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The Party Animal
(1984)
Director: David Beaird
Cast: Matthew Causey, Robin Harlan, Tim Carhart
It should come as no surprise that as a movie
critic, I love movies. It also should come as no
surprise that there are some kinds of movies
that I have a weakness for. For example, I love
westerns, from the goofy charm and innocence
found in Gene Autry and Roy Rodgers kiddie
oaters to the stylish and violent spaghetti
flicks made in Europe decades later. I am also a
fan of Hong Kong cinema, with its over-the-top
action sequences set either in modern or ancient
times, as well as its often naughty and
adults-only attitude found in movies like
Naked Killer
and Robotrix
(at least until the People's Republic Of China
took over in 1997, making Hong Kong filmmakers
afraid to do anything really controversial in
their movies.) But even though I love movies and
really love specific genres like I've just
described, there are still several movie genres
that have done little to nothing for me over the
years, despite giving those genres several
chances each. I've mentioned before that Korean
cinema doesn't impress me very much, though the
last Korean movie that I saw - Save The
Green Planet - managed to work enough so
that I would give it a mediocre rating, so maybe
there's hope for this particular side of Asian
cinema. I am also not a fan of motorcycle
movies. I'm not talking about motorcycle movies
like Easy Rider (which was good),
but motorcycle movies that involve motorcycle gangs, and
their one-note chortling villains and lame
shenanigans that would be hard-pressed to get a
PG rating today. Beach party movies I also find
lame, with their lame songs and squeaky-clean
attitude towards sex.
I realize that the three genres I described
in the previous paragraph have their fans, so I
am trying to tread lightly here. If you like any
or all of those genres, that's fine with me; I
would rather you have a happy experience with a
movie or an entire genre rather than a negative
one. But there are a couple of other movie
genres that I don't like that I'm confident that
I will find ample company in my hatred. The
first one is the pornographic genre. Though I'll
admit that I haven't viewed many examples of the
genre, the few movies I've seen have been so
cold, so mechanical, that I can't see that there
can't be very many good examples. Even a
so-called "classic" of the genre that one critic
called one of the ten best adult movies ever
made (Captain Lust) was an ordeal
for me. I actually have been determined to
improve the genre for some time now. I am
currently working on the screenplay for an adult
movie that's a spoof of a major Hollywood movie,
like many other adult movies are. It's called
The Loin King, and like the movie
it's spoofing, it's a musical. The opening birth
sequence will be scored by the song It's The
Cir....cumcision Of Life, the hero's dream
of his future will have him performing the song I
Just Can't Wait To Get Laid, and the
romantic scene of the hero and his girlfriend
will be scored by the song Can You Feel His Love Tonight?
(On second thought, it all sounds bad enough
to be a typical porno.)
The other genre I haven't mentioned before
that I dislike is a distant cousin to the porno
genre, the youth-oriented sex comedy. I still
remember my first experience with this
particular genre. When I was in junior high, it
seemed that all my classmates had seen
Porky's, and overhearing their
conversations about it lead me to believe that
it was the funniest movie ever made.
I could not
go out and watch it, because my family seemed to
be the last one in the neighborhood to get a VCR. When we finally
got a VCR, I rented the movie, popped it into
the machine, and prepared to be tickled pink.
While watching the movie, I was stunned; my
classmates actually thought this was funny? I
should have remembered that I was a
non-conformist, which I learned back in my
pre-school days when unlike other children, I
thought that Ernie was an annoying and somewhat
cruel individual while I admired his friend Bert
for his individualism. I will give Porky's
this, though; unlike other Canadian movies, it
was a real movie (Take that, David
Macdonald!) My further investigations of this
genre proved almost equally fruitless. I will
admit American Pie was okay, and I
liked half of The Last American Virgin
(the half that had the soundtrack and when it
took things seriously), but otherwise I have
been numbed by the badness of movies from this
genre. So why did I decide to watch and review
The Party Animal? It might have
been the goofy art on the VHS box. It might have
been that I heard the soundtrack was good. I'm
not sure. Anyway, here's the plot. Pondo Sinatra
(Causey) is a college student with the worst
kind of luck. He's never had sex, and he can't
get laid despite making dozens of attempts. So
he decides to concoct an aphrodisiac that will
make him irresistible to the ladies.
Based on that short plot description, you
might be thinking that while writing it I was in
a temporary state of laziness that thwarted my typical
long-winded style of writing. But in actual fact, there is
not that much more plot to be found in The
Party Animal. Maybe there was originally
more plot in the screenplay written before
production began, but there's not that much more
plot in the finished version. I say this,
because there are several signs that The
Party Animal suffered from a troubled
production. The first sign is with the running
time; including the closing credits, the movie
just runs a brief 77 minutes long. The second
sign I dug up while doing a little research on
the movie. Although David Bearid is the only
director credited in the movie, my research
uncovered the fact that another director -
Harvey Hart (who also directed
Shoot) -
directed some of this movie. A director being
replaced, or brought in to do some reshoots, is
usually not a good sign. There are definitely
some scenes in the movie that suggest some
post-production patch-ups. During the beginning
of the movie, as well as during the end of the
movie, there is some voice-over narration by
some of the supporting characters, as well as
footage of them sitting down in front of the
camera and talking to the audience directly. In
both of those parts of the movie, it feels like
it was a desperate last-minute attempt to try
and make things clear to the audience.
Despite these apparent patch-ups, there is
still a significant amount of the movie that is
unclear. There is a blonde woman (who never
speaks once in the movie) who appears several
times in the movie, in most instances when Pondo
is lamenting his situation and saying things
like, "I'd sell my soul for a piece of ass!"
This and some other stuff may be small hints that she
is
actually the Devil in disguise, but by the
last shot of the movie that's she in, you won't
be absolutely sure if this is the fact or if
there's another explanation for this character.
(By the way, sharp-eyed viewers will spot the
fact that the last shot of the movie that this
character is in is in fact the same footage of
her that was previously seen as the first shot
of the movie, only that this same shot is run
backwards at this point - another problem
sign.) There is a lot more in the movie that
seems missing for one reason or another. There's
a scene where Pondo disguises himself as a woman
and gets into a sorority, and starts a strip
poker game with some of the women there. When
Pondo's true identity is revealed (in one of the
movie's funnier moments), you would expect that
we would see the women do the expected thing and
scream and chase Pondo away. Instead, the scene
abruptly ends at this point and goes to the next
scene with no explanation as to what happened.
Then there are scenes that serve no purpose
except maybe they were added late in production to pad out the running time. Why does Pondo go to a nightclub with male strippers at
one point? And I won't get started on the
movie's dream sequences that show and tell us
nothing that we already know.
You might be wondering at this point if in
this sloppily-made movie there's anything
that works. Well, yes, there are several things
I liked about The Party Animal,
enough that I can safely say this is a notch
above the usual efforts you'll find in this
dubious genre. The report I heard about its
soundtrack was accurate; the soundtrack is
indeed great. There are songs from groups that
will be familiar to some viewers, including The
Fleshtones and the Buzzcocks; the latter's song
"Why Can't I Touch It" makes a perfect comment
on Pondo's situation. The rest of the songs are
performed by groups unfamiliar to me, but manage
to stand up to the songs coming from the famous
names. Causey himself performs a catchy number
("The Party Animal") that the credits indicate
he also co-wrote. But there's more merit to
The Party Animal than just the
soundtrack. There were several moments in the
movie that I found to be genuinely funny, which
is a lot
more than I usually find in a movie of this
genre. One of these moments was a scene
obviously inspired by the classic play Cyrano
De Bergerac, where Pondo on a picnic date is
given romantic advice via radio and headphones
by his friend Studly (Carhart, The Hunt
For Red October). It's a ludicrous
situation that goes hilariously out of control
quickly. The funniest scene in the movie is a
throwaway bit at a sex shop, where two of the
store's employees get into a discussion on the
S.A.L.T. talks, with one of them making his
points by using sex toys as props.
I also enjoyed the acting in the movie.
Although the cast is almost completely filled
with actors and actresses who did little to
nothing else before or afterwards, I can't
recall a bad performance by any one individual.
As the campus janitor and caretaker, Jerry Jones
(writer of and actor in several Rudy Ray Moore
movies) may not be in too much of the movie, but
he is amusing as an experienced romancer who
gives Pondo advice. Pondo's best friend and
roommate is played by Tim Carhart who could have
been repulsive as someone who always
successfully bags the girls, but Carhart manages
to make him a likable fellow. But the
performance that makes the most impact comes
from Causey as the frustrated Pondo. Appearing
in almost every shot of the movie, he gives a
bug-eyed, wild man performance that's stands out
as the highlight of the movie. He does a lot
more for the movie than the movie does for him.
The movie suffers from more than just a ragged
feel to it. Eventually the movie becomes
exhausting to view. We are treated to Pondo's
attempts to get laid over and over again, and it
becomes tiring. If there was a subplot about
something different, maybe the movie would be
more bearable. It would also have helped if more
of these scenes of Pondo trying to get laid were
actually funny. Most of the humor in the
movie is typical for the genre - lazy,
unimaginative, and occasionally seriously
misguided. Despite some bright spots, overall
The Party Animal is little more than
a curio, where the filmmakers may have thought
they were heading towards
classic status with the good material they had, but
the fact that this has stayed an unknown movie
says otherwise.
Check for availability on Amazon (VHS)
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: Hollywood
High, Hot Resort,
King Frat
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