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It's My Party
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Directed by Randal Kleiser
In this bittersweet comedy drama, a man nearing the end of his life seeks closure with his family and friends, and he confronts the issues of the right to die. Nick Stark (Eric Roberts) is a successful architect who is openly gay. He was involved in a committed relationship with Brandon Theis (Gregory Harrison), a television director, until Nick discovered that he's HIV-positive. Nick's first question to Brandon is "You won't leave me, will you? I don't want to die alone." Brandon, however, doesn't have the emotional strength to deal with Nick's condition and soon moves on. Several years later, even though Nick has been mindful of his health, he begins to display symptoms of full-blown AIDS, most notably the brain lesions that indicate Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy, an AIDS-related illness that has already claimed several of his friends. Wanting to go out with his dignity intact, Nick decides to throw one last party, which will give him the opportunity to say goodbye to his friends and family while he's still lucid -- shortly after which he intends to take his own life with painkillers. Nick attempts to make peace with his mother and father (Lee Grant and George Segal), who had difficulty accepting their son's lifestyle, and he enjoys a last laugh with his close friends, until Brandon -- who is hardly welcomed by the group -- shows up. Appearing as Nick's friends and family are Margaret Cho, Bronson Pinchot, Bruce Davison, Sally Kellerman, Marlee Matlin, Roddy McDowall, and Dennis Christopher. Writer and director Randal Kleiser loosely based It's My Party on his own personal experiences when his longtime companion was diagnosed with AIDS and opted to take his own life before his symptoms became too severe. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
lost interest.
It may feel disrespectful to heap opprobrium on a film as well-intentioned as this drama about AIDS and assisted suicide. But rarely has a movie flitted past such weighty issues on its way to so many soap-opera cliches and sadly misguided in-jokes. No matter how personal It's My Party was for writer/director Randal Kleiser, the final product is the type of maudlin mess that can only come from a lack of perspective. Sentimental when it should be darkly witty, scatological when it wants to be clever, and campy whenever it aims for a higher emotional register, the entire film reeks of self-satisfied liberal back-slapping. A who's who of gay and gay-friendly thespians pitched in and worked for scale, but it's hard to identify a single one who cuts through the self-pitying bathos to evoke a remotely authentic human emotion. Margaret Cho does distinguish herself, but only in her willingness to condescend to what she perceives as her built-in queer audience (a tendency that would eventually render her stand-up comedy all but unwatchable). It's tragic that veteran filmmaker Kleiser's real-life partner contracted AIDS and eventually killed himself. But it's incomprehensible that Kleiser would translate the experience into such a self-indulgent mess. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 

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