The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘The Party’ is worth your time

- BY LINDSEY BAHR

Sally Potter’s new film “The Party ‘’ is 71 minutes long.

That fact alone shouldn’t necessaril­y be a selling point — stories need as long as they need — but when superhero movies and comedies regularly extend well past the two-hour mark, it’s hard not to appreciate the restraint.

And it is a rich and layered 71 minutes that Potter spends, in black and white, with a group of highly educated and highly dysfunctio­nal people gathering for an intimate dinner party at Janet (Kristen Scott Thomas) and Bill’s (Timothy Spall) London house to celebrate Janet’s appointmen­t as the shadow minister for health.

You know going in that things are going to spiral out of control.

The first shot is of Janet, distressed and disheveled, pointing a small handgun at a mystery person on the other side of the door (and, essentiall­y the viewing audience). Then the film jumps back to the beginning of the evening and you spend the dizzying duration watching the well-heeled crowd unravel.

It’s a delightful grouping of actors, including Patricia Clarkson as a cynical and blunt American, April, and Bruno Ganz as her German husband Gottfried (who April informs the group early on that she is separating from). There is Martha (Cherry Jones), a cool and collected women’s studies professor, and her pregnant, emotional, and slightly neglected partner Jinny (Emily Mortimer). And then there is Tom (Cillian Murphy), a skittish banker who arrives last and without his wife, who he says is stuck at work and will arrive later which sounds more and more like a lie the more he repeats it. Then he immediatel­y heads to the bathroom to do a few lines of cocaine.

Bill, too, is acting strange. He’s almost catatonic as guests start to arrive, seated in a chair in the middle of the living room and limply holding a glass of wine, but Janet is too busy to notice between cooking her elaborate canapes in the kitchen and juggling incessant texts and phone calls from someone she is clearly having an affair with.

Each of the five characters gets their own arc and crisis of conscience and moment of release too — something you can’t say of many movies.

While it is wickedly funny and deft, this crowd is also not one you’d clamour for the company of for any extended amount of time. But, it is a fun experiment to be a fly on the wall for this bizarre night — a little dinner theatre canape that’ll make you laugh and think and be grateful (hopefully) that your friends aren’t this kooky. By the end, you’re ready to call it night too.

“The Party,’’ a Roadside Attraction­s release, is rated R by the Motion Picture Associatio­n of America “for language and drug use.’’ Three stars out of four.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Director Sally Potter arrives on the red carpet for the film ‘The Party’ at the 2017 Berlinale Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, in February 2017.
AP PHOTO Director Sally Potter arrives on the red carpet for the film ‘The Party’ at the 2017 Berlinale Film Festival in Berlin, Germany, in February 2017.

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