| Party Monster History: An Introduction |
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Party Monster the movie, based on the James St. James
book [Disco Bloodbath] and the documentary [Party Monster],
is a buddy movie with a twist, or a twisted buddy
movie. Its focus is the relationship between Michael Alig and James St.
James, two kids from the mid-west who come to New York where they
re-invent themselves as fabulous people. Although it is not immediately
clear to James, Michael instantly recognizes that they are soulmates
and immediately latches on to him. Shy outsiders as kids, they both
learned to hide their feelings behind witty facades, and their
bickering and barbed exchanges reveal a profound bond and budding a
co-dependency.
Michael is the quicker study even though James is
smarter and
more learned. So although it is James who initiates Michael into New
York night life, it is Michael who quickly rises to the top.
To get there Michael was equipped with no special skills
or
qualifications other than his considerable charisma. He was
fresh-faced, cute, with a twinkle in his eye. A post-modern Peter Pan.
He made no secret of the fact that he never wanted to grow up. The way
he gulped his words, the way he gestured, all projected a child-like
vulnerability. He coupled this with a child-like fearlessness daring to
do what others, who had accepted the boring boundaries of life and
drudgery of being adults, would only fantasize about.
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| Party Monster History: Creating Club Kids |
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Part of the attraction was Michael's impulsive nature as
he
quickly went from one thing to the next with the abruptness of someone
surfing channels or like a kid in a candy store. Unconstrained by
checks and balances, Michael instantly seized on new ideas with extreme
intensity. He seemed purely spontaneous, with an envious ability to
live in the moment. Vehemently opposed to drugs, he tried them one day
and over time graduated to becoming an all out drug mess. Nothing with
Michael was ever done in moderation .
However child-like or childish Michael could be, he was
not
stupid. Recognizing that we live in a media age where perception is the
reality, he knew that instant and outrageous self-invention was the
key. Unfazed by being a misfit from the Midwest, Michael gathered
around him similarly like-minded souls -- the kids who had been teased
and bullied in school -- and gave them fabulous new Club Kid
identities. They were the Lost Boys to his Peter Pan.
James could see that Michael's chaotic and unruly
behavior was
a kind of genius. It was performance art. Michael's minting of
superstars out of those least likely to be stars parodied society's
absurd obsession with celebrity. His attention-getting antics parodied
the dysfunctional circuses of our talk show times. His surreal
infantility parodied our culture's overriding obsession with youth.
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| Party Monster History: A Murder |
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The starburst that was Michael inevitably put James
somewhat
in the shade. But like him or loathe him -- and James did both -- he
found it impossible resist Michael's energetic charm or the mischief of
his spectacle. And James was not alone in this. Everyone seemed unable
to resist The Michael Alig Show. Peter Gatien, the powerful club owner,
indulged Michael as though he were his own son. At the other extreme
Angel Melendez the club kid neophyte looked up to Michael as though he
were a God. So many others like Angel followed in Michael's wake that
he was a kind of Pied Piper.
But just as David Bowie became trapped by his Ziggy
Stardust
creation, so Michael became hostage to his brat-like persona. In
reality shy and retiring, Michael's exuberant public front demanded
that, to remain ahead of the pack and leader of the parade, he
continually had to outdo himself with increasingly outrageous pranks.
One day Michael went too far. He murdered Angel.
There was nothing particularly nice about Angel, and
Angel
had attacked Michael, hadn't he? But then as James realized that
perhaps it was not self-defense, that perhaps there was more to it, it
started to eat away at him. And even when Angel was reduced to a mere
sacrificial symbol, James was forced to recognize that no excuse could
justify such a brutal thing. Even the surreal anarchic alternative
universe they had created from themselves had to conform.
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Plot Summary
for
Party Monster (2003)
Set in the New York club scene of the late
1980's
thru the 1990's, a tale which chronicles the rise and fall of club-kid
promoter Michael Alig, a
party organizer, whose extravagant life was sent spiralling downward
when he boasted on television that he had killed his friend, roommate,
and drug dealer, Angel Melendez. Originally from Indiana, Alig moved to
New York, and came to be an underground legend, known for his excessive
drug use and outrageous behavior in the club world. At his peak, he had
his own record label, and magazine, and hosted Disco 2000, one of the
biggest club nights in New York in the '90s. He was doing a lot of
drugs, and as his addiction got worse, his party themes became darker
and more twisted. Alig's saga reached its tragic crescendo when he
viciously murdered his drug dealer, Angel, by injecting him with Drano
and throwing him in the East River. The power he wielded on the club
scene made him feel untouchable, so he didn't hestitate to boast of the
murder. The press thought it was a publicity stunt--until Angel's body
washed ashore.
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
Party Monster is a curiosity: a
fictional
version of events already covered in documentary form (see Party
Monster: The Shockumentary) by this film's co-directors, Fenton
Bailey and Randy Barbato, best known for The Eyes of Tammy Faye.
Party Monster,
theatrically released in 2003, also signals the return of Macaulay
Culkin to films after a long absence. Culkin plays 1980s club
kid-turned-killer Michael Alig, a small-town boy who arrives in New
York in search of reinvention on the Ecstasy-fueled party scene. Alig
ascends from rube to ringmaster, organizing Fabulous happenings and
anointing, in Warhol-like fashion, various transvestites and studly
naifs the era's new superstars. Seth Green plays Alig's arch but more
reticent co-conspirator and roommate, James St. James. Green is more
grounded in character than Culkin, though neither actor is convincing
as a deluded drag queen. Despite interesting material, the directors
never reveal what makes Alig a compelling figure in Manhattan's social
history. --Tom Keogh
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Party Monster
Directed by : Fenton Bailey, Randy Barbato
PARTY MONSTER
stars Macaulay Culkin, Seth Green, Chloe Sevigny and Dylan McDermott.
Based on the book DISCO BLOODBATH by James St. James, this feature film
from award winning filmmakers Fenton Bailey and Randy Barbato is a
buddy movie with a lethal twist. Its focus is the friendship between
Michael Alig (Culkin) and James St. James (Green), two mismatched kids
who meet amidst the early 1990s nightclub scene in New York City. Of
the two, James is smarter, but Michael is the quicker study. And
although it is James who initiates Michael into the New York club life,
it is Michael who gathers around him similar souls---the kids who had
been teased and bullied in school--and gives them fabulous new Club Kid
identities. They are the Lost Boys to his Peter Pan, and help his rise
to fame, as he becomes the premiere party giver. Few can resist
Michael’s star power, including Peter Gatien (McDermott), the powerful
club owner who indulges Michael as though he were his own son. But as
the demands of leading the party parade escalate, Michael’s behavior
becomes increasingly outrageous and violent, culminating in murder.
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PARTY
MONSTER: ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE SOUNDTRACK
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| Party
Monster: A Fabulous But True Tale of
Murder in
Clubland |
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| James St. James |
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EXCERPT/
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