Party Girl Movie Review
Party Girl Review
"Party Girl" Overview

Rating: R
1995
Cast and Crew
Director : Daisy von Scherler MayerProducer : Harry Birckmayer,Stephanie Koules
Screenwiter : Harry Birckmayer,Daisy von Scherler Mayer
Starring : Parker Posey,Anthony DeSando,Liev Schreiber,Guillermo Díaz,Omar Townsend,Sasha von Scherler
"I don't have a job. I'm a loser. Shoot me!"
This pretty much sums up the early attitude of the title character in Party
Girl, a new film by Daisy von Scherler Mayer, about the misadventures of a New
York City diva who finds her life suddenly falling apart. Parker Posey plays
Mary, the Party Girl in question, whose flair and style are matched only by her
inability to do anything productive with her life.
Mary is an old-style slacker of the first degree. The picture opens with Mary
hosting a party to cover this month's rent, only to get busted by the cops and
having to call her librarian godmother (Sasha von Scherler) to bail her out.
Godmother takes pity and gives Mary a job as a library clerk, which seems to
suit the carefree socialite like a designer muumuu. Interspersed with Mary's
quest to find her place in the fascinating world of library science, she
frequents party after party, always in search of the hippest hangout and the
ultimate cool time.
Party Girl is something of an allegory to the existentialist literature it
refers to: Mary is in search of life's meaning in a world which appears to
have none. This New York is completely surreal, full of ultra-hip people and
places that are usually too cute for their own good. In the end, Mary can't
find a shred of meaning in this world, so she turns to...the Dewey Decimal
System. And it gets weirder than that, perhaps the most bizarre part of the
film being an inexplicable romance Mary has with a street falafel vendor (Omar
Townsend).
Party Girl ends up being a mostly-entertaining movie. It isn't the raucous
comedy it's billed as, but the funny bits are worth the price of admission.
Posey is electric, a consummate professional (and the only one in the cast who
nails her lines every time). It's incredible how she makes the most mundane
thing look cool; the most enjoyable part of Party Girl just might be seeing
what Posey is wearing in the next scene, and managing to outdo what she had on
previously.
The film takes quite awhile to really get rolling, and that's largely due to
the relatively inexperienced supporting cast and the low low budget which
allowed for only two takes of any scene. As a result, much of the movie's
dialogue is stilted and just doesn't flow smoothly enough to convey the
sarcastic wit all of these characters are supposed to be imbued with. The
budget has also burdened Party Girl with some damaging sound problems.
Also, while Mary's parties are to die for, her search for a career is
uninspired. What begins as a comedic Mary vs. The World ends up being an
overdramatic Mary vs. The Dewey Decimal System--not what I was expecting, and
probably not what the audience wants to watch. I wish the filmmakers had taken
Mary's own advice here: "Lighten up! It's a party!"
Isn't it?
Reviewer: Christopher Null





