It's time to kick back and relax. It's Friday Fun time. TGIF, do you remember when that acronym came into being? It was a 1978 disco movie. I rented it for a blast from the past.
The time was 1978. The heyday of disco dancing, mirrored balls, Donna Summer and the Beegees topped the charts, the Vietnam War,Fantasy Island debuted on television, and the cost of a Super Bowl ad was $162,000.

1978
PG
89 minutes
- Genre:
- Contemporary Movie Musicals, Disco, Music & Musicals, Comedy
- Cast:
- Donna Summer, Jeff Goldblum, Valerie Landsburg, Terri Nunn, Debra Winger, Chick Vennera, Ray Vitte, Commodores
It's
Friday night and time to head to the hottest disco in town for the big
dance contest in this 1970s groove-fest. A wild assortment of crazy
characters shows up, and the Commodores supply the music. Singer Nicole
(Donna Summer) is convinced she's going to get her big break, while Marv
"Leather Man" Gomez (Chick Vennera) wanders the club dispensing advice.
Thank God It's Friday won an Oscar and a Golden Globe for the song
"Last Dance."
I watched this my children. One of whom I was pregnant with when this movie first hit the theaters. The script was still hopelessly hokey, but the music was fabulous. I still have the soundtrack on 8-track tape and a player to play it on.
"Woman! Don't you throw anything away?" Hahaha, nope! Why should I? It still works!
We followed that movie up with Saturday Night Fever.and had a disco marathon going.

R
118 minutes
- Genres:
- Drama, Classic Dramas, Disco, Dance, Blockbusters
- 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's musical ushered in the disco craze with the character of
19-year-old Tony Manero (John Travolta). 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 (Karen Lynn Gorney). Although the
plot addresses socioeconomic themes, it's the Bee Gees soundtrack and
Travolta's strutting, Oscar-nominated moves that have made the film
iconic.
After dinner, the grandchildren wanted to try their feet to some of the dance moves they had seen. We have the 8-track of both movies so we couldn't resist playing them while they practiced. Now my husband and I are old disco dancing pros because we lived the era. My husband broke out his wide collared polyester shirts and pants and I put on one of my floaty polyester dresses, and we set up shop as instructors. Well sort of, neither of us can do all the moves like when we were much younger.
We had an impromptu dance competition going with even one-year old James getting into the act. He could shake his booty with the rest of them. Our #2 grandson and #1 granddaughter had the best moves as a couple, while our #4 grandson had the best John Travolta disco stance shown above in the movie cover.
Great fun was had be all. So much for the blast from the past. All together now we are doing the boxcar. Er, um the disco line dance. Er, um the electric slide. Oh heck, every generation has a version.