To: Think4Yourself who wrote (53535 ) 7/18/2006 8:06:21 AM From: shades Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 116555 India also banned Peter Sellars - THE PARTY if I am not mistaken - thier definition of what they are allowed to ban is pretty broad. This should concern people like Mish - his blog brothers are getting the 1984 treatment.screenselect.co.uk The Party (1968) MGM HOME ENT. (EUROPE) LTD. Starring: Peter Sellers | Claudine Longet | Gavin McLeod | Buddy Lester Director: Blake Edwards Run time: 95 mins Genres: Comedy Released: September 27, 2004 In one of their few non-Clouseau efforts, Blake Edwards and Peter Sellers preserve the spirit of the French bumbler in the person of Hrundi V. Bakshi, an accident-prone Indian actor. Brought to Hollywood to play the title role in SON OF GUNGA DIN, Bakshi destroys the film's most elaborate set with his bungling and is banned from the set by Edward Clutterbuck (J. Edward McKinley), the film's producer. But because of an error by the producer's secretary, Bakshi's name is added to the guest list of his next party, an A-list affair. Shortly after arriving, Bakshi begins accidentally dismantling Clutterbuck's carefully staged event, destroying a flower bed, knocking a servant through a bay window, and triggering the lawn sprinklers, soaking the producer's pretentious guests. When the producer's daughter, Molly (Kathe Green), and a group of her friends arrive with a Day-Glo-painted elephant, Baskhi is shocked by the sacrilege and insists on washing the pachyderm in one of the house's indoor pools. As the other guests begin to join in the fun, pandemonium erupts. Sellers is typically brilliant in a film abounding in sidesplitting sight gags.