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PlotThe Party (alternative title: "Hollywood Party") is a 1968 comedy written and directed by Blake Edwards, starring Peter Sellers (in what was his only non-Pink Panther collaboration with Edwards) and Claudine Longet. The film has a very loose structure, and essentially serves as a series of set pieces for the comic talents of Sellers.
The score of The Party was by Henry Mancini, including the song "Nothing to Lose". Mancini, commenting on audience reactions, noted, "That's what I get for writing a nice song for a comedy. Nobody's going to hear a note of it." Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Hrundi V. Bakshi (Sellers) is a seemingly nameless and faceless extra actor from India brought to Hollywood for a role in a Gunga Din-like film. Unfortunately, he manages to blow up the set before the cameras are rolling -- ruining an entire day's filming. The director (Ellis) is fit to be tied, and wants him fired immediately & blacklisted. However, instead of being blacklisted, Bakshi's name is accidentally written on the guest list of the studio boss's big party. Upon arrival, he loses his shoe in the pond/stream that flows through the house and spends a significant amount of time attempting to retrieve it (a scene parodied by Amitabh Bachchan in the movie Namak Halaal). As he offers to engage in banter, guests and host look on in puzzled confusion. The only ones at the party to pay him much notice, at first, are Michele (Longet) and a macaw whom Bakshi talks gibberish to and overfeeds "birdy num nums".
Image:TheParty21.jpg Sellers as Hrundi V. Bakshi The action of the party then moves to the pool, where Bakshi asks that the elephant be restored to a more dignified state. The entire home is soon overrun with soap bubbles as they scrub graffiti off the animal. The local police arrive as well. Bakshi offers to drive Michele home (in his Morgan threewheeler car) and the film ends with a hint that this is the beginning of a romantic relationship. On the surface, The Party may appear to be simply a series of set pieces from the Blake Edwards/Peter Sellers combination. It might be seen on a deeper level, however, as a sendup contrasting the extreme shallowness of most of the guests with the rise of a more idealistic set in American culture, with elements of culture shock and eastern philosophy that was beginning to come into vogue in 1968. Trivia
Quotes
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