiographical, but then completely descends to fiction.
* [[Black Comedy]]: As pitch black as it gets. All of his books, no matter how violent or full of [[Squick]], contain at least three laugh out loud moments and lots of sly dialogue.
* [[Black Comedy]]: As pitch black as it gets. All of his books, no matter how violent or full of [[Squick]], contain at least three laugh out loud moments and lots of sly dialogue.
Line 21: Line 21:
* [[Dead Baby Comedy]]: Tasteless jokes are a recurring motif in several of the books; arguably, ''[[American Psycho]]'' ''is'' this.
* [[Dead Baby Comedy]]: Tasteless jokes are a recurring motif in several of the books; arguably, ''[[American Psycho]]'' ''is'' this.
* [[The Eighties]]: and how (though ''[[Glamorama]]'' and ''[[Lunar Park]]'' are set later)
* [[The Eighties]]: and how (though ''[[Glamorama]]'' and ''[[Lunar Park]]'' are set later)
* [[The Film of the Book]]: ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]]'', ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''. The opening of ''Imperial Bedrooms'' (the sequel to ''Less Than Zero'') gets very [[Literary Agent Hypothesis|meta]] with this, and has the characters commenting on how little the film of ''Less Than Zero'' had to do with their experiences.
* [[The Film of the Book]]: ''[[Less Than Zero]]'', ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''. The opening of ''Imperial Bedrooms'' (the sequel to ''Less Than Zero'') gets very [[Literary Agent Hypothesis|meta]] with this, and has the characters commenting on how little the film of ''Less Than Zero'' had to do with their experiences.
* [[Gainax Ending]]: Almost all of his books have this, but most especially in ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[Glamorama]]''.
* [[Gainax Ending]]: Almost all of his books have this, but most especially in ''[[American Psycho]]'' and ''[[Glamorama]]''.
* [[Gorn]]: In all the books to some extent, but reaches an apex in ''[[American Psycho]]''.
* [[Gorn]]: In all the books to some extent, but reaches an apex in ''[[American Psycho]]''.
Line 27: Line 27:
* [[Hookers and Blow]]: and sometimes just blow. And pot. And heroin. And animal tranquilizers.
* [[Hookers and Blow]]: and sometimes just blow. And pot. And heroin. And animal tranquilizers.
* [[Life Embellished]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]''.
* [[Life Embellished]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]''.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]]'' and ''Imperial Bedrooms'' are both named for [[Elvis Costello]] songs.
* [[Literary Allusion Title]]: ''[[Less Than Zero]]'' and ''Imperial Bedrooms'' are both named for [[Elvis Costello]] songs.
* [[Los Angeles]] and [[New York City]]: primary settings for his novels.
* [[Los Angeles]] and [[New York City]]: primary settings for his novels.
* [[No Ending]]: ''The Rules of Attraction,'' ''[[American Psycho]]''.
* [[No Ending]]: ''The Rules of Attraction,'' ''[[American Psycho]]''.
** ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]'', in fact, ends ''mid-sentence''.
** ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]'', in fact, ends ''mid-sentence''.
* [[No Going Steady]], occasionally with a dash of [[Love Triangle]] / [[Love Dodecahedron]]
* [[No Going Steady]], occasionally with a dash of [[Love Triangle]] / [[Love Dodecahedron]]
* [[Old Shame]]: Averted-- his first published novel, ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]]'', was a success. Ellis later said that it's "pretty good writing for someone who was 19".
* [[Old Shame]]: Averted-- his first published novel, ''[[Less Than Zero]]'', was a success. Ellis later said that it's "pretty good writing for someone who was 19".
* [[Parental Obliviousness]]: ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]]'', ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
* [[Parental Obliviousness]]: ''[[Less Than Zero]]'', ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
* [[Our Vampires Are Different]]: "The Secrets of Summer" in ''The Informers'': vampires here can (and do) eat raw meat or drink animal blood-- and when they consume the blood of drug users they get the effects whether they want them or not.
* [[Our Vampires Are Different]]: "The Secrets of Summer" in ''The Informers'': vampires here can (and do) eat raw meat or drink animal blood-- and when they consume the blood of drug users they get the effects whether they want them or not.
* [[The Rashomon]]: Paul and Sean tell conflicting, contradictory accounts of their relationship in ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
* [[The Rashomon]]: Paul and Sean tell conflicting, contradictory accounts of their relationship in ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
* [[Recursive Canon]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]'' (Patrick Bateman exists and so does the novel ''[[American Psycho]]'').
* [[Recursive Canon]]: ''[[Lunar Park]]'' (Patrick Bateman exists and so does the novel ''[[American Psycho]]'').
* [[Seinfeldian Conversation]]: All of his books have long drawn out conversations about shallow topics, with the Business Card scene from the book and movie of ''[[American Psycho]]'' being the most famous.
* [[Seinfeldian Conversation]]: All of his books have long drawn out conversations about shallow topics, with the Business Card scene from the book and movie of ''[[American Psycho]]'' being the most famous.
* [[There Are No Adults]]: ''[[Less Than Zero (Literature)|Less Than Zero]],'' ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''
* [[There Are No Adults]]: ''[[Less Than Zero]],'' ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Several, but primarily [[American Psycho|Patrick Bateman.]]
* [[Unreliable Narrator]]: Several, but primarily [[American Psycho|Patrick Bateman.]]
* [[The Verse]]: Characters from previous novels show up in later works, and Patrick Bateman actually debuted (with a somewhat different personality) in ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
* [[The Verse]]: Characters from previous novels show up in later works, and Patrick Bateman actually debuted (with a somewhat different personality) in ''[[The Rules of Attraction]]''.
Line 47: Line 47:
[[Category:Authors]]
[[Category:Authors]]
[[Category:Bret Easton Ellis]]
[[Category:Bret Easton Ellis]]
[[Category:Screenwriters]]
[[Category:Pages with working Wikipedia tabs]]

Latest revision as of 05:06, 22 September 2021

/wiki/Bret Easton Elliscreator
Bret Easton Ellis in 2010

Bret Easton Ellis is a Los Angeles-born writer who rose to fame in The Eighties as one of the "Literary Brat Pack"-- and probably the most successful of this group. Works include:

Alongside the controversy of these books, Ellis is a fairly public figure, whose Twitter account and public quotes skirt the edges of misogyny and misanthropy. In short, Ellis is a terrific writer who isn't all right in the head.


Bret Easton Ellis provides examples of the following tropes: