Screened as part of NZIFF 2017

The Party 2017

Directed by Sally Potter World

“This sketch of an ambitious Westminster politician and dinner-party hostess (Kristin Scott Thomas), whose life comes spectacularly apart before the canapés are even served, is a consummate drawing-room divertissement, played with relish by a dream ensemble.” — Guy Lodge, Variety

Aug 11

The Pastorius-Waller Theatre at the Suter Art Gallery

Aug 14

The Pastorius-Waller Theatre at the Suter Art Gallery

UK In English
71 minutes B&W / DCP

Rent

Director/Screenplay

Producers

Christopher Sheppard
,
Kurban Kassam

Photography

Alexey Rodionov

Editors

Anders Refn
,
Emilie Orsini

Production designer

Carlos Conti

Costume designer

Jane Petrie

With

Kristin Scott Thomas (Janet)
,
Timothy Spall (Bill)
,
Patricia Clarkson (April)
,
Bruno Ganz (Gottfried)
,
Cherry Jones (Martha)
,
Emily Mortimer (Jinny)
,
Cillian Murphy (Tom)

Festivals

Berlin 2017

The dinner-party-from-hell genre is delivered a short sharp shock by veteran British writer-director Sally Potter in this gleaming black comedy. Kristin Scott Thomas is hosting a group of friends to celebrate her promotion as shadow Minister of Health, elegantly juggling dinner preparation, congratulatory calls and surreptitious messaging from a lover. Husband Timothy Spall plays aggressive DJ, otherwise upright but catatonic in the living room as the guests arrive. These include her best friend (Patricia Clarkson, wryly acidic), her life-coach boyfriend (Bruno Ganz, wondrously inane), a coked-up venture capitalist (Cillian Murphy) who arrives sans wife, and an earnest lesbian couple (Emily Mortimer and Cherry Jones) intent on sharing some good news. Silly them.

“It’d poop The Party, so to speak, to reveal anything further – though this is less a plot-based exercise than a tipsily conversational one. Potter’s eminently quotable screenplay works up just enough narrative momentum to sustain a barrage of killer one-liners: With the hors d’oeuvres increasingly unlikely to be served, decorum is swiftly shed and these privileged vultures instead feed ravenously on each other’s ideals...

One shouldn’t pull a muscle, however, in reaching for the subtext of Potter’s witty shaggy-dog story: Its giddy in-the-moment pleasures are enough... Months after the US election campaign turned an intended jibe into a rallying cry, Sally Potter’s latest further proves that there’s pleasure, pride or both to be taken in being a nasty woman.”— Guy Lodge, Variety