![]() ![]() ![]() There’s not one but two scenes in which she attempts to dance the traditional dances of Arab women, complete with a mock veil. Where the movie conflicts with our contemporary sense of propriety and taste is in its reveling in Mary’s ignorance and entitlement - some might say they were offended back in 1995. von Scherler Mayer harnessed the young actress’s innate idiosyncrasies of gesture and bearing to create an enduring portrait of a feckless, ridiculous, rude - and yet altogether charming - young woman. Posey behaves, and looks a bit, as if she’s a modern, more irreverent, more hep Hepburn (Katherine), with a dash of Audrey circa “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” thrown in for extra urbanity and chicness. No discussion of the movie’s acting can exclude the appellative “Party Girl.” Featured in nearly every scene, Ms. A longtime NY actress who died in 2000, Sasha Von Scherler, director Daisy von Scherler Mayer’s mother, imbues the character of the tough librarian godmother with both warmth and wrath - and not a little absurdity, which the movie requires. As Leo, Guillermo Díaz endears with his enthusiasm and naivety, no more so than when he flubs a transition from one record to another (a major faux pas for professional DJs) because he’s just spotted a beautiful go-go dancer. The main performances, too, pop as if they were just placed in a microwave and not left to stale over the ensuing 28 years. The dance soundtrack, mostly house music, and Mary’s fashion choices delight as well. Fans of bygone New York will love spotting places that no longer exist, like Keith Haring’s Pop Shop, and ubiquitous downtown denizens of the ‘90s like Lady Bunny and Natasha Twist. Certain scenes are worth highlighting, such as when Mustafa laments how his falafel-selling non-Arab competitors use toothpicks, and when Mary tears into a library patron for placing a book back onto a random shelf. So does “Party Girl” hold up as a sprightly entertainment? The answer is pretty much confirmative, with the overall movie still bursting with wit, verve, and color. From here, any moviegoer can guess how it ends. After a disastrous night, she wakes up the next day determined to continue her career in library science and secure Judy’s help. Judy fires her, and Mary returns to party-planning by staging a warehouse rave. ![]() One night, though, Mary forgets to close the windows of the library and several out-of-print books are destroyed by rain. She even classifies Leo’s extensive record collection. Indignant over Judy’s constant admonishments, Mary begins to dedicate herself to learning the Dewey Decimal System. At the same time, Mary’s DJ friend Leo, who has no place to stay, comes to live with her.Īfter breaking up with her loutish boyfriend Nigel, she pursues a relationship with food vendor Mustafa. Mary reluctantly agrees yet continues to go out and party most nights. With no other family to help her, she calls up her godmother Judy, who bails her out and offers Mary an entry-level job as a clerk in the library she oversees. Parker’s character, has for organization, a brief but thorough plot summation is in order: the movie opens with twenty-something Mary’s arrest for illegally operating a social club in her Chinatown apartment. Now being revived at the IFC Center in a new 4K restoration, the comedy is ripe for re-evaluation, particularly as Gen-Xers (like myself) grapple with our legacy and move further into the middle of middle-aged. Kooky and campy, the salutation was popularized by the movie “Party Girl,” that 1995 indie cinema classic featuring Parker Posey’s first starring role. “He-he-hello!” If you lived at New York City in the nineties, or were city-adjacent, you may remember this particular greeting, especially if you hung out with club kids or frequented hip watering holes like Bar d’O.
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