
In such works as “Less Than Zero” and
“American Psycho” Brett Easton Ellis brilliantly dissects
contemporary American society, a culture in which too much
is never enough. Now, adapting his own acclaimed novel for
the screen, he returns to the Los Angeles of the early
1980’s with a multi-strand narrative that deftly balances a
vast array of characters who represent both the top of the
heap (a Hollywood dream merchant, a dissolute rock star, an
aging newscaster) and the bottom (a voyeuristic doorman, an
amoral ex-con).
Connecting all his intertwining strands are the
quintessential Ellis protagonists—a group of beautiful,
blonde young men and women who sleep all day and party all
night, doing drugs—and one another—with abandon, never
realizing that they are dancing on the edge of a volcano.
Filmed with uncommon glamour and grit by acclaimed
Australian director Gregor Jordan (“Ned Kelly,” “Buffalo
Soldiers”), “The Informers” is an alternately blistering and
chilling portrait of hedonism run amuck.
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