The Party

4.00
    The Party
    2017

    Synopsis

    Various individuals think they’re coming together for a party in a private home, but a series of revelations results in a huge crisis that throws their belief systems – and their values – into total disarray.

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    Cast

    • Timothy SpallBill
    • Kristin Scott ThomasJanet
    • Patricia ClarksonApril
    • Bruno GanzGodfried
    • Cherry JonesMartha
    • Emily MortimerJinny
    • Cillian MurphyTom

    Recommendations

    • 80

      CineVue

      It's a curt, nasty and deftly acted chamber piece high on laughs and savagery about frustrated idealism and how little it takes to make society fall to pieces.
    • 80

      The Guardian

      Unassuming and old-fashioned funny entertainment isn’t exactly what we associate with this film-maker, but that’s what she has very satisfyingly served up here. It’s not especially resonant or profound but it is observant and smart, with some big laughs in the dialogue. The whole thing is enjoyably absurd though not precisely absurdist.
    • 80

      Screen Daily

      The most enjoyable film yet from a director whose conceptual seriousness has often seemed daunting.
    • 80

      Variety

      Slight and self-contained, it won’t go down in cinema history as anything but, perhaps, the most purely fun film ever made by peculiar British experimentalist Sally Potter.
    • 80

      Empire

      Patricia Clarkson steals the show, but everyone in Potter’s gifted cast gets their moment to shine in a sharp-edged, claustrophobic parlour piece that puts the boot into middle-class mores.
    • 80

      Total Film

      Enjoyably acted by a fine ensemble cast, it crisply skewers the hypocrisies of its left-liberal, middle-class characters.
    • 75

      The Playlist

      There is an energy to The Party, and a kind of rejuvenating bouncy glee that we haven’t seen from Potter in a long time. And after “Ginger and Rosa,” a film that felt better directed than it was written, being undermined by some very stilted dialogue, the fact the Potter also wrote the screenplay here comes as another pleasant surprise.
    • 70

      The Hollywood Reporter

      A charming little tragicomedy which flirts with savage social satire but never fully embraces it.

    Loved by

    • Miljana