Disco Fever (1978) Poster

(I) (1978)

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5/10
Fabian Goes Disco
kamikaze-410 May 2023
Disco Fever, alternately known as Jet Set Disco, and for some inexplicable reason, Jukebox is a time capsule of an era that has come and gone. As expected, a forgettable disco soundtrack, cliched disco dancing, and adequate acting make this movie as monotonous as any night at a disco. The cast does try, but they seem to be on autopilot throughout the film.

The plot: The owner of a popular disco persuades a faded rock and roll star to perform on the opening night of her latest creation- a disco on a jetliner! The twist is the rock and roll star, played by Fabian, is unknowingly the opening for the owner's latest disco singer, Michael Blodgett. Fabian won't go for that. And that's the plot.

This movie is slightly better than any Network TV movie featuring Disco as a plot device, but that's faint praise.
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8/10
This is the correct review of the film from someone who watched it
Serpent-527 October 2005
Late 50's teen idol Desmond (FABIAN) and his comical manager (CASEY KASEM) gets mixed up with a corrupt disco owner/music manager Cybill who wants to sign Desmond up for a contract only to use him for a opening act for a new disco singer (MICHAEL BLODGETT) on a new DISCO inside a airplane. Fabian sings 3 new songs (not disco) in this very lost gem. In fact, his song "movin' on" sounds like a 1973 song, not 1978. Do not believe on other reviews of this film, THIS FILM DOES NOT CONTAIN TOP 40 HITS, this film contains original songs and music. Any film with Casey Kasem playing a Horny manager and King of Kustomizer George Barris in it, it's should be out on DVD! BTW, the scene the previous reviewer mentioned are NOT IN THIS FILM. no Manilow, no Jefferson starship, but we do get Shabba-Doo the Breakdancer in it!
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a humorous view of 70's disco life
cotabell7 November 1998
By happenstance, I was in this movie (dating a member of the production team) and when an extra didn't show up in front of Carlos and Charlie's on the Strip at 3 in the morning, it was discovered I fit the costume and viola! I had a non-speaking scene with Fabian.

Who knows where I can obtain a copy of this? Last word I received was that it might be available in a dubbed version.

Trivia buffs-- Disco fever was NOT the original title. Due to the plot of the movie, the original title was Jet Set Disco.
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10/10
Nostagia movie
mkerstein21 August 2018
I worked on this movie as an extra. Was dancing at Osko,s Disco would be delighted to see this on DVD, Please , try to get this on DVD
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8/10
The ninth circle of 70's disco hell
Woodyanders6 June 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Former teen idol Richie Desmond (a likeable performance by former 50's teen idol Fabian) and his slick hustler manager Brian Parker (a deliciously hammy Casey Kasem) run afoul of jaded nightclub owner Cybil Michaels (sharply played to the bitchy hilt by Phoebe Dorin), who tricks Desmond into being the opening act for up and coming new disco singer Tommy Aspen (a nicely smarmy portrayal by Michael Blodgett of "Beyond the Valley of the Dolls" fame).

Boy, does this understandably obscure flick offer an alarming embarrassment of hopelessly dated and kitschy 7's disco riches: We've got hideously gaudy clothes, a meandering narrative complete with a predictable happy ending, overpermed hair, foxy gals in tube tops and hot pants shaking their moneymakers, cornball humor, and the inevitable funky-throbbing get-down groovy pulsating disco music. Susette Carroll lends appealing support as the sweet Renny Lawrence, custom car king Chuck Barris makes a cameo appearance as himself sporting gold chains and a half-unbuttoned shirt (hubba hubba!), and Elizabeth Daily can be briefly glimpsed in her inauspicious film debut as an auditioning disco dancer. A real campy hoot and a half.
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8/10
It was like 1978 would never end...
BandSAboutMovies30 May 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is a film that could have only been made in 1978, approved with a signature in blood and a mountain of sweet, sweet cocaine. This was the time when the music would never end, when the buttons couldn't be unbuttoned any lower, when shag carpeting was everywhere and AIDS was years away. A magical time, lost to us forever, that for so many was only experienced on the silver screen through protagonists like Tony Manero and this movie's hero, Desmond.

Desmond is played by Fabian, who at one point in the late 50's and early 60's was a huge deal as a singer for young girls. Plucked out of Philadelphia obscurity while in a hospital visiting his father - who had just had a heart attack - Fabian had a $30 week allowance while learning to sing after already becoming a chart-topper.

Fabian's introduction was a marvel of early marketing, with ads that exclaimed "Fabian Is Coming", then asked "Who is Fabian?" before letting the nation know that "Fabian is Here." After a big run of successes - and testifying during the payola scandal that his voice was electronically altered - Fabian spent $65,000 (about $336,000 today) to get out of his contract. He felt like a puppet that wanted to be free.

The star also went into acting, appearing with Stuart Whitman in 1957's Hound-Dog Man, as well as High Time with Bing Crosby and North to Alaska with John Wayne. Fabian felt that acting suited him much better than singing. While he spent most of the 1960's making films for 20th Century Fox, the major failure of Cleopatra let to them letting many contracts expire. No matter. American-International Pictures soon came calling.

There, Fabian appeared in everything possible for the studio - car racing films opposite Annette Funicello and Frankie Avalon (Fireball 500), as a schoolteacher battling marijuana (Maryjane), in a rip-off of The Dirty Dozen (The Dirty 8) and even taking over Avalon's role as he battled Vincent Price under the direction of Mario Bava (yes, I could never make up Dr. Goldfoot and the Girl Bombs).

But by the late 60's, he'd started drinking, posed naked on a motorcycle for Playgirl, was arrested for a public argument with his wife, then he started playing Vegas until he went bankrupt. Obviously, his life has been a wild ride up until this point. Fabian retired, only to suddenly return in the mid-70's.

Oh yeah - he also was in a major car crash in a celebrity race at the famous Watkins Glen. And then he put on a cigarette on a plane flight after being asked to extinguish it. Except he put it out directly into the body of that passenger. And that passenger ended up being a district attorney. Whew! Fabian's life got even crazier when his former manager was the consultant for 1980's The Idolmaker, a thinly veiled story where a young and handsome singer named Caesare doesn't deal well with his whirlwind success. After a lawsuit, Fabian and his wife received a personal apology and his manager's 7.5% interest in the film.

Which brings us - in the most roundabout way possible - to Disco Fever.

Originally known as Jukebox, Fabian is pretty much playing himself, as a once-famous singer who only wants to sing his own songs. The trouble is, most of these songs aren't all that great, with Fabian possessing a warbling voice that would have done well with some AutoTune, had it existed in 1978. He's also covered his matinee idol looks up with a beard, looking a bit like Eddie Rabbit.

Even when he tries to unwind at Cybil's disco, one of the girls there mentions seeing him on TV in Rio Bravo (he corrects her, it's North to Alaska) as well as Beach Blanket Bingo (that's not him, it's Frankie Avalon). All he really wants to do is stay home and write new music while pining after the next too young girl who broke his heart.

However, his manager Brian Parker has different ideas. He's played by Casey Kasem, which may seem bonkers to those who only knew Casey as the voice of America's Top 40 and Shaggy from Scooby-Doo. But before all that, Casey was an actor, appearing in several biker films like The Glory Stompers, Wild Wheels and The Cycle Savages. He's also in The Incredible 2-Headed Transplant, The Dark and well as voices for Battle of the Planets and several of the Transformers like Bluestreak and Cliffjumper before he left that show over its depictions of Arabic stereotypes.

None of this knowledge - nor knowing that his frozen corpse would spend over a year being shuffled all over the world in a battle between his children and his second wife - will prepare you for the sights of Casey Kasem begging women for sex and falling all over a carpet trying to do the blow that's spilled all over it.

Parker wants Desmond to get signed by Cybil (Phoebe Dorrin, Antoinette from TV's The Wild, Wild West), who is the biggest power going in disco, what with having her own club and now an airplane that she's converted in a flying disco. Yes, really.

The goal is to use Desmond's old name power but force him to use his old songs in a convoluted revenge scheme because he spurned her years ago. Her real goal is to push the new voice of disco - Tommy Aspen, played by Michael Blodgett, Lance Rocke from Beyond the Valley of the Dolls - who just likes to sneer and do coke.

There are plenty of music numbers where we simply watch people not involved in the story dance, which are still pretty fun. You can glimpse breakdancer Shabba-Doo as well as Elizabeth E.G. Daily as one of those dancers years before she was Dottie in Pee-Wee's Big Adventure. Also - did you know she was once married to Rick Salomon, the same man who was married to Pamela Anderson and Shannen Doherty, as well as appearing in a stolen sex tape with a young Paris Hilton. You think with luck like that, God would smite him somehow, but he won $2.84 million at last year's World Series of Poker. Meanwhile, E.G. Daily won our hearts in roles in One Dark Night; Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains; Valley Girl; Better Off Dead and Bad Dreams, as well as providing Tommy Pickles voice on Rugrats.

This whole mess comes to us from the team behind Supervan: writer John Arnoldy and director Lamar Card. They're joined by George Barris. Yes, the very same George Barris who made the Batmobile and Dragula for The Munsters. Yes, he was part of Supervan, but what that has to do with disco - and why he and his wife show up playing themselves at a tennis club - I can only chalk up to the 1970's and some big flakes of Peruvian powder. In fact, I can only imagine that this movie was really just a reality movie shot of the lives of a briefly single Kasem, a down and out Fabian and the Barris family as they lived it up under the sun in '78 before reality came crashing down.

This film isn't on blu ray. It isn't even on DVD. That needs fixed so that it can mess with the minds of others, too. I can't even believe that it exists and wish that disco airplanes were still a thing, because only in 70's exploitation film can such a magical thing occur.
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If You Enjoyed The Era - A Must See...If Not, Avoid Completely!
MovieMan-1125 August 1999
I saw this film once a long time ago, sometime around 1984. It was one of those "late night" movies on WTAF TV 29, which runs out of Philadelphia (now WTXF) and I never forgotten it to this day simply because of the excellent soundtrack it had. It was just as good as the "Saturday Night Fever" soundtrack. It had songs that are very rare and are seldom heard today, such as "You Little Trustmaker" and "DISCO", along with the more popular disco songs like "Disco Duck" and "Copacabana". The story was an odd one: A disco club owner owes his life to a big-time gangster and makes the gangster half-owner of his disco club. Things take a turn for the worse when the disco owner has an affair with the gangster's wife. After the gangster sparred the disco owner's life, that's the worst thing he can do. Best Scene: The owner tries to impress a disco chick by dancing naked in his apartment to the song "Miracles" by Jefferson Starship. Not available on video. I might never see it again. But who cares? I only needed to see it once. And if you ever get a chance to see it again (probably as a "late night" film), you'll understand why. *** out of ****
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