THE PARTY – Review

Patricia Clarkson as April pops a champagne cork before sparks start to fly, in Sally Potter’s darkly comic satire THE PARTY. Photo courtesy of Roadside Attractions ©

In Sally Potter’s THE PARTY, what starts out as a quiet little celebration rapidly transforms into a series of shocking revelations and emotional meltdowns in this delicious dark comedy. The resulting film crackles with energy, head-whipping twists, and whip-smart humor. What starts out as a happy occasion quickly devolves into shocking revelations, verbal fireworks and general debacle.

THE PARTY packs in a lot in its mere 71 minutes. Shot in a crisp black and white, writer/director Potter gets right down to business of introducing these sharp-witted and often acid tongue characters and hen upsetting what was supposed to be a quiet little celebration with old friends after a long-sought victory, along with everyone’s carefully built world.

Newly-elected British politician Janet (Kristin Scott Thomas) has invited a few other couples to her home for a little party in her London home to celebrate her recent triumph at the polls. Janet and her husband Bill have invited three long-time friends who share their political views and party. The election is a culmination of Janet’s career and all their ambitions for their political party. Well, for three of the couples. The fourth couple invited is a younger woman politician from the opposition party, with whom Janet will have to work, and her American banker husband. The stage is set for some fireworks.

First to arrive is Janet’s acerbic best friend April (Patricia Clarkson) and her German boyfriend Gottfried (Bruno Ganz), a smiling old-hippie “life coach” given to spouting aphorisms and Buddhist philosophy who is clearly on his way out in April’s affections. Janet’s husband Bill (Timothy Spall), an academic who sacrificed his own career to support Janet’s ambitions, seems remarkable subdued. Next to arrive are Martha (Cherry Jones), Janet and Bill’s radical feminist friend and her younger new wife Jinny (Emily Mortimer) who is now pregnant. The three couples then await, with a bit of dread, the arrival of the fourth, with the new co-worker from the opposition party, but instead only the American husband Tom (Cillian Murphy) shows up, saying his wife will join them later. The husband is clearly distressed, the reason for which we will eventually see.

As champagne corks pop, one after another surprise announcement ramps up the tensions in this evening of fun and games. The appearance of a gun boosts the potential for more than just people shooting off their mouths and verbal violence.

 

It is quite an assembly of acting talent and writer/director Sally Potter makes brilliant use of them all. Sally Potter, whose previous films include 2012’s GINGER AND ROSA, is known for intelligent and challenging independent films. She describes this film as “a comedy wrapped around a tragedy.” Janet and her long-time friends consider themselves, in the words of director Sally Potter, “morally right and politically left,” and have a sort of smugness about that view of themselves, a bubble that invites popping.

There is a bit of a modern “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” to this story, in that what starts out staid and sophisticated becomes anything but as secrets are revealed. THE PARTY has the same feeling that the characters are trapped in this confined space until all the elements have played out. Bill starts the evening debacle off by throwing the first bomb but soon all the couples have revelations and shocks for the gathering.

The title is clearly a play on words for both the gathering and the unnamed political party which and her friends have long supported. Potter uses the sharp-tongued interactions between the characters to poke a bit of satiric fun at British politics, particularly the Labor Party. At times, the characters will talk about high-minded views and then undercut their own idealism with political maneuvering.

While politics are discussed, the real focus of the humor is on human foibles. All the cast are excellent but Patricia Clarkson nearly steals the show as the acid-tongued April. Time after time, April’s pointed criticisms and blunt views both underline absurdities and get to the real point that others are dancing around. Cherry Jones is a major culprit, dancing around generational differences in her relationship with her much younger wife. Bruno Ganz, as the goofy dreamer and would-be wise man is particularly funny, a perfect foil to April. Timothy Spall’s Bill and Ganz’s Gottfried engage in a bit of self-delusional lunacy that is as funny as it is horrifying. Cillian Murphy’s character starts out as an enigma but eventually is revealed as a linchpin of the drama under the comedy.

No spoilers but the film ends with a final shot that is the perfect cherry on the top of this satiric confection. This satire lets the air out of many sails as one revelation follows another in this bitingly funny film. It packs more dark comedy and satiric jabs in its brief running time than several the usual parlor drama. THE PARTY is an invitation you should accept.

RATING: 5 out of 5 stars

UNKNOWN – The Review

A popular theme of the mystery thriller film genre is the big conspiracy against one man. Sometimes the protagonist has amnesia and battles shadowy forces to find out his identity. Many times those forces are out to convince the authorities that the hero has lost his sanity. The makers of UNKNOWN twist those themes in order to add some variety to this type of action film. What if you woke up and all your loved ones did not recognize you?

As UNKNOWN begins Dr. Martin Harris ( Liam Neeson ) and his wife Elizabeth ( January Jones ) are flying into the Berlin airport. Martin is a prominent American botanist and is scheduled to present an address at an international agricultural summit. After landing, they load their bags into a taxi and head to the hotel. As Elizabeth checks in, Martin realizes that his briefcase was not in the cab. Without telling her, he hops in another taxi driven by Gina ( Diane Kruger ) and races back to the airport. Along the way they are involved in a horrific traffic accident and the taxi plunges off a bridge into an icy river. After pulling Martin out of the sinking car, Gina leaves him to the paramedics. A few days later, Martin wakes up in a hospital. He’s told that Elizabeth has not been in to see him. Against his doctor’s wishes, Martin races back to the hotel and spots her at a reception. With hotel security surrounding him, Martin confronts her. But she does not know him and is joined by her husband Dr. Martin Harris ( Aidan Quinn ) ! Martin #1 has no ID on him ( it was in that darn briefcase ) and is escorted out by security. Has he lost his mind? Maybe if he can find the cab driver and retrieve that case he’ll be able to prove his identity and get his life back. But those shadowy forces are not going to make it that easy for him.

UNKNOWN has a lot of things going for it that elevates it from the usual man on the run thriller. First off is the cast headed by the always interesting Liam Neeson. Here he’s somewhere in-between the tough guy from TAKEN and the cerebral scholar from KINSEY. He really has to use his brain and brawn fending off those conspirators all the while frustrated and sorrowful at the turn his life has taken. He’s got to return things back to normal. January Jones plays another variation of the icy blond that was a staple of Hitchcock film and injects a bit of her Betty Draper Mad Men TV persona. Aidan Quinn plays the second Martin with equal parts bewilderment and cold-bloodiness. Frank Langella sweeps in during the last act as a colleague that may be the real Martin’s salvation. Or is he? Diane Kruger brings great energy to her role as the somewhat, shady, feisty fraulein Gina, who wants nothing to do with Martin at first. The best support is given by veteran German film star Bruno Ganz as private detective Ernst Jurgen who’s an ex-officer of an elite East German secret police force. You might recognize Ganz from his performance as Hitler in DOWNFALL-footage of him ranting has been re-subtitled and purloined by many You Tube posters. He gives the world-weary old detective a quiet dignity and commands the screen in every scene he appears. Another thing going for this film is the Berlin locations. This is a locale we don’t get to see much in current films unlike LA or Toronto. Director Jaume Collet-Serra keeps things movingly along. There’s a couple of well executed car chases through crowded Berlin streets and some brutal hand-to-hand combat sequences. He wrings a lot of suspense from a drugged-up Martin trying to reach for a pair of scissors in one sequence. I wish the script would’ve offered up a few more surprises. I was able to figure out the big plan about a third of the way through. However the film’s strong cast, locations, and pacing set it above the typical crash-crash-explosion actioners that fill up the multiplex. Not anything groundbreaking , but a diverting couple of hours at the movies.

Overall Rating : Three and a Half Out of Five Stars

Liam Neeson In Trailer For UNKNOWN

 

Face the UNKNOWN with Liam Neeson and January Jones in this new trailer from Warner Bros. Pictures.

Synopsis:

Dr. Martin Harris (Liam Neeson) awakens after a car accident in Berlin to discover that his wife (January Jones) suddenly doesn’t recognize him and another man (Aidan Quinn) has assumed his identity. Ignored by disbelieving authorities and hunted by mysterious assassins, he finds himself alone, tired, and on the run.

Aided by an unlikely ally (Diane Kruger), Martin plunges headlong into a deadly mystery that will force him to question his sanity, his identity, and just how far he’s willing to go to uncover the truth.

Academy Award® nominee Liam Neeson (SCHINDLER’S LIST), Diane Kruger (INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS) and January Jones (TV’s “Mad Men”) star in the contemporary thriller UNKNOWN. The film also stars Aidan Quinn (TV’s “The Book of Daniel”), Bruno Ganz (THE READER) and Oscar® nominee Frank Langella (FROST/NIXON).

The film was directed by Jaume Collet-Serra (ORPHAN), from a screenplay by Oliver Butcher & Steve Cornwell, based on the novel Out of My Head by Didier van Cauwelaert. UNKNOWN is produced by Joel Silver, Leonard Goldberg and Andrew Rona. Susan Downey, Steve Richards, Sarah Meyer and Peter McAleese served as executive producers, with Richard Mirisch, Adam Kuhn, Charlie Woebcken, Christoph Fisser and Henning Molfenter co-producing.

Collet-Serra’s behind-the-scenes collaborators included director of photography Flavio Labiano, production designer Richard Bridgland, editor TimAlverson, and two-time Oscar®-nominated costume designer Ruth Myers (EMMA, THE ADDAMS FAMILY). UNKNOWN was shot entirely in Germany, using Studio Babelsberg, the oldest large-scale studio complex in the world. Studio Babelsberg is also a co-producer on the film, under an agreement with Silver’s Dark Castle Entertainment. Locations also included Berlin and Leipzig.

Warner Bros. Pictures presents in association with Dark Castle Entertainment, a Panda Production. UNKNOWN will open nationwide on February 18, 2011. Visit the film’s official site here and follow it on Facebook here.