Parker Posey was the queen of indie films in the 90's, her attitude and line delivery mad her a indie cool new directors a favorite. Party Girl was made in New York in 1995 by a first time filmmaker,
starring an actress who, except for a notable supporting turn in a Richard
Linklater comedy, had had only small character parts in independent films.
Party Girl was accepted into Sundance that year and garnered only a limited
theatrical run. But over the years through word of mouth, it has become a
beloved cult hit, quoted ad nauseam by its devotees, whose ranks multiply
yearly. The film was nominated for Grand Jury Prize for best drama.
The plot seems at first utterly conventional, straying between
nominally feminist chick flick to slacker comedy. Downtown It girl Mary is
unemployed, on the verge of eviction, and “fabulous,” which in movie parlance
means she wears quirky outfits and uses her acerbic wit against her friends. When
she gets arrested for turning her apartment into a makeshift nightclub, Mary is
bailed out by her godmother, Judy, a librarian. In order to pay Judy back and
to prove herself to as capable and trustworthy, Mary becomes a clerk at Judy’s
library. Gaining her good opinion is complicated by Judy’s constant panting
that she can’t trust Mary because she reminds her so much of her mother, an
irrational grousing that is the movie’s only major flaw. Mary’s mother may have
been quite the party-goer, but many young women are, and one can’t hold young
people accountable for doing the same things that their parents did when they
were the same age. I would be extremely frustrated if my grandparents always
said, “Gillian, you’re such a bleeding heart liberal, just like your mother was
when she was your age. I won’t be surprised if you end up getting divorced,
too.”
In most movies of this genre, Mary would prove her responsibility and
intelligence by harnessing her femininity to her advantage by translating her
party-loving sociability into entrepreneurial skills. Movies where female
protagonists use stereotypically female frivolous traits like shopping or
beautification to gain respect and enter positions of authority reinforce false
perceptions among women that clinging to traditional gender roles can still
benefit them in modern society. Unlike Troop Beverly Hills or Romy and
Michele’s High School Reunion, in Party Girl Mary recognizes the detrimental
effects of her superficiality on her friends and on herself. Rather than giving
her enemies makeovers and introducing them to the insecurity and vacuity of the
world of fashion, Mary realizes her vocation in the library sciences and
resolves to gain the confidence of Judy and her peers. Party Girl is a fun film
with a positive message powered by Parker Posey’s truly sassy and engaging
performance. Certain scenes suffer from tired comedy clichés like gay sidekicks
or male strippers, but Posey’s consummate delivery, timing, and body language
pull the film’s weaker elements into her comically perfect orbit. And luckily
she’s in almost every scene.
Direction: Daisy von Scherler Mayer
Screenplay: Daisy von Scherler Mayer, Harry Birckmayer
Music: Anton Sanko
Photography: Michael Slovis
Cast:
Parker Posey, Anthony DeSando, Guillermo Diaz, Donna Mitchell, Liev
Schreiber, Omar Townsend, Sasha von Scherler
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