Can't Fight the Fever
(Published December 5, 2011, in slightly different form)When the movie Saturday Night Fever was released in December of 1977, it became a smash critical and popular success that delivered disco to the masses, John Travolta to movie theaters, and a record that became the biggest-selling soundtrack of all time.
But in my household, the film�s influence was exactly...nil. Considering my family�s strict rock & roll diet and my impressionable age, I didn�t have to be told that a movie about disco was cinema non grata. (Say it with me now: �Disco sucks!") But beyond hewing to the party line, as a family we agreed those high-pitched, nasal Bee Gee voices had become annoyingly ubiquitous in the months following the film's release.
The Bee Gees and their chests |
For the next half decade, my views on disco�and by extension, Saturday Night Fever�remained unchanged, even after the country's disco rage had subsided. When the movie showed up on cable in both PG and R-rated versions, I peeked in at a few key scenes to compare the levels of nudity and swearing (the '80s equivalent of watching deleted scenes), but even the charms of Donna Pescow and Karen Lynn Gorney couldn't overcome my lingering aversion to the film as a whole.
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