The Party (1968) Poster

(1968)

User Reviews

Review this title
228 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
"Birdie Num Nums"
Instant_Palmer12 November 2020
Legendary Peter Sellers improvised his role using only Director Blake Edwards' 50 page film outline with no set scripted dialogue. Sellers is left to devise and improvise each scene. This required assembling a highly competent ensemble of supporting actors capable of keeping up with Peter, and they pulled it off very well. Larry David uses this same approach in his 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' in case you did not know.

The film's scenes were largely shot in sequence to preserve the comic flow, allowing Sellers to figure out what astoundingly destructive comic mess his character Hrundi Bakshi (the character being an actor brought in from India to lend authenticity to a period film) would innocently create next for his Hollywood producer boss while shooting the film on location, and the "big man" president of the studio, whose Beverly Hills VIP party Bakshi inadvertently gets an invite to attend.

Truly hilarious deadpanned slapstick scenes abound - one of the most memorable being the "Birdie Num Nums" bit.

This movie has captured an ever growing number of fans over the years, myself included.

One may be offended by the cliche' India culture stereotyping Sellers applies via his character's mannerisms and accent, but If you want to be compelled to laugh out-loud, this may be just the ticket.
48 out of 54 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
We have a saying in India
petra_ste6 April 2014
Is there a more iconic comedic prologue than The Party's, with Hrundi Bakshi (Peter Sellers, priceless), a bumbling actor involuntarily, repeatedly sabotaging some kind of schlocky adventure / period piece first by refusing to die, then by showing his wholly anachronistic watch and finally by blowing up the set while trying to tie his shoelaces? Because if there is, I can't think of one at the moment.

The movie belongs to veteran comedy director Blake Edwards and especially to Sellers, who provides an hilarious turn as Bakshi, a sweet, meek individual so clumsy and inclined to disaster, he is essentially the human version of a tornado. Material is droll, but at times so thin that with a lesser lead it would have collapsed - Sellers being who he is, the mere sight of him staring with awkward alarm at a toilet which refuses to stop flushing provokes laughter.

8,5/10
29 out of 36 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Inspired slapstick
moonspinner5525 January 2001
Blackballed bit-actor in Hollywood is mistakenly invited to a Tinsel Town party hosted by the same studio chief who wants him dead. Unusual comedy with little dialogue, lots of terrific visual gags and Peter Sellers at his peak (he's very low-keyed here, and immensely charming). Director Blake Edwards loses his footing in the final 15 minutes when the gathering gets out of hand (I can't recall one movie wherein a wild party sequence managed to be hilarious). Despite this, there's a lovely concluding scene between Sellers and a breathtaking Claudine Longet (who looks like a delicate flower), capped with Henry Mancini's wonderful score. "The Party" isn't full of dumb shtick. The slapstick is sometimes very smart, and Edwards doesn't condescend to the audience. Good fun! *** out of ****
38 out of 54 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Like Chaplin
jacob-4511 December 2004
Warning: Spoilers
I always find it strange that people think a comedy should have you rolling in your chair not so! There are movies that one gets a warm, funny feeling inside and that one appreciates the subtleties of the acting and set ups. Often a laugh a minute movie is forgotten quickly, but those movies that simmer and let the humor seep out slowly often linger in the mind.

The Party is a movie shot in the sixties with all the hang-ups and social undertones that were abundant then. I laughed myself silly then and today I still laugh with the benefit of hindsight and years of social and cultural change.

Peter Sellers' performance is on a level par with Chaplin; a rare achievement for any actor.
158 out of 175 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
Elvis' favorite movie..
Lirazel7 August 1999
What can you say about Peter Sellers? From the Goon Show, through the Ealing comedies, the Pink Panther films, up to Being There, he was consistently brilliant! Kubrick knew it, Blake Edwards knew it, and this movie does a lot to prove it to everyone else. Instead of making his stereotype just a vehicle for laughs, he brings out the pathos and beauty inherent in alienation..instead of using scripted antique gags as an invitation to walk through the role, he transcends each tired joke with impeccable timing and facial expressions. Even the silly sixties situations don't ruin the comedy here, as they did in Alice B. Toklas. In my opinion, this one is timeless, and should be seen by anyone who has a sense of humor.
115 out of 128 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Hilarious Peter Sellers vehicle in which he causes disaster at a posh gathering
ma-cortes3 April 2012
Superb and overblown comedy with Peter Sellers in sparkling form as one man show in which plays an Indian actor making life intolerable for all and causes wreak considerable havoc at a lush Hollywood party . Very funny comedy from the team responsible for the Inspector Clouseau series , as stars Peter Sellers , musician Henry Mancini and director Blake Edwards .

This release is an enjoyable comedy starred by the great Peter Sellers as the inept and bungler actor named Bakshi , role who along with Clouseau became a world-wide institution . Pacing of visual film is well-developed including a magnificent opening with Sellers and his trumpet , as the director with his knowledge of the mechanics of cinema gets entertainment and amusement . Several chuckles and gags , and sight jokes abound , the result of which is one of the funniest Blake Edwards films . The movie gets entertained and hilarious moments here and there , with some side-splitting situations . This slapstick contains funny scenes , never slowdown and laughters come quickly . Top-notch Peter Sellers who is an absolute walking disaster in a similar character to Clouseau , as botcher Bashki , everything he touches turns to ashes . It appears notorious secondaries as Gavin MacLeod , Steve Franken , Marge Champion and a gorgeous Claudine Longet . Lively and atmospheric music by habitual Henry Mancini .

The film is well penned and directed , as always , by Blake Edwards . Blake is a classic comedy filmmaker and director of his own dialogue , there's no doubt he knows what he's about . His stories are amusing and well-realized though uneven , but thanks to Sellers many movies stand out . He had successes with ¨Pink Panther¨ series who became him a world-wide celebrity as ¨A shot in dark¨ , ¨Return of pink panther , ¨Revenge of pink panther¨ , ¨Curse of Pink Panther¨ , ¨Pink Panther strikes again¨ , ¨Trail of Pink Panther¨ , ¨Son of Pink Panther¨ , among others . Since then , there have been many more hit-and-miss comedies , some wildly unsuitable vehicles for his second wife Julie Andrews as ¨The Tamarind seed¨ , ¨Darling Lili¨, ¨SOB¨ , ¨10¨ , ¨That's life¨ . His greatest hits were ¨The party¨ , the tranvestite comedy ¨Victor/Victoria¨ and of course the joyously ¨Breakfast at Tiffany's ¨. The flick will appeal to Peter Sellers fans . This is arguably one of the Blake Edwards' best . This consistently fun comedy titled ¨The party¨ deserves 'Two thumbs up' .
10 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Charming Blake Edwards slapstick comedy
lqualls-dchin27 January 2002
When I was working for the Museum of Modern Art, we had a small retrospective for Blake Edwards, and he selected "The Party" as the movie he wanted to open with: he felt it was his "purest" film comedy. After the opening sequence with the Peter Sellers character wrecking a movie set, the bulk of the film takes place during the night of a big Hollywood party (which the Sellers character is inadvertently invited to). In this, the film is as rigorous as Antonioni's "La Notte" (also set during the events of one day and night), and the sight gags build and accumulate in a manner that is reminiscent of Jacques Tati (with the same melancholic humor prevading the slapstick). The film is utterly charming, with some acerbic touches pricking the hypocrisies of Hollywood, and the film takes the time to let the characters (especially the two principals, played by Sellers and Claudine Longet in her only major film role) develop. It may not be as manic as parts of "The Pink Panther" but it's very funny in an even and sustained way.
49 out of 62 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Silly, juvenile fun
mls418224 May 2021
Innocent, clumsy but lovable Peter Sellers is out of his element among a group of phony, pretentious Beverly Hills fools. He is victim to circumstance, technology and some silly customs that are foreign to his experience. The result is sometimes hilarious.

Okay, first of all, just about everyone in this film is stupid. This is 2020 and most of us realize that Indian Americans are just as diverse as anyone else - ranging from brilliant and socially adept to the opposite of the spectrum. I realize this is dated and can be seen as offensive. I think the point of his character being Indian is that he is naive to some of the useless and ridiculous customs of the time as well as subtle changes in the culture. I don't think it was intended to be hurtful. I mean the man us the only likeable character in the movie! He isn't stupid, gauche or uncivilized. I think most of us would feel out of place and nervous in such a settimg. I do think it is pointless to portray the character as any race and am sorry people find it offensive. I like the character and don't think he represents anything but sincere and innocent. Hey, he gets the girl, right?

On a lighter note the film features murderess Claudine Longet who got less than a month in jail for killing her lover. Talk about something to be enraged about! On top of that she can't act or sing!
10 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Amazing film
penderowskia27 June 2020
I have just seen this film, and it is really funny. I am new to Mr. Sellers' filmography, and he's very funny and talented.
14 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Sight Gags with Water
RARubin6 April 2005
I wasn't till after I saw the Crime-Doc on TV about 60's "Moon River" singer Andy William's wife, Claudine Longet and her lover ski champion, Spider Williams would I have possibly recognized Peter Seller's mild love interest in The Party. Claudine is so nice to bumbling Hrundi. In truth, according to the documentary, Claudine in real life got what she wanted in Hollywood no matter what, but her role here is the opposite of type.

Are site gags funny for an-hour-an-a-half? Not always in The Party. How many ways can you embarrass yourself at an uncharacteristically stuffy Hollywood mogul's party? The answer is, endlessly. The bathroom scene with the toilet gives Sellers a wet laugh a second. Since there is a lake of water in every room, before long the cocktail dresses of 1968, and the tuxedo's of any era, end up in the soup. Ad laundry detergent and you have a bubble bath of sound stage proportions. Throw in a drunken waiter and a Gay mincing caterer, a control panel to open and shut floors, walls, and bars, and put on the ladies head falls upon falls plus toupee jokes. I think you're getting the idea.

Blake Edwards was trying to make a hip, swinging 60's comedy, but I think he missed the mark completely. If you are looking for sex, drugs, and LSD, this film looks more like Sinatra Vegas of an earlier era.
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The comedy classic that wasn't so much directed as choreographed.
mark.waltz13 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Timing is everything in comedy, and thus thrilling classic is probably the most continuously hysterical film that I have seen in years. This is one of those films where you must watch without distraction and without turning away for any reason. Those who dismiss comedy as not an art form should open up to films like this where every moment is staged to be precisely perfect down to the second.

This really has no major plot, just the goings on at a lavish Hollywood party where Sellers, as an accident prone Indian actor, shows up stag and unknowingly turns the evening into a series of accidents, aided by a drunken server, a few ditsy starlets, and just plain bad timing. While there are a few familiar faces involved (Marge Champion as the hostess and Gavin MacLeod with a toupee as a rather nasty guest), the supporting cast is mainly unknown actors who are directed to not react to the things going on, giving the assumption that they were simply to ignore everything going on around them, exposing pretentious behavior from the audacious guests.

The genius of Peter Sellers and director Blake Edwards surpassed the two Pink Panther films with this where every inconceivable accident happens to him. I don't find anything offensive in Sellers' portrayal of a Hindu man; in fact he's quite lovable in his flaws, gentility and sincerity. So while it may indeed be a mad, mad, mad, mad party, there's nothing maddening for the audience except perhaps the fact that it will take several viewings to capture everything going on.
14 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Birdie nom nom...
paul_haakonsen11 April 2021
The 1968 comedy "The Party" is indeed a timeless Blake Edwards comedy. And it is a very wonderful and hilarious movie that I always will associate with the great Peter Sellers.

The storyline in "The Party" is pretty straight forward and rather simplistic if you look at it objectively. And that is definitely not a hindrance to the movie. In fact, its simplicity is something that works well in favor of the movie. Especially so, since the movie is so amazingly brought to life by the wonderful character gallery and some very memorable acting performances.

"The Party" is a comedy that works so phenomenally well because of the characters in the story, as written by writers Blake Edwards, Tom Waldman and Frank Waldman. And it is a situational comedy that brings lots of laughs as the movie unfolds on the screen.

The dialogue in "The Party" is funny and well-written, and there are lots of very memorable and quotable lines being tossed around here, and especially Peter Sellers brings a lot of these to the screen.

It should be noted that the movie really clicks because of the phenomenal cast, which includes the likes of Peter Sellers, Steve Franken, Denny Miller and James Lanphier.

A movie like "The Party" would not have passed today, with all the political correctness, anti-stereotyping and other such mindless things that permeates Hollywood. Why? Well, you have Peter Sellers, a Caucasian, playing a Hindi named Hrundi V. Bakshi in the movie. A character that he portrays very well mind you.

"The Party" is a comedy that most certainly has withstood the test of time with excellency. It is a movie that you can watch again and again over the years, and it never wears old. If you haven't already seen "The Party", and you enjoy comedies and find yourself with the opportunity to watch it, you have to treat yourself to the experience. Because this is exactly what the title says, a party.

My rating of "The Party" lands on a most well-deserved seven out of ten stars.
6 out of 10 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Frightfully dull party
JamesTCT8 March 2005
I cant believe there is so much positive feedback for this film... did I watch the same film as you guys? I am a HUGE fan of Peter Sellers and I think the guy is genius, but this is far from his finest hour - OK Sellers is brilliant in this film, and all the problems of this film are not his fault, I blame Blake Edwards. This was meant to be some sort of silent film farce homage, but it seemed to be 10x slower paced than your average farce. The whole thing with the drunken waiter got old VERY fast and was so overused and unfunny, it had me cringing rather than laughing. Even Sellers genius couldn't save the many dull moments in this film, which consists of dull people talking about nothing in particular, Sellers listening to them, making unfunny comments and generally having his talent wasted. There were only a few sequences that were genuinely funny, the lost shoe sequence, the birdy num num sequence and the waiting for the toilet sequence. In between that comedy gold are interminable scenes of pure boredom as I try desperately to find something to laugh at. I cant understand why so many people find this a hilarious and classic Sellers film! And I love Sellers, I found the Pink Panther movies funny and even find stuff like Frank Spencer and Mr Bean funny (Rowan Atkinson undoubtedly stole a few ideas from this film but executed them far better) so i cant understand why I simply don't get this film at all.
41 out of 91 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
One of the funniest films ever made!
benosler28 February 2004
This film has to be regarded as a hilarious one-man-act by Peter Sellers. I saw it on its first run UK cinema release in 1969 and I've seen it at least a dozen times since. I would gladly watch it another dozen times; it always makes me laugh. The supporting cast perform adequately but Peter Sellers does all the work. He is simply one of the all-time greatest masters of great comedy timing. I was surprised to read so many negative comments on this site in association with this film. I can only surmise that they have come from a younger generation who have had their sense of humour surgically removed due to a force fed diet of unamusing US sitcoms. If you can't laugh at this film you must be birdie-num-num!
183 out of 208 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
10/10 AMAZING COMEDY
corneliablondeau28 June 2020
Sellers is great, this film is great and honestly all the recent bad reviewers need to rewatch this, and maybe then they will change their mind about it.
16 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Love this
angieporizkova4 July 2020
How can you not like this film, it's so funny. Sellers is just superb.
12 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
0 out of umpteen people found the following comment useful:-
JoeytheBrit12 August 2005
IMDb really should change that line to 0 out of umpteen people found the following comment corresponded with their preconceived opinion but, hey, my comments have received so many zeros that I'm starting to feel quite special…

First off, I've got to say I'm no great fan of Peter Sellers (and before you ask, I watched the film because I watch whatever the hell I feel like watching. Good films sometimes overcome their over-rated stars, and this film is fairly well regarded by a lot of knowledgeable people). Sellers was an over-rated actor in my opinion, with a limited repertoire that he exploited to the full (and kudos to him for that), and no amount of ardent fans telling me how wrong I am will sway me from an opinion formed from the evidence that's been shown to me at 24fps. That doesn't mean I think he has no talent – I just don't think he has as much of it as most other people seem to think (and, yes, I've seen DR. STRANGELOVE).

If I didn't know better I'd suspect that, in the opening scene of this film, writer/director Blake Edwards was having a sly dig at the self-indulgence Sellers so often displayed in his movies when working with a director too inexperienced or intimidated to rein in such egocentricity. Lampooning GUNGA DIN, Sellers blows that warning trumpet, and refuses to stop no matter how many times he's shot. The scene goes on beyond the bounds of decency until every other actor on the set is emptying their firearm into him. Still he trumpets; squeaky, breathless toots, tuneless laments aimed at the sky as he lies on his back. It works for me as a parody of Sellers rather than a parody of GUNGA DIN…

Wait a minute – don't click on that 'NO' button yet. Just because I don't subscribe to the 'Sellers was a comedy genius' line of thought doesn't mean I didn't like this film. In fact I did, and Sellers is actually quite good in it. He's blacked up, and employs an Indian accent that is probably considered offensive these days, but he manages to inject an intelligence and warmth into a character that, for most of the film, is simply the subject of a sequence of borderline slapstick mishaps. He's a stranger in a strange land, as is Michele Monet (Claudine Longet), his kindred spirit, and the land in which he finds himself is obsessed with beauty, success, and status. In his white shoes and red socks and tie he is totally at odds with the stylish and sophisticated West Coast party-goers, but their elegance is all on the surface, while Bakshi's is inside of him.

The movie is reminiscent of a silent movie, but more Tati than Chaplin, especially when it focuses on the hapless Bakshi's encounters with modern technology. There is no plot to speak of, just Bakshi wandering around studio head Fred Clutterbuck's (J. Edward McKinley) plush house, grinning inanely at all around him, trying to blend in as he increasingly stands out. The comic timing is often quite sublime, prompting a number of laugh-out-loud moments and, although the film falters very badly in the last third, the relationship that develops between Bakshi and Monet is quite touching. But the ending is woefully misjudged, and at odds with the pace and tone of the rest of the film. It dates the film badly, and comes across as fake and forced.
16 out of 37 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great!
blakemanrich3 July 2020
This is simply great. I'm a huge fan of Peter Sellers and this film is one of his bests.
12 out of 15 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
I'd tried to like it but....
elo-equipamentos4 July 2017
Since the first time in 1986 when l watched this comedy l was disappointed by the end, then l saw one more time on cable TV trying to see something more around 1998, nevetherless my opinion wasn't change, yesterday l pick up this DVD after twenty years to has the final opinion about this famous movie, the first half part is really good with some odds situations that are worth of note, which including the bathroom's scene, but the ending when all house is turns a total mess spoils the movie, more Blake Edwards isn't to any taste after all, so this movie is quite clear overrated to me, this kind of comedy didn't makes my head.

Resume:

First watch: 1986 / How many: 3 / Source: TV-Cable TV-DVD / Rating: 7.
8 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The best Party ever
schlesingerscat27 June 2020
I really wish to have been invited. The film is great, and Sellers delivers a charming performance.
14 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Loads of fun
gcd706 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
Very humorous film about a clumsy actor from India who is accidentally invited to a party where he immediately begins to wreak havoc.

Blake Edwards (in much better form than he has been recently) sets the tempo well and after a slow first fifteen minutes, he keeps things moving well, while wisely leaving the bulk of the work to Peter Sellers, who easily steals the show with his riotous portrayal of Hrundi V. Bakshi, the misfit Indian. Phrases such as 'Birdie NumNums' and 'Howdy Pardner' will alone be enough to set you roaring with laughter. And a subplot involving a waiter who drinks everything he should be serving will keep you entertained meanwhile.

Still loads of fun twenty-five years on.

Sunday, March 28, 1993 - T.V.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
One of the best comedies of all time
rearkell16 August 2013
When I first saw The Party in the theater in 1968, I broke down crying from laughing so much. Watching it again recently, it has - like all great comedies - stood the test of time quite well. A beautifully understated performance by Peter Sellers, playing an aspiring actor from India. Also an incredibly funny performance by Steve Franken (aka Chatsworth Osborne Junior from the Dobie Gillis Show) as a waiter who keeps getting drunker and drunker throughout the "party". Also a very nice performance by Claudine Longet. Two of the funniest scenes are in the beginning, when, as a bit actor in Hollywood, Peter Sellers refuses to die on cue in a Gunga Din-type scene, and then accidentally steps on a detonator that prematurely blows up a fortress before the cameras are rolling. But there are funny scenes from beginning to end. One of my favorite quotes is: "In India, we don't think who we are. We know who we are." The growing friendship between Claudine Longet and Peters Sellers is also done quite well
17 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Laugh until tears rolled down both cheeks.
max von meyerling31 August 2009
Warning: Spoilers
I saw this when it first came out and I remember liking it but wondered if there wasn't something more. Like some of the more undervalued films of the era they were held to an unreasonably high standard. Some of the more regarded films have aged rather badly while others which disappointed have held up rather better.

Watching THE PARTY the other night I found myself laughing out loud alone in a room. The toilet scene had me uncontrollably. There is no plot of course, just a series of sight gags. It's a throwback to the Mack Sennet days. You arrived at a location with some notes and started filming and saw what happened. Comedy was built and not written out. Some gags are planned but it was incumbent on the artist to build on them. In this case the artist was the comedian-Peter Sellers. The director was more or less the enabler.

Sellers does the entire film in a slightly broad Indian accent but while he is a pratt he's not a total idiot. He is moral and without a mean bone in his body. He's just a clumsy screw up and what else would you want for a comedy? Of course he was responsible for more bad pseudo-Indian accents than anyone else in history.

And Steve Franken is superb in support as the drunken waiter, a classic comedy part, known as a pi55 act in English Music Hall. This is one of the classical touches Edwards uses. There are more than a few hints that this film is something of an answer to Jacque Tati's sublime PLAY TIME (1967) where instead of making a film on a bespoke set the size of a small city it is done on a single sound stage.

The rest is just for laughs. No message, no lesson. Just comedy tonight.

And one irony, The "Good Girl", Claudine Longet, who needs to be protected from evil old Mr. Divot (!) the lecherous producer (are there any other kind) played by the follicularly devious Gavin MacLeod, was later tried for shooting to death ski star Spider Savitch. She did it but it was ruled an accident. But that's another movie.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Painful "Party"
frankf-103 July 2013
It is unsettling to read all the rave reviews "The Party" gets here. Throughout the film I kept wondering if Blake Edwards and Sellers actually thought this was a funny film. I found it painful... almost embarrassing, to watch. I couldn't believe how trite were the ideas - including the floor opening over a swimming pool, which was great decades before when done in "Its a Wonderful Life," but just one of many duds in Party. And every cliché is dwelt on for a minimum of 10 minutes. Filling a house with bubbles was good for 5 minutes on I Love Lucy, but it is built to operatic dimensions here - while maintaining a frightening level of boredom. The drunk waiter, for about 15 minutes, took over the movie. I wish I could say it was a relief, but his stumbling around and falling on people added zip to the "fun." Could someone please tell me what was funny about the hostess falling into the pool the first, second and/or third time?

Thank gawd Sellers made Strangelove and the Pink Panther flicks! I'd hate to have his reputation rest on this junior high school video.
29 out of 67 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Humor and critique
Seshet16 February 1999
Warning: Spoilers
The Party offers a remarkably skillful blend of humor and critique. I'd like to offer a somewhat serious but very informal observation of this very clever, funny movie. We've got a non-Westerner (Hrundi Bakshi, played by Peter Sellers) trying desperately to fit into American culture. We've also got a young French woman (Michele Monet, played by Claudine Longet), who is also trying to fit in. Neither of them like or understand what they see. Hrundi seems incompetent, but when he's not bending to American society we recognize that he's really intelligent, intuitive, funny, and caring.

As Hrundi wends his way through the hosts' gigantic house, he observes the pitfalls of the American way: drugs, alcoholism, greed, deceit, vanity, materialism, sexism, and racism, to name a few. He also observes societal constraints. Michele sees these things too, and she is also the target of sexism and even, perhaps, of misogyny (her date tries to force himself on her and, later, demands that she leave with him or lose any chance of a film career). They interact with people who think they know who they are but, as Hrundi infers, don't really know who they are.

The climax occurs when Hrundi demands that the hosts' daughter and her friends wash an elephant they have ignominiously painted (a representation of ideological protest gone wrong, since it's more for entertainment than for anything else). When they start washing, the party turns into a real party. Social lines are blurred as people in different social levels are equalized, for example, when some of the housekeeping staff joins the party. Constraints and boundaries are laid aside and forgotten. The American guests, a group of Russian entertainers, Hrundi, and Michele all join in and have fun together. Not everyone joins the party; the older Americans refuse to participate. But we get the idea that they and their ideals have been vanquished.

In the end of the movie, we get a strong and uplifting suggestion that Hrundi and Michele are going to be spending more time together.

Subtle humor, clever slapstick, romance, and serious issues -- The Party has them all in good abundance. The best aspect of this movie, however, is that it examines serious themes through masterful,unrelenting humor.
102 out of 121 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
An error has occured. Please try again.

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed