The Party (1968)

The Party (1968)

Taglines: If you’ve ever been to a wilder party… you’re under arrest.

The Party movie storyline. A film crew is making a Gunga Din-style costume epic. Unknown Indian actor Hrundi V. Bakshi (Peter Sellers) plays a bugler, but continues to play after repeatedly being shot and after the director (Herb Ellis) yells “cut.” Bakshi accidentally blows up an enormous fort set rigged with explosives. The director fires Bakshi immediately and calls the studio head, General Fred R. Clutterbuck (J. Edward McKinley). Clutterbuck writes down Bakshi’s name to blacklist him, but he inadvertently writes it on the guest list of his upcoming dinner party.

Bakshi receives his invitation and drives to the party. Upon parking his car, he steps into mud. Bakshi tries to rinse the mud off his shoe in a pool that flows through the house, but he loses his shoe. After many failures, he is reunited with his shoe served to him on a silver platter by one of the waiters.

Bakshi has awkward interactions with everyone at the party, including Clutterbuck’s dog Cookie. He meets famous Western movie actor “Wyoming Bill” Kelso (Denny Miller), who gives Bakshi an autograph. Bakshi later accidentally shoots Kelso with a toy gun, but Kelso does not see who did it. Bakshi feeds a caged macaw food from a container marked “Birdie Num Num” and drops the food on the floor. Bakshi at various times during the film activates a panel of electronics that control the intercom, a replica of the Manneken Pis (soaking a guest), and a retractable bar (while Clutterbuck is sitting at it).

The Party (1968)

After Kelso hurts Bakshi’s hand while shaking it (“My goodness, I would have been disappointed if you hadn’t crushed my hand”), Bakshi sticks his hand into a bowl of crushed ice containing caviar. While waiting to wash his hand, he meets aspiring actress Michèle Monet (Claudine Longet), who came with producer C.S. Divot (Gavin MacLeod). Bakshi shakes Divot’s hand, and Divot then shakes hands with other guests, passing around the fishy odor, and back to Bakshi after he has washed his hand.

At dinner, Bakshi’s place setting by the kitchen door has a very low chair that puts his chin near the table. An increasingly drunk waiter, Levinson (Steve Franken), tries to serve dinner and fights with the other staff. During the main course, Bakshi’s roast chicken catapults off his fork and becomes impaled on a guest’s tiara. Bakshi asks Levinson to retrieve his meal, but the woman’s wig comes off along with her tiara, as she obliviously engages in conversation. Levinson ends up brawling with other waiting staff, and dinner is disrupted.

Bakshi apologizes to his hosts; then needs to go to the bathroom. He wanders through the house, opening doors and barging in on various servants and guests in embarrassing situations. He ends up in the backyard, where he accidentally sets off the irrigation sprinklers. At Divot’s insistence, Monet gives an impromptu guitar performance of “Nothing to Lose” to impress the guests. Bakshi goes upstairs, where he saves Monet from Divot’s unwanted advances by dislodging Divot’s toupee.

The Party (1968)

Bakshi finally finds a bathroom, but he breaks the toilet, drops a painting in it, gets toilet paper everywhere, and floods the bathroom. To avoid being discovered Bakshi sneaks onto the roof and falls into the pool. Monet leaps in to save him, but he’s then coerced to drink alcohol to warm up. He finds Monet crying in the next room and consoles her. Divot bursts in and demands Monet leave with him. Monet says no, and Divot cancels her screen test the next day. Bakshi convinces her to stay and have a good time with him.

They return to the party in borrowed clothes as a Russian dance troupe arrives. The party gets wilder, and Bakshi offers to retract the bar to make room for dancing. Instead, he opens a retractable floor with a pool underneath, causing guests to fall in the pool. Levinson makes more floors retract, and more guests fall in. Clutterbuck’s daughter arrives with friends and a baby elephant painted with “THE WORLD IS FLAT” on its forehead and hippie slogans over its body. Bakshi takes offense and asks them to wash the elephant. The entire house is soon filled with soap bubbles.

The Party is a 1968 American comedy film directed by Blake Edwards, and starring Peter Sellers and Claudine Longet. The film has a very loose structure, and essentially serves as a series of set pieces for Sellers’s improvisational comedy talents.[2] Based on a fish-out-of-water premise, the film is about bungling actor from India, Hrundi V. Bakshi (portrayed by Sellers), who accidentally gets invited to a lavish Hollywood dinner party and “makes terrible mistakes based upon ignorance of Western ways”.

The protagonist Hrundi Bakshi was influenced by two of Sellers’ earlier characters, the Indian doctor Ahmed el Kabir in The Millionairess (1960) and Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series. In turn, the character Hrundi Bakshi went on to be influential, inspiring several later popular characters, including Amitabh Bachchan’s character Arjun Singh in the 1982 Bollywood blockbuster Namak Halaal, Rowan Atkinson’s character Mr. Bean in the hit 1990s British sitcom of the same name, and Hank Azaria’s character Apu Nahasapeemapetilon in the hit American animated sitcom The Simpsons.

The Party was the only non-Pink Panther collaboration between Sellers and Edwards. Producer Walter Mirisch knew that Sellers and Edwards were considered liabilities; in his autobiography, Mirisch wrote “Blake had achieved a reputation as a very expensive director, particularly after The Great Race.” Sellers had played an Indian man (Dr. Ahmed el Kabir) in his hit film The Millionairess (1960), and another Indian physician in The Road to Hong Kong (1962). He is mostly remembered as a similar klutz as Inspector Clouseau in The Pink Panther series.

The film started shooting in May under the title RSVP. The film’s interiors were shot on a set, at the MGM lot, though this may be a mistake as IMDb lists the Samuel Goldwyn Studios on Formosa as the correct address, likely as other Mirisch Productions, including West Side Story, were shot there as well. The original script was only 63 pages in length. Edwards later said it was the shortest script he ever shot from, and the majority of the content in the film was improvised on set.

The film draws much inspiration from the works of Jacques Tati; Bakshi arrives at the party in a Morgan three-wheeler which may suggest Monsieur Hulot’s car in Monsieur Hulot’s Holiday. However, it was not the same car (Salmson AL3). The entire film storyline is reminiscent of the Royal Garden restaurant sequence of Playtime, and the comedic interaction with inanimate objects and gadgets parallels several of Tati’s films, especially Mon Oncle.

The Party Movie Poster (1968)

The Party (1968)

Directed by: Blake Edwards
Starring: Peter Sellers, Claudine Longet, Natalia Borisova, Jean Carson, Marge Champion, Al Checco, Corinne Cole, Dick Crockett, Frances Davis, Danielle De Metz, Kathe Green
Screenplay by: Blake Edwards, Tom Waldman, Frank Waldman
Production Design by: Fernando Carrere
Cinematography by: Lucien Ballard
Film Editing by: Ralph E. Winters
Costume Design by: Jack Bear
Set Decoration by: Reg Allen, Jack Stevens
Music by: Henry Mancini
MPAA Rating: None.
Distributed by: United Artists
Release Date: April 4, 1968

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