R, 119 min.
Director: John Badham
Writers: Norman Wexler, Nic
Cohn
Starring: John Travolta,
Karen Lynn Gorney, Barry Miller, Joseph Cali, Paul Pape, Donna Pescow, Bruce
Ornstein, Julie Bovasso, Sam J. Coppola
Every time I see “Saturday
Night Fever” I’m impressed by how good it is. Having been a child at the time
of its release, I remember the disco craze that surrounded it. The movie was
huge. Its impact was felt on television as the networks entered a war of the
dance competition shows. John Travolta was catapulted into the spotlight as a
megastar. The Bee Gees’ soundtrack album became one of the best selling albums
of all time. The movie even received a rerelease with a PG rating that allowed
people like my parents to drag kids like me to it and wrap everyone up in the
disco craze.
What my five-year-old self
took away from the movie at the time was that a white suit with a black shirt
was the epitome of cool and playing around on the Verrazono Narrows Bridge was
a bad idea. It was just your typical blockbuster in my mind. A crowd pleaser,
which by 70’s gold-plated standards, I suppose it was. When I saw it as a young
adult I thought my parents were awful people for having brought a six-year-old
to see a movie with a gang rape scene in it. It was shortly after that
screening that I learned it had been edited out (along with all the bad
language) for the PG version that was released for mainstream audiences because
of the film’s popularity.
Now, I see it for the social
criticism that it is. This movie is not kind to the lifestyle these young men
embraced in the 70s. It is not nice to Travolta and his group of friends. They’re
depicted as racist bigots who bash blacks, Hispanics, homosexuals and women
without any question of hiding their feelings toward others. They come from
families that worship religious ambition and have taught them nothing of
tolerance or empathy. Travolta’s Tony Manero aspires to be something better,
but must fight against the environmental conditioning in which he’s been
raised. It’s a coming of age story that’s about so much more than the typical
trivialities of young adulthood.
11 comments:
Nice. I have been looking for years and I can't seen to find the real name of the stripper Penny in Saturday night fever. She is asked to dance by Travolta after he gives his "charity" dance. Do you know her real name???
Thanks.
James
ever get an answere??
I have been curious as well.
Anyone know?
She is so beautiful and her dancing is too sexy!
Same here, I just watched the directors cut of Saturday Night Fever. I;m too curious as to who was the very Sexy Stripper???
Please someone tell us who Penny was. I was a stripper in those days and would love to know if she was someone I worked with.
Aahh found her. Karen Lynn Gorney.
Karen Lynn is not the stripper
Karen Lynn played Stephanie
Who was she?
penny lane aka terri morreale
penny lane in brooklyn terri morreale never got credited
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