In late October of 1929, Variety printed one of the most famous headlines in history ..... "WALL STREET LAYS AN EGG." Along about January of 1995, Variety might have repeated that headline, with a slight variation, for this movie: "MRS. PARKER LAYS AN EGG." According to IMDb, this movie amassed the ridiculously puny box-office gross of $2.144. million. That might have been good -- in 1929! But in this modern era, that kind of gross at the box office would not even qualify as bus fare for Bill Gates. Thus, by those standards, "Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle" laid a bigger egg than the one laid by Wall Street 72 years ago.
Just why DID this movie bomb so dramatically with the vast moviegoing public? Probably for a combination of reasons (as often is the case). One reason would be that the general moviegoing public could not relate to it in any way. Today's moviegoers are, for the most part, quite young and most of them have probably never heard of any of these people, much less actually know anything about them. And it matters not a whit how famous any of them might have been in "their day." Also, this movie is nothing if not a talkfest. Most of today's moviegoers, what I like to call the three-second-cut-weaned-on-MTV crowd, need at least the occasional bang-bang shoot-'em-up to maintain their attention and keep them awake. Finally, and perhaps most important of all, the movie is not very good. It is the type of movie which is often referred to as an "interesting failure." I'll even add a fourth reason why I think this movie failed: I'm not sure that it is even POSSIBLE to make a good movie about this subject matter. The real-life characters who are this movie's subject(s), as a group, remind me of the famous part-quote from Shakespeare's "MacBeth," to wit ..... "full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."
And I have yet another problem with this movie. Before writing this, I read MANY reviews of the movie, those of both IMDb users and professional critics. To a person, they commend the entire cast in all of their roles. I could not possibly disagree more! Take, for example, Andrew McCarthy, who plays Eddy Parker, Dorothy Parker's first husband. This guy has been THE WORST ACTOR IN MOVIES for the last 20 years. As such, he proudly carries both torch and scepter handed down to him by George Nader from many years earlier. When a female (of course!) IMDb user complimented his performance here, I really lost it. Or Matthew Broderick. He's a decent actor but one with a limited range (which does not extend much beyond "Ferris Bueller's Day Off"). Trying to imagine him as Charles MacArthur is a leap across the chasm of credulity which can only end in a fatal plunge. Even Gwyneth Paltrow, an Oscar winner, fails in this movie, playing a character who should not even BE IN the movie. Indeed, Jennifer Jason Leigh, exceedingly annoying as Dorothy Parker, is one of the few actors here who seems up to the task of playing the famous personality to whom he or she has been assigned.
OK, one more. One more reason this movie failed was simply that ALL the famous people portrayed are so dislikable. As the self-appointed literati of The Jazz Age (the 1920s), how much can one stomach watching a group of alcoholics (which they surely were!) slicing and dicing everything and everyone -- including themselves -- to absolute shreds.
This movie didn't just lay an egg at the box office. It was an egg-laying machine!