Ansioso por su futuro tras la escuela secundaria, un joven de 19 años italoestadounidense de Brooklyn trata de escapar de la dura realidad de su sombría vida familiar dominando la pista de b... Leer todoAnsioso por su futuro tras la escuela secundaria, un joven de 19 años italoestadounidense de Brooklyn trata de escapar de la dura realidad de su sombría vida familiar dominando la pista de baile de la discoteca local.Ansioso por su futuro tras la escuela secundaria, un joven de 19 años italoestadounidense de Brooklyn trata de escapar de la dura realidad de su sombría vida familiar dominando la pista de baile de la discoteca local.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Nominado para 1 premio Óscar
- 6 premios y 14 nominaciones en total
- Dan Fusco
- (as Sam J. Coppola)
- Paint Store Customer
- (as Robert Costanza)
Reseñas destacadas
As I've been rewatching this from time to time over the decades, I now see there is a lot more there. It's actually pretty nihilistic, the family drama is reasonably intricate, as is the love story. On top of that, it's an interesting view on 1970's NYC, perhaps not in the same league as Midnight Cowboy or Taxi Driver, but nevertheless sharing an origin. At times, it's as gritty and dark as these two films.
The music is stellar and the disco scenes are iconic. Not a masterpiece as it sometimes is cringeworthy and shallow, but on the whole it's a culturally important piece of film history.
The same goes for "Saturday Night Fever" (SNF), a film that showcases disco in its most perfect form. And yet the true theme of the movie is about wanting more out of your life but just existing, until something affects you so much that you decide to start living.
John Travolta's character is so well played against his friends who are, quite simply, cruel no hopers who disrespect the opposite sex & treat them as fifth best against the car they all share to have 'mobile' sex in.
The female character that eventually shifts Travolta's character appears at a time when horrific events really force him to reassess where he is going something that his friends will never be unable to ever do.
It is easy to label a movie a certain way. There are films with similar themes such as 'Good Will Hunting', which is noted for its themes & dialogue rather than being a kitsch memory, and we should remember SNF for the same reasons.
So Tony (Travolta) is a New York City born and bred Italian American with only a high school education, an employee at a dead end job - selling and mixing paint - in a store that is now extinct - the neighborhood hardware store that is about to get replaced by the big box hardware stores such as Harbor Freight. Dad is used to being the head of the family, but now he has been laid off in middle age. Suddenly Edith is talking back and disrespecting Archie and he doesn't like it one bit. And the only thing that makes Tony feel alive is Saturday nights on the dance floor of the local disco where he is the best.
And then he meets a girl - Stephanie. She is everything that I, a Texan, was told that New Yorkers are - loud mouthed, self important, snooty. And yet Tony follows her around like a puppy because he is in love. Annette (Donna Pescow) follows Tony around like a puppy because she is in love. It's funny how Tony doesn't like how Stephanie treats him, yet he turns around and treats Annette the same way. But Tony turns out to be much more self aware than you would think. And Stephanie - there is much more to her story than her being just another stuck up Manhattanite.
There is so much casual sex going on here that it answers the question "Where did herpes come from?". But it is so much more than glittering disco balls. it is a love story. A story of a guy learning about the friendship component of love. It is a tragedy. It is a story of young people at a crossroads. And last but not least, it has probably one of the great soundtracks in motion picture history and gave the Bee Gees a second act. I'd highly recommend it. Just try to ignore your probable first reaction "Yikes those clothes!!!!"".
The snag is that SNF was NOT a disco movie. Yes, it had dazzling dance sequences, yes, it had a pulsating soundtrack, and, yes, many of the scenes were shot in a disocteque, but I have always felt that the disco theme was peripheral to the real story; the alienation of youth and the acceptance and sanctuary they find in each other and their chosen surroundings. In fact, Nik Cohn's article on which the film was based (and which he later admitted was faked), "Tribal rites of the new Saturday night" would have been a more apposite title. John Travolta perfectly captures this. As Tony Manero he almost ritually prepares himself for his night out, preening himself in front of the mirror, donning his warrior's uniform, and then escaping the drudgery of his existence to his battleground, the local disco where he is the tribal chief.
Gritty, foulmouthed and somewhat downbeat, SNF starkly presented the darker underbelly of the disco subculture.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesJohn Travolta had worked hard on the "You Should Be Dancing" sequence and threatened to quit the film when the studio suggested it should be shot in close-up instead of full-body.
- PifiasWhen Tony is walking with Stephanie to get coffee, a girl's scream is heard. A group of girls was watching them film the scene and they would scream when they saw John Travolta.
- Citas
Tony Manero: Would ya just watch the hair. Ya know, I work on my hair a long time and you hit it. He hits my hair.
- Créditos adicionalesWhen the title appears on screen, it is done in the style of a neon sign. The word "Fever" is blinking.
- Versiones alternativasIn 2002, AMC (American Movie Classics) showed a new print of 'Fever' with scenes not in the theatrical release nor home version:
- 1) After Tony's first night at the disco, he and his buddies cruise the bridge, where the song 'Jive Talkin'' can be heard in the background. He gets out of the car, and begins to caress the bridge's structure with his fingertips.
- 2) After asking Doreen to dance, Tony and Doreen dance to 'Disco Duck'.
- 3) Tony takes Stephanie back to her Bay Ridge home, where they kiss in the car.
- 4) Tony signs for a telegram that tells his father has been asked to go back to work.
- 5) After getting out of the subway, Tony buzzes Stephanie's apartment building.
- ConexionesFeatured in Les rendez-vous du dimanche: Episodio fechado 16 abril 1978 (1978)
- Banda sonoraHow Deep Is Your Love
Courtesy of RSO Records, Inc., Stigwood Music, Inc. (Unichappell Music, Inc.) BMI and Bros. Gibb, B.V.
Written by Barry Gibb, Robin Gibb and Maurice Gibb
Performed by The Bee Gees
Selecciones populares
Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Idiomas
- Títulos en diferentes países
- Fiebre de sábado por la noche
- Localizaciones del rodaje
- 86th Street, Brooklyn, Nueva York, Nueva York, Estados Unidos(opening sequence: Tony's Walk)
- Empresas productoras
- Ver más compañías en los créditos en IMDbPro
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 3.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 94.213.184 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 3.878.099 US$
- 18 dic 1977
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 237.113.184 US$
- Duración1 hora 58 minutos
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1