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Party Monster

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
18K
YOUR RATING
Macaulay Culkin, Seth Green, and Wilson Cruz in Party Monster (2003)
Trailer for Party Monster
Play trailer1:56
1 Video
13 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
    • 170User reviews
    • 32Critic reviews
    • 36Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 nominations total

    Videos1

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

    Photos13

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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 reviews170

    6.217.7K
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    Featured reviews

    6colettesplace

    So bad, it's good - a guilty pleasure, if not quite as hedonistic as the lives of the club kids themselves

    Party Monster is based on the true story of 80s club kid and promoter, Michael Alig, infamous for his bizarre New York parties and, later, for the brutal murder of a drug dealer.

    It's adapted from Alig's friend James St James' book Disco Bloodbath by filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato, whose earlier documentary about Alig actually inspired St James to write the book. After a nine-year absence, Macauley Culkin returns to film as cherubic bisexual Alig, who persuades James St James (a camp Seth Green) to teach him the art of infamy.

    Famous for doing nothing long before reality TV, Alig becomes a manufacturer of celebrity and a promoter, serving up some wild parties, including a Halloween bloodbath, truck rave and kinky hospital party. The costumes, by Richie Rich and Michael Wilkinson, are spectacular and capture the excesses of the era. These kids affix fake spiders and cobwebs to their faces, wrap themselves in blood-soaked bandages,wear full body costumes and never look less than fabulous.

    Considering the low budget and appalling production values, the high profile supporting cast is a surprise. Dylan McDermot plays Galien, club owner and Alig's mentor, with Mia Kirshner as his wife, Chloe Sevigny as Alig's girlfriend, plus Natasha Lyonne, Marilyn Manson and John Stamos. Wilson Cruz is enigmatic as wannabe and drug dealer Angel, and Wilmer Valderra is suitably objectified as Alig's beloved beefcake, DJ Keoki.

    Party Monster suffers from uneven performances and poor direction but despite this, it's fascinating. It captures the disposability of party drug culture convincingly and will most likely become a cult classic. ***/***** stars.
    9ptb-8

    "Saved" by the pill....

    A famous quote by Pauline Kael about Greta Garbo was that "she was the complete reason to see a film". Well, let me tell ya, I will agree, astonishing even myself, that Maculay Culkin fits this description about PARTY MONSTER. Off screen for 9 years and making two excellent eye-popping returns (the sly wry and hilarious SAVED is the other) 23 year old Culkin is nothing more than front and center startling and compelling in this very clever club culture expose of the very real and very cruel pill bunny Michael Alig. Released clumsily on one print in Australia and off screen in 2 weeks, this film deserved smart marketing and even a reissue before DVD dumping because it has a potentially huge audience and major industry credit as a very difficult genre to re create successfully. I think PARTY MONSTER is a complete success in its serious efforts to capture the dance party scene of the 90s and the glittering bowel of its dark side. The performance by Seth Green is equally disturbingly funny, complete with effete rantings and flummoxed quips that leave the viewer smiling in admiration at his genuine talent. The look of PARTY MONSTER is almost as if Larry Cark re made "Studio 54" and got Bob Mackie to create the costumes. The art direction and costume design is especially perfect and adds hilariously to what is, I believe one of the most clever and nasty black comedies to emerge from the USA this century. Marilyn Manson as gigantic dopey drag queen Christina (geddit) is especially hilarious and shocking. If you have seen the equally brave and hilariously tragic HEDWIG AND THE ANGRY INCH and also read Roger Ebert's superbly written and accurate review of PARTY MONSTER then you will be well equipped to deliciously slurp up every frame of this - literally - sensational disco bloodbath. To say that the astonishing and entertaining performances of Culkin and Green are fearless is the understatement of the century. 20th or 21st! PARTY MONSTER is a major achievement.
    10Mr_Vai

    Want to take a strange trip?

    The old saying is "truth is stranger than fiction," and you know what, it's true. In "Party Monster" we are taken on a very trippy and true little journey that allows us to see first-hand, the crazy club life of New York City in the 1980s. In particular, we get an up-close and personal biography of the "club kids." The "club kids" were a group of young party monsters that were actually paid by club owners to show up at their clubs. Mind you, these kids did not do any kind of performing at all, they simply showed up. However, when you see their outrageous costumes and attire, you see why people had their eye out for them. These kids were bizarre and odd and stoned and well, weird. Livng lives that were so out of balance, tragedy was inevitable. Green and Culkin portray the two most prominent members of this group and they are both good. However, it is Culkin that really steals the movie, breaking away from his stereotypical characters of the past and playing somebody that very few actors would be brave enough to take on. The reason I gave this movie 10 stars, is the look and sound. This movie is like watching an acid flashback from the 1980s. I mean, you are there, in the room with them as they strut in and snort up. The music is 1980s, the attitude is 1980s, it is hard to describe. Much of the film is dream-like. Moreover, Culkin is mesmerizing as a character too odd for words. No, the story and acting are not Oscar-worthy, but the look of the film, the feel of the film, wow! I predict that this film will become more popular as the years go by. It has the qualities of all those great midnight movies of the 1980s. I really recommend it for people craving something different and historical (in a weird sense).
    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.
    8okami_ito

    A well informed movie about drug abuse.

    I often wondered why U.S. American movies involving young people who are into drugs are either pathetic (f.e. Drugstore Cowboy) or even downright ridiculous in their conservative portrayal of the dangers of drug use (f.e. Traffic, The Movie). Party Monster is very different. It's easy to see that the people who made this movie really informed themselves about what they tried to show. By doing this they achieved one of the best movies about adolescence i've seen in a long time. It's has a very sad and tender tone and though some scenes seem a little bit too stagy, the performances of the two leading actors are pure magic. It's pure joy just to watch them and as you got to see a lot of them there is plenty of fun. Nevertheless the movie leaves you with a very intense and ambivalent feeling towards it's characters who were indeed something very special. I even dreamed about this picture after seeing it! Thanks for the strange dream!

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    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: 132nd street, and on the double!

      Keoki: Are we going very far?

      Michael: All the way, I hope...

    • 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

    • How long is Party Monster?Powered by Alexa

    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
      1 hour 38 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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