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Party Monster
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Starring Michael Alig
With a short 57-minute running time calculated for TV timeslots, this documentary was partially financed by Cinemax and UK's Channel 4. Staged simulations are smoothly integrated with legit footage to jigsaw together a portrait of Michael Alig, serving time for manslaughter when this film was made. Waving goodbye to South Bend, Indiana, Alig arrived in NYC, became a college dropout, and developed a reputation for promoting parties during the '80s. The Alig parties featured bizarre costumes, performance art, and a sexual slant, but they eventually began going haywire with wild drug use/abuse of heroin, crack, and animal tranquilizers, prompting the law to take note. In early 1996, drug dealer Angel Melendez vanished, and a corpse later turned up floating near Staten Island; months later, Alig and a roommate were arrested. To recount the grim details, filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato interviewed Alig in prison, combining this with both party videos and footage of Alig associates. Shown at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Bhob Stewart, All Movie Guide
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movie year countdown - round #2 ...
by in Risselada Blog
is neutral about it.
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"This blog entry is part of my “movie year countdown round #2”. Read more about that here.Party MonsterI really have no idea why I thought I'd like this film as much as I was thinking I might. In retrospect it was what I should have expected it to be. Obviously the people in this film were going to be totally wacked out, hedonistic sickos. Of course it's somewhat interesting for the bizzarro factor. But after you get over that there's no one " [More]
BlogNosh 12/06/07
by in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"BILLY THE KID - In NYC Add to My Profile | More Videos Above: Billy Price, star of Billy the Kid, goes to New York, crosses the street, and suddenly finds himself shirtless in an impromptu dance party. I watched this video for the first time on mute, whilst on a conference call, and thought I was having a psychotic break. Thanks, Kevin. Woody Allen’s Speechless vid, via United Hollywood. This wouldn’t even be on here if it wasn’t such a slow week. This has nothing to do with movies, really, " [More]
Movie year countdown viewing pr ...
by in Risselada Blog
is neutral about it.
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"This is a list for Round 2 of my movie year countdown viewing project as first described here. If by any strange chance whoever is reading this is actually following along you may notice that I'm still less than two thirds of the way through my original one. Well I'm starting this new one because as much as I love old movies it can get a little tedious watching just older movies. So I'm going to be blending my watching of the two lists together. Still focusin " [More]
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Re:Weekly Theme for September 2 ...
by in Weekly Theme
"The best comedy about drugs (Other than maybe Fear and Loathing)? Kids in the Hall: Brain Candy. "I just heard about this new drug that makes you happy. I just want to say: FUCK HAPPY!" The guy's in Party Monster sure did a rediculous amount of drugs it sounds like, although I wasn't too interested in them. Has anyone seen Altered States? I'm really interested in seeing this one. " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Gripping and silly in equal measure, this documentary is arguably more entertaining than the filmmakers' later feature of the same name. Without Macaulay Culkin to stand in for him, club kid-turned-murder Michael Alig faces the camera both before and after his conviction for the killing of drug dealer Angel Melendez. The result is like a year's worth of Jerry Springer episodes crammed into a single can't-miss hour. From home movies of Alig during his ketamine-snorting heyday to interview footage of his trashy, baffled mother, Party Monster amply chronicles the druggy, fame-for-fame's-sake ethos that powered New York club life during the rave years. Along the way, it gives camera time to all sorts of marginal cases without ever asserting any prefab moral viewpoint. Sadly enough, the burned-out remnants of the club-kid scene are still willing to talk about Alig as long as it gives them a spot in the limelight (if not the Limelight). Filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato may pad their already short documentary with cheesy reenactments, but it's hard to dismiss the traffic-accident magnetism of interview subjects like the former Alig hanger-on who tries to promote a 12-inch dance single inspired by the murder. The feature-film version may be hipper and wittier, but this documentary shows the whole sick scene like it really went down. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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SpiritualWarfare
SpiritualWarfare
loved it.
xtemporaryxbliss
xtemporaryxbliss
loved it.
msgenevieve
msgenevieve
loved it.
lopezdash
lopezdash
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aidanbrack
aidanbrack
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