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Party Girl (1995)
Released By: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment   Rating: R   In Theaters: N/A
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Studio: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
Genre: Comedy
MPAA Rating: R
Director: Daisy Von Scherler Mayer
Language: English
Official Website: N/A
Theatrical Release: N/A
Home Video Release: N/A
Cast: Parker Posey, Omar Townsend, Guillermo Diaz
Published ID: 5947
UPC: 687797710994, 043396100640,
Plot: The debut feature from director Daisy von Scherler Mayer, Party Girl pretty much cemented Parker Posey's status as the indie-film it girl of the 1990s. Posey stars as Mary, a fun-loving and irresponsible twentysomething New Yorker who prefers throwing bashes at her loft to pay the rent over getting a real job. But when one of her shindigs gets broken up by the cops, Mary lands in the slammer and is forced to enlist the help of her librarian godmother, Judy (Sasha von Scherler, the director's mother). In order to prove that she's not the layabout she seems to be, Mary begins working at the library with Judy. Party Girl was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at the {~1995 Sundance Film Festival} and was later turned into a short-lived Fox sitcom. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide
IDDateTimeTitleReviewHelpfulVotesTotalVotes
Sparkling movie! (But a possibly murky transfer to DVD)
Added 8/19/2009

It's a given that I adore this movie. In what other movie is there Parker Posey mastering both vogue-ing and the Dewey Decimal system? I dare you to find any any other.

But viewers might want to know that some (all?) of the DVDs of it are transfers not from film, but from video! -- and that means that no matter how much you get your DVD player to zoom in, the soundtrack credits are just a big blur-- and believe me, this is important, because the music practically makes the movie, and you will want to track down these songs/mixes!

So you'd want to look up this or that song, but its credits listing could be just a big smudge, where a proper transfer would show crisp letters saying, for one example, "Dajae- U Got Me Up (Cajmere Underground Charleston Mix)". (That's the song played during the "Natashaaa!" vogue-ing scene.)

Or maybe your DVD will be unlike mine, and will be a proper transfer, from film, and you'll have great picture quality and can read the music listings in the credit. You pays your money, you takes your chance. (The full listings SHOULD be online somewhere, but good luck.)

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Parker Posey is the Life of this 'Party.'
Added 11/11/2008

What this Party Girl lacks in depth, it makes up for in effervescence. Daisy von Scherler Mayer's hip, urban comedy, Party Girl (1995), stars Parker Posey in a pre-Waiting for Guffman role as a New York Public Library clerk by day and a self-destructive Manhattan party girl by night. While mastering the Dewey Decimal System, 23-year-old Mary (Posey) buys a Lebanese phrase book just to spark up a romance with a Lebanese falafel street vendor, Mustafa (Omar Townsend). He is too good for her. Proving that girls just wanna have fun, she throws raves and parties with her gay friend, Derrick (Anthony DeSando), and her DJ roommate, Leo (Guillermo Díaz). While this movie lacks depth, Posey carries the film with her wacky, Holly-Golightly-performance as Mary, a charming young woman with a penchant for "partying, flirting, [and] making stuff up."

G. Merritt

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Parker Posey, Queen Of The Indie Movies
Added 6/8/2008

I first saw her in " sleep with me." while the rest of the film was average, her scenes stood out. she's not as pretty as angelina jolie, but she compensates for it by being smarter and funnier. she just knows how to make a indie movie cool. she always plays a variation of the girl who's left of center or quirky, which i never get tired of. in " sleep with me," she she went topless in one scene and i fell in love with her; she proved that women who were b-cups were hot. i watched' broken english" recently and loved it, but this one will always be the movie that made her the queen. Parker is just the perfect 90's new york girl, trying to find herself and make her mark in the big city. so her aunt gives her a job at the library and things only get funnier from there. of all the new york movies you could watch, this ranks with annie hall as the funnier ones. about 95 percent of the screenplay is quotable. the scene which parker tells a library patron off for shelving a book back himself, had me laughing out loud. the " natasha " scene in the nightclub is even funnier. parker then uses the dewey decimal system to rearrange a friends record collection and he goes ballistic. Parker has gone on to appear in mainstream movies and even had a tv series, but she's an indie girl. she owns independent movies....
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Funny even after over a decade
Added 4/16/2008

I watched this movie when it came out in the theater back in 1995. I was always bad with remembering movies, but this movie definitely left a lasting impression. Although I didn't remember everything, I remembered the storyline and remembered how funny and entertaining the movie was. I liked it a lot. Parker Posey is hilarious, so cute and just adorable as quirky Mary, club kid fashionista turned librarian clerk. Plus, I think I can relate... the whole 90's rave/party scene, club kids, my love of fashion, quirkiness, etc. Even greater, my sister is a librarian, and I can almost see her as Mary. For years, being a librarian and a pretty darn good one, many people have asked my sister if she has seen the movie. Sadly, she had not. I decided to change that and bought two copies, one for her and one for myself. I am glad I did! After rewatching it, I suddenly remember why I liked it so much. Although I have watched it now several times over and over, the movie doesn't seem to get old; I am very glad I now have it as part of my movie collection. Memorable scenes include:

- The club scene with Leo... the "pop"-py, jerky club kid movements and the "He-He-Hello"s
- Leo talking with Renee about his experience deejaying at the London clubs and his imitation of a cat choking.
- Mary dancing to Arabic music as she daydreams of her "Lebanese Delight."
- Flashbacks about the Dewey Decimal System, a trained monkey, and a reprimanding godmother.
- Mary's series of repeated visits as she wins back the same Lebanese Delight.
- The police stripper at Mary's surprise birthday party and her godmother's reactions just as Mary proclaims that she wants to be a librarian and go to grad school for it.

etc. etc.... way too many funny scenes to mention. I think this movie is a hit or miss... either you like it or you don't.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
I'm a big Parker Posey fan, but...
Added 3/9/2008

Even she can't save this turkey.

This type of film seems to have been common in the 1990s -- a lot of rootless young people go to the Big City (always New York) and compete to be admitted to "exclusive" night clubs ("Are you cool enough to spend your money here?"). This film was dated even before it was released. Spare yourself the agony.

0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
Sparkling movie! (But a possibly murky transfer to DVD)
Added 8/19/2009

It's a given that I adore this movie. In what other movie is there Parker Posey mastering both vogue-ing and the Dewey Decimal system? I dare you to find any any other.

But viewers might want to know that some (all?) of the DVDs of it are transfers not from film, but from video! -- and that means that no matter how much you get your DVD player to zoom in, the soundtrack credits are just a big blur-- and believe me, this is important, because the music practically makes the movie, and you will want to track down these songs/mixes!

So you'd want to look up this or that song, but its credits listing could be just a big smudge, where a proper transfer would show crisp letters saying, for one example, "Dajae- U Got Me Up (Cajmere Underground Charleston Mix)". (That's the song played during the "Natashaaa!" vogue-ing scene.)

Or maybe your DVD will be unlike mine, and will be a proper transfer, from film, and you'll have great picture quality and can read the music listings in the credit. You pays your money, you takes your chance. (The full listings SHOULD be online somewhere, but good luck.)

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Parker Posey is the Life of this 'Party.'
Added 11/11/2008

What this Party Girl lacks in depth, it makes up for in effervescence. Daisy von Scherler Mayer's hip, urban comedy, Party Girl (1995), stars Parker Posey in a pre-Waiting for Guffman role as a New York Public Library clerk by day and a self-destructive Manhattan party girl by night. While mastering the Dewey Decimal System, 23-year-old Mary (Posey) buys a Lebanese phrase book just to spark up a romance with a Lebanese falafel street vendor, Mustafa (Omar Townsend). He is too good for her. Proving that girls just wanna have fun, she throws raves and parties with her gay friend, Derrick (Anthony DeSando), and her DJ roommate, Leo (Guillermo Díaz). While this movie lacks depth, Posey carries the film with her wacky, Holly-Golightly-performance as Mary, a charming young woman with a penchant for "partying, flirting, [and] making stuff up."

G. Merritt

1 out of 1 people found this helpful.
Parker Posey, Queen Of The Indie Movies
Added 6/8/2008

I first saw her in " sleep with me." while the rest of the film was average, her scenes stood out. she's not as pretty as angelina jolie, but she compensates for it by being smarter and funnier. she just knows how to make a indie movie cool. she always plays a variation of the girl who's left of center or quirky, which i never get tired of. in " sleep with me," she she went topless in one scene and i fell in love with her; she proved that women who were b-cups were hot. i watched' broken english" recently and loved it, but this one will always be the movie that made her the queen. Parker is just the perfect 90's new york girl, trying to find herself and make her mark in the big city. so her aunt gives her a job at the library and things only get funnier from there. of all the new york movies you could watch, this ranks with annie hall as the funnier ones. about 95 percent of the screenplay is quotable. the scene which parker tells a library patron off for shelving a book back himself, had me laughing out loud. the " natasha " scene in the nightclub is even funnier. parker then uses the dewey decimal system to rearrange a friends record collection and he goes ballistic. Parker has gone on to appear in mainstream movies and even had a tv series, but she's an indie girl. she owns independent movies....
0 out of 0 people found this helpful.
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