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Party Monster

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Party Monster (2003)
Trailer for Party Monster
Play trailer1:56
1 Video
18 Photos
Dark ComedyDocudramaTrue CrimeBiographyCrimeDramaThriller

Based on the true story of Michael Alig, a Club Kid party organizer whose life was sent spiraling down when he bragged on television about killing his drug dealer and roommate.Based on the true story of Michael Alig, a Club Kid party organizer whose life was sent spiraling down when he bragged on television about killing his drug dealer and roommate.Based on the true story of Michael Alig, a Club Kid party organizer whose life was sent spiraling down when he bragged on television about killing his drug dealer and roommate.

  • Directors
    • Fenton Bailey
    • Randy Barbato
  • Writers
    • Fenton Bailey
    • Randy Barbato
    • James St. James
  • Stars
    • Macaulay Culkin
    • Wilson Cruz
    • Seth Green
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    18K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Fenton Bailey
      • Randy Barbato
    • Writers
      • Fenton Bailey
      • Randy Barbato
      • James St. James
    • Stars
      • Macaulay Culkin
      • Wilson Cruz
      • Seth Green
    • 171User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Party Monster (2003)
    Trailer 1:56
    Party Monster (2003)

    Photos18

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    Top cast33

    Edit
    Macaulay Culkin
    Macaulay Culkin
    • Michael Alig
    Wilson Cruz
    Wilson Cruz
    • Angel
    Seth Green
    Seth Green
    • James St.James
    Diana Scarwid
    Diana Scarwid
    • Elke
    Dillon Woolley
    • Young James
    Marilyn Manson
    Marilyn Manson
    • Christina
    Dylan McDermott
    Dylan McDermott
    • Peter Gatien
    Mia Kirshner
    Mia Kirshner
    • Natasha
    Wilmer Valderrama
    Wilmer Valderrama
    • Keoki
    Elliot Kriss
    • Cabbie
    Janis Dardaris
    Janis Dardaris
    • TV Reporter
    Manny Perez
    Manny Perez
    • Johnny
    Justin Hagan
    Justin Hagan
    • Freez
    Brendan O'Malley
    • Young Michael
    Phillip Knasiak
    • Young Wrestler
    John Henry Summerour
    • Rodney
    • (as John Summerour)
    John Stamos
    John Stamos
    • Talk Show Host
    Chloë Sevigny
    Chloë Sevigny
    • Gitsie
    • Directors
      • Fenton Bailey
      • Randy Barbato
    • Writers
      • Fenton Bailey
      • Randy Barbato
      • James St. James
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews171

    6.217.9K
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    Featured reviews

    HippieLizzie

    Breathtaking - Green steals the film

    Living in the UK means you very rarely get to see some amazing films. Having read the book I heard about the film and as you do, immediately ordered it to be shipped over, not expecting to find it anywhere near as good as the book. Boy, was I wrong.

    Macaulay Culkin as Alig is annoying and my one pet peeve of the film. He just didn't make Michael real to me. His entire performance seemed to scream "I was a child star, now I'm playing a gay addict! Look at me!". The role was also written for him and I got the impression that because of this he felt he didn't have to act too hard to be brilliant. He never, despite his attempts, gave Alig another level. The accent didn't add anything to the character and by the end I was left wondering why everybody had loved Michael Alig.

    Seth Green on the other hand stole the film from right under Culkin's nose. His performance as James St James was one of the best I have ever seen in my life. He transformed himself until you didn't even realise it was the guy from Buffy you were watching. His mannerisms were spot on and really did St James justice. His voice was not as whiny or non descript as Culkin's, it was simply a prop used by him. His character managed to appear human throughout the entire film and his habit of touching his hair at least once a scene was fabulous. Green deserves an award for such an amazingly real, yet flamboyant performance.

    The supporting cast were also fantastic and each and every person added to the story. The removal of Mavis from the film did annoy me slightly but after a while you forget she was ever there. The costumes, and behaviour of every single Club Kid in this film were fantastic. You really felt as though you were actually watching this happening. Marilyn Manson as Alig's first Superstar Christina was perfect, adding to a character not mentioned a lot in the book.

    All in all an absolutely fabulous film that deserves far far more credit than was given to it. Seth Green really held the film together, showing rare glimpses of humanity amongst all the glitter. Green was perfectly cast and deserves at least some recognition for a fantastic performance. The only downside was Macaulay Culkin, who simply did not shine. He stood back and let the supporting cast, and especially Green turn this into their movie, not his.
    8roswellian-1

    Surprisingly Good.

    When I started to watch this movie I wasn't at all aware what it was about. I just saw that MaCaulay Culkin and Seth Green were in it and thought, "Cool! Maybe this'll be good." A lot of people say this movie was bad, that it was horribly acted, but I think they just couldn't get past Culkin's shortcomings. I don't believe he was a bad actor, I simply believe he got stuck on the idea of how he had to humanize his character, and that was his ultimate downfall (in the special features he explained this was something he wanted to bring to the character).

    Seth Green, as always, is adorable and can completely immerse himself into a character and really bring him to light. Marilyn Manson played Christina wonderfully, if only for a short time. Wilmer Valderrama was terrific as Keoki and it was a disappointment to see he was only in such a little portion of the film.

    All in all, this movie was great. It had a great cast and a great script. The movie was meant to poke fun, not to make you think about any hidden meanings or to wonder why they were acting so strange. Club Kids were all about glamour, mocking celebrities, and, in the end, drugs. They didn't want to grow up, and they certainly didn't want to live a normal life.

    Culkin had his moments where he pulled Alig off well, and in others, you could tell he was trying to stretch the character into places he wasn't meant to go. And if he was, Culkin certainly wasn't the actor to do it.

    All in all, a "fabulous" film. Highly recommended if you're interested in how some of the 80's really played out.
    7Smells_Like_Cheese

    Actually it was pretty good, weird, but good

    I know this film doesn't have that good of a rating, but actually I thought this was an interesting film. It had such an incredible story to it, it is set in the 80's and is about the club kids and how clubbing came to be so popular. To be different was so cool and the make up, the sex, the drugs were such a way of being released from the "normal" world. Where Alig was going into such high places, you guess it, it can only go downward.

    Seth and Maculy are just so adorable in this film, I just loved their chemistry and how they played off each other. These were such risky roles, but they took them on and accepted them into their own. They also researched the film and I believe should get more credit for it. It's a new age Rocky Horror Picture Show, sit back and feel fabulous!

    7/10
    5EnjoyablePresence

    Not as good as you'd want it to be

    The material here (covered in a similarly named documentary) is fascinating. The 90s New York club kid scene was a distinctive period with many crazy sights and scenes. Unfortunately, this film is poorly made on just about every level.

    Most of the acting is not just bad, but some of the worst you'll ever see in a mainstream film. This is exacerbated by poor directing. The dramatic scenes don't feel dramatic (I yawned as one character nearly died). The costumes are very good, about on par with the actual club kids. So the film looks good at least.

    Another issue: they changed so much for this movie from the actual story! If you research the actual murder and such after watching this you'll just be confused as to why they made all those arbitrary changes. I certainly wasn't to make a great film. Many people like this film, but I suspect deep down they want to live in the 90s club kid scene, and aren't objectively judging the film for its merits.
    7bmacv

    Club kids on the primrose path: The movie that '54" should have been

    'I'm the lowest kind of celebrity, a playwright's wife,' Celeste Holm tells Anne Baxter in All About Eve. Fifty-plus years later, she might still make the snapshot page in Vanity Fair (once), but new kinds of celebrity have clambered up to push her further down the pecking order. There are the Elvis impersonators and celebrity look-alikes. There are the trash-talking competitors on the reality shows. And there are the Club Kids, urban counterparts to the beach bums of a generation or two ago who sought nothing more out of life than an Endless Summer. What the Club Kids want is an Endless Party, where they can flame out in a drug-enhanced limelight.

    The Limelight was a fixture among New York City's young downtown hedonists in the last decades of the last century. It's the center of a very small universe for James St. James (Seth Green), a budding queen from across the Hudson who, equipped with little else than a trust fund and received notions of imperious glamor, sets out to be the social arbiter of the club scene. His misfortune (and ultimately opportunity) is meeting up with hick Michael Alig (Macaulay Culkin), just off the Big Dog from one of the square states, who will prove to be St. James' very own Eve Harrington.

    Imagine Bob Hope and Bing Crosby gone gay, their bitchy dynamics holding these buddies together as they prance and stumble down the Rave Road. They live in cold-water walk-ups, spending what money they have on costumes and drugs (when they can't cadge them). As a living, they set themselves up as promoters and taste-makers for struggling entrepreneurs like Dylan McDermott, whose Limelight is barely breaking even. They dream up ever more outrageous parties to lure other kids from the bridges and tunnels and tenements once occupied by immigrants but now serving as digs for druggies and rodents. (Marilyn Manson as stoned drag queen Christina serves as 'driver' for one of the events, trying to maneuver a big rig in platform heels.) Along the way there are Alig's discarded or disengaged boyfriends (Wilmer Valderrama) and girlfriends (Chloe Sevigny), sexual preference always taking a back seat first to Ecstasy and K, then to crackpipes and snorted heroin.

    Party Monster derives from St. James' memoir Disco Bloodbath – as a result of his plunge into addiction, Alig ends up incarcerated for the murder of his dealer Angel (Wilson Cruz). And as St. James, Green delivers a pitch-perfect performance, blackly funny yet with intimations of the shallow life he knows he leads. It's Culkin's misfortune to have his co-star so expertly steal the movie, but, with his sullen, pouty mouth, his child-star successes well behind him yet not quite filled out enough for adult roles, he's plausible as a callow social-climber who's nothing but surfaces and attitude anyway. (And as his good-time-gal-pal mom, Diana Scarwid is, as always, memorable). Party Monster maintains a deft balance between its faintly horrifying humor and its somber notes. It's a story about kids old beyond their years who, as they proudly proclaim, are utterly superficial, but still not (quite) the 'monsters' they pretend to be. Party Monster – a much more interesting and accomplished piece of work – is the movie that '54" should have been, and maybe even thought it was.

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    Jesse Eisenberg in The Social Network (2010)
    Docudrama
    Lee Norris and Ciara Moriarty in Zodiac (2007)
    True Crime
    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in The Sopranos (1999)
    Crime
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Much of the drug use in the movie was toned down from Michael Alig and James St. James's actual habits for fear it would seem unbelievable.
    • Goofs
      Michael Alig was arrested while in the company of his male lover, not his female lover. Gitsie was a secretary, not a girlfriend. Alig has never been romantically interested in any woman.
    • Quotes

      Michael: We're like two peas in a pod, you and I, James.

      James: I pity the pod.

    • Connections
      Featured in 20/20: Party Monster/Party Monster and Murderer (2003)
    • Soundtracks
      Take Me to the Club
      Written by Bruno Coviello

      Performed by Mannequin

      Courtesy of Peace Bisquit

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 17, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Клубная мания
    • Filming locations
      • Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA
    • Production companies
      • World of Wonder Productions
      • Killer Films
      • ContentFilm
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $5,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $742,898
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $15,163
      • Aug 31, 2003
    • Gross worldwide
      • $782,606
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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