Family Party (film)

Family Party
Directed by Pari Mathur
Produced by Felix Ding
Rishi Kumar
Emily Barbera
Written by Pari Mathur
Music by Chris and JJ
Eyes on the Shore
Cinematography Richie Yau
Edited by Sara Newens
Release dates
Oct 2015
Running time
52 min
Country United States
Language English
Budget $95,000

Family Party is a 2015 coming of age comedy written and directed by Pari Mathur. The film stars Jaya Prasad, Vishal Vaidya, Jai Ahuja, Rahul Nalamasu, and Hunter Milano who are group of teens that decide to sneak out of a family event and go to a local concert. The film is currently available in all English-speaking territories on Netflix.[1][2]

Synopsis

High school senior, Nick gets forced by his parents to attend a boring family party instead of letting him to go a local summer concert with his baseball buddies. He meets a group of teens—including a girl named Arti—who are all stuck at the party too. They soon realize they all have tickets to the same concert and hash out a plan to sneak out. Their scheme falls apart when they’re met with another jealous childhood friend, a missing diamond necklace, and a small religious ceremony put on by the adults.

Production

Director Pari Mathur completed the script in 2009. The cast was auditioned from the Harker School and Naatak theater group. Principal photography started in August 2013 in Oakland and San Jose, California. Additional scenes were also shot around Saratoga, Pleasanton, and Pacifica.

Family Party was accepted and premiered at the New York Indian Film Festival in 2015. The film was released on October 2015 on iTunes,[3] Google Play,[4] Amazon,[5] and Vudu.[6] It was acquired by Netflix late 2015 and became available to stream worldwide in all English-speaking territories in early 2016.

Cast

[7]

Accolades

Family Party premiered at the New York Indian Film Festival 2015.[8]

Release

Family Party was released on iTunes, Google Play, Amazon, and Vudu on Oct. 2015. The film was acquired by Netflix in March 2016 and is currently available to stream in all English-speaking territories worldwide.[9]

Music

The teens in the film are all trying to go to an Eyes on the Shore concert, an actual bay area band, who provided the song for the end credits called “Jigsaw”.

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/9/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.