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Wild Party

Original title: The Wild Party
  • 1975
  • R
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
951
YOUR RATING
Raquel Welch and James Coco in Wild Party (1975)
With the arrival of talking pictures, a silent film comedian (a Fatty Arbuckle-type) throws a lavish party to try and save his failing career. His plan is to release one last, great silent epic. In HD.
Play trailer0:55
1 Video
98 Photos
Period DramaTragedyComedyDrama

With the arrival of talking pictures, a silent film comedian (a Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle-type) throws a lavish party to try and save his failing career. His plan is to release one last, great... Read allWith the arrival of talking pictures, a silent film comedian (a Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle-type) throws a lavish party to try and save his failing career. His plan is to release one last, great silent masterpiece.With the arrival of talking pictures, a silent film comedian (a Roscoe 'Fatty' Arbuckle-type) throws a lavish party to try and save his failing career. His plan is to release one last, great silent masterpiece.

  • Director
    • James Ivory
  • Writers
    • Walter Marks
    • Joseph Moncure March
  • Stars
    • James Coco
    • Raquel Welch
    • Perry King
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    951
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • James Ivory
    • Writers
      • Walter Marks
      • Joseph Moncure March
    • Stars
      • James Coco
      • Raquel Welch
      • Perry King
    • 23User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Trailer
    Trailer 0:55
    Trailer

    Photos98

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    James Coco
    James Coco
    • Jolly Grimm
    Raquel Welch
    Raquel Welch
    • Queenie
    Perry King
    Perry King
    • Dale Sword
    Tiffany Bolling
    Tiffany Bolling
    • Kate
    Royal Dano
    Royal Dano
    • Tex
    David Dukes
    David Dukes
    • James Morrison
    Chris Gilmore
    Chris Gilmore
    • Nadine
    • (as Annette Ferra)
    Eddie Lawrence
    • Kreutzer
    • (as Eddie Laurence)
    Bobo Lewis
    Bobo Lewis
    • Wilma
    Don De Natale
    Don De Natale
    • Jackie
    Dena Dietrich
    Dena Dietrich
    • Mrs. Murchison
    Regis Cordic
    Regis Cordic
    • Mr. Murchison
    • (as Regis J. Cordic)
    Jennifer Lee Pryor
    Jennifer Lee Pryor
    • Madeline True
    • (as Jennifer Lee)
    Mews Small
    Mews Small
    • Bertha
    • (as Marya Small)
    Baruch Lumet
    Baruch Lumet
    • Tailor
    Fred Franklyn
    Fred Franklyn
    • Sam
    • (as Fredric Franklyn)
    J.S. Johnson
    • Morris
    Tom Reese
    Tom Reese
    • Eddy
    • Director
      • James Ivory
    • Writers
      • Walter Marks
      • Joseph Moncure March
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews23

    5.3951
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    Featured reviews

    theeht

    very good though not widely seen

    Unforgettable, very well done depticition of decadent 1920s Hollywood. Raquel Welch is superb as the desperate, sweet mistress of a deeply disturbed overweight and washed up comic named Jolly Grimm, ably played by James Coco. To resuscitate his career, Jolly throws a party that ends in tragedy. Very loosley based on Fatty Arbuckles story, this unforgettable and devastating film features fine support from Perry King as a Valentiniesque actor, and especailly from Miss Tiffany Bolling, as a lovely but unhappy film starlet. All in all, a class A effort that should have gotten a better recption at the time, but may well emerge as a cult classic. It is newly released on DVD , which should add to the fine film.
    7SnoopyStyle

    a different Merchant-Ivory

    It's 1929 and talkies are taking over. Veteran comedian Jolly Grimm (James Coco) is putting together a new silent film with his own money. It's an old style broad comedy. He's throwing a party but is having trouble gaining support for his film. He hopes to show the movie during the party and get some backing. He's afraid to lose his girlfriend Queenie (Raquel Welch) who catches the eye of hunky new leading man Dale Sword (Perry King).

    This is a different Merchant-Ivory movie from their more famous 80's and 90's fare. They are still doing historical dramas but not necessarily this type. For most of it, I liked this movie and was surprised at the critical panning. The dark ugliness of Hollywood could be off-putting. I'm not a fan of the ending. It's often an easy out for a movie to end with gun fire. A better climax may be Jolly trying to get into the Pickford party and refused entry. All in all, I like this as one of many takedown of Hollywood people.
    paulfrancis6189

    The Wild Disaster

    This is with out a doubt the worst movie I have ever seen. Plastic characters spewing the most amazingly bad dialog imaginable. If Ed Wood had still been directing in the 70's, this could have been his masterpiece. I am still surprised that Perry King and Raquel Welch did not pool their funds to buy out every print, so they could be spared the embarrassment of the general public seeing the most laughable dance sequence ever put on celluloid. It is especially sad to think that this was a big movie for James Coco. His true comedic talents were totally wasted in this mess of a film. The film is so unbelievably bad that I am surprised that it has not reached some sort of "cult film" status. It should be played at midnight at art house all over the US. It would bring screams of laughter from everyone in the audience. Maybe John Waters should do the re-make?
    4moonspinner55

    The possibilities were endless, but what's on the screen is muddled and dispiriting...

    The combination of director James Ivory and his producing partner Ismail Merchant with sensual star Raquel Welch should have resulted in a dynamic art-house hit, but "The Wild Party" is a series of missed opportunities (you're more acutely aware of all the possibilities that went unrealized than you are gripped by what made it to the screen). Loosely based on the Fatty Arbuckle scandal, this is a well-intentioned, noble failure with James Coco playing a silent-screen star in early 1930s Hollywood who throws a bash to celebrate his comeback in talkies, but his big night goes awry. A.I.P. recut the film for its theatrical run to punch up the sex--which gave the pic something of a sullied reputation--however MGM has since restored Ivory's cut. Coco, Welch (as mistress Queenie), and Perry King (as another in his stable of studs) all do fine work, and some of the dialogue has snap. The film is certainly a curiosity, but Ivory's handling is plastic and his pacing and musical effects are colorless. *1/2 from ****
    6sol-kay

    Hollywood Babylon

    **SPOILERS** Surviving from what happened in the wild party of the night before at comedy legend Jolly Grimm ,James Coco, mansion writer Jimmy Morrison, David Dukes, is laid up in his hospital bed recovering from a bullet wound in his neck. Jimmy is doing what he does best writing a screenplay about the terrible events that put him in the hospital and ended up taking the lives of two people, one a major screen heart-throb, at the party.

    It all started when comedian Jolly Grimm who hadn't made a movie in years invited all the Hollywood big shot producers and a number of actors actresses, and hangers on, to his place to view his new film "Brother Jasper" that he hoped will re-start his fledgling career. Having had an amazing 27 hits in a row Grimm is now considered a has-been by the studios and hasn't been giving any staring parts in any of their major motion pictures. Grimm decided to go over their heads and make a movie that he stares in and and directed himself. Grimm still needs the Hollywood honchos to distribute his movie for it to reach the public and it's at the party that Grimm is throwing that he hopes to impress them in just doing that.

    Tense and nervous the day before the big party Grimm takes it out on his live-in girlfriend Queenie, Requal Welch, who put up with his manic-depressive actions for years but now it seems that even she reached her breaking point with Grimm unable, or not wanting, to control his violent outbursts anymore that she's at the receiving end.

    Showing Jimmy the movie "Brother Jasper" to get his professional opinion Grimm's told that the movie needs a number of changes or cuts, like a comedic cannibal scene,in what's supposed to be a heart-wrenching and serious film, that has poor Jimmy almost thrown out of the Grimm Mansion. With all the Hollywood illuminates showing up to see what Grimm hoped to be his masterpiece and the movie that would catapult him back on top of the weekly theater ticket receipts, and on the silver screen, things don't go as well as Grimm hoped in fact the party turns out to be a total and deadly disaster for him.

    Loosely based on an incident about actor Fatty Arbuckle back in the 1920's when he was arrested and put on trial for the rape and murder of a young starlet that he invited to a drunken party, and orgy, of his. Arbuckle was found innocent but his career was finished and he died a poor and broken man some ten years later.

    James Coco is at his best as the tragic Jolly Grimm who ends up not only losing any chance of getting back in the Hollywood limelight but also looses Queenie first to movie matinée idol Dale Sword, Perry King, and then ends up losing her life due to his jealous and uncountable rage. Grimm is not at all that much of a villain in the film "The Wild Party" he's more a victim of his own spectacular success.

    Sweet and loving at first when he took Queenie off the street and gave her a place to stay, in his, mansion and put her in a number of his movies as well, as taking care off all her needs Grimm also treated Queenie as an equal not as someone who's totally dependent on him. It was only when his career started to fall apart that Grimm became an abusive swine towards her as well as everyone else.

    With the party degenerating into an orgy free for all and Queenie leaving Grimm, by going off with Dale Sword, all by himself that the drinks and suspicions that were overwhelming his already fragile mind took control and Grimm lost it as well as lost what life and freedom that he still had left.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Vincent Canby, writing in The New York Times in 1981, stated: "Wild Party (1975) was made in 1975 but is only now receiving its New York premiere is the result of one of those not atypical fallings-out between the people who actually make movies and those who finance them. The original distributor, American International Pictures, didn't like [Director] Mr. [James] Ivory's version and released, instead, a drastically cut, re-arranged version that did poorly at the box-office. The movie was then put on the shelf for four years. The film being shown at the Art is the one Mr. Ivory and [Producer] Mr. [Ismail] Merchant wanted released in the first place."
    • Goofs
      All entries contain spoilers
    • Quotes

      Nadine: [She walks into the garden, carrying a toolbox] Is this Mr. Grimm's house?

      Jolly Grimm: That's right.

      Nadine: Well, do you know where I can find Mr. Grimm?

      Jolly Grimm: You're looking at him.

      Nadine: Oh! I'm sorry... wow, you look thinner. Oh, well I didn't mean... it's just on the screen you look gigantic!

      Jolly Grimm: Who are you?

      Nadine: Oh gosh, I'm sorry. My sister said I should come. You know, Grace. Grace Jones. She came with Eddie Mangione.

      Jolly Grimm: What's your name?

      Nadine: Nadine. Nadine Jones.

      [she smiles]

      Jolly Grimm: [He takes her hand] Welcome Nadine. How did you get here?

      Nadine: I hitchhiked. Thumbed all the way from Burbank. See, I'm a dancer. Acrobatics, ballet... like that. And I'm good too, Mr. Grimm. I thought maybe you like to let me entertain all these movie people and...

      Jolly Grimm: Not tonight. It's not a good time.

      Nadine: Oh no... really?

      Jolly Grimm: You must be starved. Why don't you go to the kitchen and get some chow. I think there's some sasparilla in the icebox. Ask for Wilma. Go on now, it's right through there.

      Nadine: Thanks, Mr. Grimm... but maybe later?

      Jolly Grimm: We'll see.

    • Alternate versions
      Originally released as a distributor's cut of 91 minutes with its scenes significantly altered and reordered. A restored director's cut was eventually issued, which runs 108 minutes, and remains the version most commonly in circulation.
    • Connections
      Featured in The Wandering Company (1985)
    • Soundtracks
      Singapore Sally
      (uncredited)

      Written by Walter Marks

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 24, 1976 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Merchant Ivory Productions (United States)
      • MGM
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Queenie
    • Filming locations
      • Mission Inn - 3649 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • American International Pictures (AIP)
      • Merchant Ivory Productions
      • The Wild Party Production Company
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $900,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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