My favorite parts - Robert Sean Leonard as an environmental lawyer who seems sensitive at first yet denies his sexual partners certain vital "need to know" information, a hilarious deconstruction of Lady and the Tramp as only Harvard grads could do it, and the closing credits superimposed on what could almost be called a music video featuring "Love Train" that sends the film out on a joyful hopeful note. A youth lived in the most exciting city in the world in a time of unique cultural acceptance and sexual freedom, and now they are forced to march on to a more constrained existence. It's not disco they are mourning, it is their passing from one phase of their youth to a more mature state, although I doubt they even realize it yet. They mate, decouple with varying amounts of pain and drama, are living their youth at a time when they believe "The H" - herpes - is the worst thing that can happen to you, and when disco dies, proclaim that it just CAN'T be dead. It's like "The Asphalt Jungle" (minus the crime) meets "Friends".Īll of these people are college educated, some at the Ivy Leagues, yet they are underpaid, and in the case of Charlotte and Alice, doing jobs that in any other city would go to high school grads. In short, there is something unlikable about all of these people except maybe Alice, yet I found them fascinating. Among the men in the group we have an ad man who must be able to get clients into the club or he'll be fired, a lawyer, and an assistant manager at the club who avoids commitment by telling women he is gay.
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Charlotte seems like the kind of person who just wants other people around to make her feel better about herself. But she is constantly putting Alice down, steering her the wrong way in her relationships, and blurting things out that embarrass Alice. She went to the same college as Alice, and she seems to seek out a connection with Alice much more than vice versa, even though Charlotte is the outgoing one. I'd almost call her an Amish girl in sequined clothes and platform shoes by night, business attire and sensible shoes for her job in publishing by day. The center of the film is the pair of - I guess you'd call them friends - Alice and Charlotte. You could call them friends but they are more like acquaintances, and they all frequent one particular disco. The film's focus is on a group of recent college grads in their early to mid 20's.
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Stillman must have been acutely aware of not wanting to be that film because, did you notice the film is devoid of even one song by the brothers Gibb, who are practically emblematic of the disco era? Since disco was completely dead - and its death was like that of one struck down suddenly by a heart attack - by the fall of 1980, he is probably aware of the anachronisms here, and just spun the tale as it was to prevent himself from basically making a yuppie version of Saturday Night Fever. "Disco Destruction Night", occurred in July 1979, and he's got it happening "in the very early 80s" at about the mid point of the film. I just fell in love with this film and its characters, characters who could only exist as they did and together in that very late disco period.Īctually, Stillman got some things wrong, and maybe he did so on purpose. Bernie also suspects that Des’ pal Josh (Matthew Keeslar), who works for the DA, is interested in more than disco.Reviewed by AlsExGal 10 / 10 For me, a trip down memory lane.Įxcept my memory lane was in Dallas, not New York City.
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Despite his friendship with Des (Chris Eigeman), the club’s underboss, Jimmy represents the boring element that Bernie (David Thornton), the club’s huckster owner, wants to keep out. Finessing themselves into a hot disco, the women connect with two Harvard grads - Tom (Robert Sean Leonard), a lawyer, and Jimmy (Mackenzie Astin), an ad man whose job depends on getting fat-cat clients into the club.
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Their low-entry jobs in book publishing provide the rent for a small apartment while they try to climb higher. Shy Alice (Chloë Sevigny) and assertive Charlotte (Kate Beckinsale) are just out of Hampshire College. Disco completes what Stillman calls his “Doomed Bourgeois in Love” trilogy. Writer and director Whit Stillman, a Harvard man himself, has previously investigated this preppy class in Metropolitan(1990) and Barcelona (1994). These educated snobs can barely hide their insecurities. Set in the early 1980s, this literate, lacerating social comedy focuses on the kind of yuppie Manhattan careerists the better clubs would block at the door. Don’t look here for the drug and sex-crazed boogie nights of the disco era.