Parker Posey Movie:

The Anniversary Party



   Parker Posey

  Posters
  Movies
  News
  Bio
  Latest Photos
  Movie Trailers
  Wallpapers
  Pics
  Video Clips
  On TV
  Articles
  Blogs
  eBay
  Gossip
  Photos
  YouTube

  Celebrity Movies




Parker Posey Movie:
The Anniversary Party



Movie
The Anniversary Party
The Anniversary Party
List Price: $24.98Label: New Line Home Video

Salesrank: 29194

Released: January 15, 2002
Our Price: $2.99
Used Price: $0.82
MPAA Rating: R (Restricted)
Media: DVD

Features:

  • Anamorphic
  • Closed-captioned
  • Color
  • DVD
  • Widescreen
  • NTSC
  • Starring:

  • Jane Adams (II)
  • Mina Badie
  • Jennifer Beals
  • Phoebe Cates
  • Alan Cumming
  • Editorial Review:
    Studio: Warner Home Video Release Date: 05/10/2005 Run time: 95 minutes Rating: R

    Description of The Anniversary Party:
    It's easy to be skeptical when a couple of well-connected actors throw a script together, start shooting their fabulous friends with digital cameras, and call it a movie. But Jennifer Jason Leigh and Alan Cumming, who bonded in Cabaret on Broadway, have crafted a rough little gem in The Anniversary Party. Influenced by Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? and The Player, it's a devastating portrait of a fragile marriage and a perceptive look at life in Hollywood. The characters are based--to an eerie degree--on their Hollywood counterparts: Kevin Kline and Phoebe Cates are a Shakespeare-quoting actor and his retired actress wife; Gwyneth Paltrow is a rising young starlet; etc. Leigh is an actress on the way down, and Cumming, a best-selling author and up-and-coming director, is the sexually ambiguous husband with whom she has recently reconciled. The titular party is to celebrate their sixth anniversary, and revelations about the characters accumulate as the evening progresses from a tense session of charades to an ecstasy-pill-fueled blowout by the pool. The screenplay combines brittle humor with melodrama and consists of more talk than action (as in the Dogme films that inspired it), but the proceedings are rarely less than compelling even if the characters, for the most part, aren't exactly the most likable bunch. As a result, Jennifer Beals ends up stealing the show from the bigger names in the cast simply by emerging as the most genuinely human character--the one who actually showed up to honor her friends' commitment rather than to advance her career. --Kathleen C. Fennessy

    The Anniversary Party Reviews:
    Lunatics Run Asylum, Histrionics Ensue 1 Star Review
    2009-06-27 - This movie is still on cable TV but I think I can make the call...ugh.

    The late Gene Siskel famously asked, "Would lunch with the actors in a movie be more interesting than the movie itself?"

    THE ANNIVERSARY PARTY adds another layer to that dilemma: if actors filmed a party as a movie...would it be more interesting than a real movie...or would it be worse than actually attending a party with them?

    The first part of the movie is dead air. You wonder if the actors knew the cameras were running yet. Alan Cummings plays the gayest husband ever. Remember Wayland & Madame from the 1970s/80s? Wayland and that old lady puppet would make a more convincing hetero couple than Cummings and Jennifer Jason Leigh. Dana Carvey played a character called "The Effeminate Heterosexual" on SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE. Carvey couldn't have vamped it up as much as Cummings did in this movie.

    The actual anniversary party itself features a clumsy and embarrassing game of charades along with dull and indulgent toasts. There isn't a believable moment to anything.

    After alcohol and ecstacy are passed around, the movie finally has something that kind of happens in it. Actors crying, yelling, still rattling on about themselves. Cummings gets even gayer, shouting about all the women he's loved...wearing a yellow Boy London muscle shirt and bands in his hair.

    For a movie about Hollywood types having a party, I'd rather rewatch Blake Edwards' S.O.B. from 1981. It's got to be more realistic than this.

    The Story of Sally & Joe (and One Really Good Party!) 5 Star Review
    2008-10-16 - "The Anniversary Party" is one of those small, enjoyable, indie films, that you can watch over and over again and with each repeated viewing find new details, plot points and lines of witty dialogue, that come to the viewer's attention.

    In this comedy/drama, we meet Joe (Alan Cumming) and Sally (Jennifer Jason Leigh), who are celebrating their sixth wedding anniversary with a party held in their beautiful, modern, LA home. At first, they seem like the perfect celebrity couple. Sally is a famous Hollywood actress with a distinguished career. Joe is a renown author, who has just gotten the studio greenlight to direct his first movie, based on one of his novels.

    The party begins and little by little, we start to meet the guests, who are mostly in the arts or the Hollywood film industry. Everyone has their own professional and personal connections to Sally and Joe, that are slowly revealed. Like most friends and acquaintances, they bring to the party, their own quirky personalities, neuroses and agendas. As the evening gets going, liquor starts flowing easily and ectasy is passed around. This leads to folks opening up and revelations being made about the hosts. We begin to find out, that this 'picture perfect' Hollywood couple has more than their share of marital problems. The couple has recently spent time apart. There have been past problems with both infidelity and drugs. While the celebration of their wedding anniversary was suppose to be a new begining for the couple, it really just serves as a catalyst to bring their problems to the forefront and reveal just how much trouble the relationship truely is in.

    This is one of those small movies, where just everything comes together. The film was written and directed by actors, Alan Cummings and Jennifer Jason Leigh. Its' conversational, witty dialogue, keeps you interested and wanting more. The film gives you a real 'fly on the wall' feeling of attending an intimate Hollywood party in a beautiful, LA home.

    In addition, the film has a wonderful, ensemble cast, which includes Kevin Kline, Phoebe Cates, Gwyneth Paltrow, Jennifer Beals, Parker Posey, John C. Reilly and Jane Adams. These actors have created a really interesting variety of characters, who can be both likable or not. With an interesting cast of character actors such as this, how can you not want to hang around at the party and hope, that it lasts just a little bit longer? Highly recommended!

    IT'S ONLY ME, BUT: 4 Star Review
    2008-05-31 - EVER B EEN INVITED YO A SNOBBY PARTY. ESPECIALLLY WHEN THE HUSBANDS BEST FRIEND IS A WOMAN. LOADS OF FUN. JM

    Horrible 1 Star Review
    2008-02-13 - This was one of the most unlikable films I've seen in a long, long time.

    The mood is set right at the beginning, when the main character just can't keep his hairy armpits from being spotlighted in the camera. It's gross, it's relentless, and apparently the director liked it that way.

    Then there's the overuse of the F word, again, setting the I'm-not-going-to-like-this-film mood. F this, F that. It's not even mildly realistic; it's gratuitous.

    The film goes from strange to stranger. Pointless. Ugly people. Ugly language. Ugly...I was going to say "ugly story" but there doesn't seem to be a story.

    I didn't pay a lot for this DVD, and it's now on its way to the city landfill, where it should feel at home.

    Garbage.

    One of my favorites 5 Star Review
    2007-10-06 - This movie was done very well. Its more of reality than a reality show. Theres many people in the movie and it shows very nicely their personalities, and little peeks into their lives without even leaving the party. It also shows the realness of extacy and relationships. Its a beautiful movie that will make you laugh, feel calm, cry and want to get up and do E lol.










    Click here for more detailed information about the
    Parker Posey movie:

    'The Anniversary Party
    '