Saturday Night Fever

1977 R 1h 58m Blu-ray / DVD

Saturday Night Fever

1977 R 1h 58m Blu-ray / DVD
  • Overview
  • Details
Director John Badham's musical ushered in the disco craze with the character of 19-year-old Tony Manero. By day, Tony's a paint store clerk, but at night, he's a polyester-clad stallion who rules a Brooklyn nightspot with his partner, Stephanie.
Cast
John Travolta, Karen Lynn Gorney, Barry Miller, Joseph Cali, Paul Pape, Donna Pescow, Bruce Ornstein, Julie Bovasso, Fran Drescher, Martin Shakar, Sam Coppola
Director
John Badham
Format
Blu-ray DVD
Screen
Widescreen Anamorphic 1.85:1
Subtitles
English, Spanish (Neutral)
CC
Yes
Audio
English: Dolby Digital 5.1, English: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround, French: Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Screen
Widescreen Anamorphic 1.78:1
Subtitles
English, English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish (Neutral)
CC
No
Audio
English: Dolby Digital 5.1, English: Dolby True HD, French: Dolby Digital 5.1, Spanish (Neutral): Dolby Digital Mono
Rating
R - Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. Contains some adult material. Parents are urged to learn more about the film before taking their young children with them. R - Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian. Contains some adult material. Parents are urged to learn more about the film before taking their young children with them.
age 16+
Common Sense rating OK for kids 16+
age 16+

Common Sense Note

Parents need to know that two versions of this hit were released on home video, one a PG-rated (more deserving of a PG-13, really) edit, mainly on VHS, and a later R-rated DVD that put back a lot of the original theatrical film's harshest gutter language and vibes. Both detail urban gang-style behavior by the characters ¿ even by nominal hero Tony Manero -- with much swearing, fighting, casual and/or animalistic sex (the most disturbing being a gang-rape at the end), and ultimately deadly mischief. Though Tony ends up seeking a healthier path, his family's Catholic religion has nothing to do with it; in fact, his brother, a priest, quits the clergy, declaring that he has no faith anymore.

Sexual Content

Even with sheer disco-dance outfits and leotards, men show more flesh than women: Tony flexes before a mirror in briefs, some of his buddies are pantsless while having sex in the back of their shared car. A near-naked go-go dancer is in the background of one scene. Plenty of sexual remarks and challenges ("Are you as good in bed as you are on that dance floor?"). Talk of pregnancy (and marriage) as an unhappy consequence of sex.

Violence

The worst is saved for the end of the movie: a gang-rape (though the camera is an anguished non-participant the whole time). Tony and his gang have a streetfight with Puerto Ricans that results in lots of bruises and bandages. Another fight (off-screen) puts one guy in the hospital with broken limbs. One of the characters dies in a fall off a bridge.

Language

In the R version: frequent F-words and C-words, plus racial epithets for African Americans and Latinos. The racial stuff is still there in the PG version, but the S-word is more common.

Social Behavior

Tony Manero goes from a delinquent with racist and sexist attitudes to a more mature guy who realizes there are better things and more admirable ways to behave. Along the way there's plenty of bad behavior: cruising for fights with rivals, meaningless sex, drug connections, and nocturnal mischief that eventually kills one of them. The Catholic religion followed closely by Tony's joyless, stifling (somewhat stereotypically Italian-American) family isn't shown to be a positive thing, or even relevant in their lives, and Tony's brother leaves the priesthood because he no longer has faith.

Consumerism

The car Tony and his friends share has a prominent STP sticker, Trojan-brand condoms make a significant appearance, and there's a dialogue reference to Polaroid cameras (and Polaroid's now-forgotten ad campaign featuring actor Laurence Olivier). But it's the soundtrack, practically quadraphonic in its '70s disco-palace tunes that heavily pushes the Bee Gees and other artists.

Drugs / Tobacco / Alcohol

Lots of social drinking (including while driving) and some drug use, with much talk of "getting high."

  • Age appropriate
  • Not an issue
  • Depends on your child and your family
  • Parents strongly cautioned
  • Not appropriate for kids of the age

This information for parents is provided by Common Sense Media, a non-profit organization dedicated to improving kids' media lives.

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