Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Saturday Night Fever is a 1977 American dance drama film directed by John Badham and produced by Robert Stigwood. It stars John Travolta as Tony Manero, a young Italian-American man who spends his weekends dancing and drinking at a local discothèque while dealing with social tensions and disillusionment in his working class ethnic neighborhood ...

  2. Tony Manero is a 2008 Chilean drama film directed by Pablo Larraín about a 52-year-old man in Santiago in 1978 who is obsessed with John Travolta's character in Saturday Night Fever. It won the top prize at the 2008 Torino Film Festival and was Chile's submission to the 81st Academy Awards for the Academy Award for Best Foreign ...

  3. Aug 28, 2008 · Raúl, a middle-aged, unemployed man, is obsessed by the character Tony Manero, who John Travolta plays in the film "Saturday Night Fever". He tries to imitate him in every detail, and gets involved in a violent political plot in the Pinochet regime.

    • (4.6K)
    • Drama, Music
    • Pablo Larraín
    • 2008-08-28
  4. Dec 16, 1977 · John Travolta stars as Tony Manero, a 19-year-old Italian-American from Brooklyn who becomes a disco king. The film follows his struggles with family, work and love, and features the Bee Gees' music and John Badham's direction.

    • (88K)
    • Drama, Music
    • John Badham
    • 1977-12-16
  5. John Travolta returns as Tony Manero, a former disco king who tries to make it big as a Broadway dancer. The film, directed by Sylvester Stallone, features music by the Bee Gees and Vince DiCola.

    • (17.7K)
    • Sylvester Stallone
    • PG
    • John Travolta, Cynthia Rhodes, Finola Hughes
  6. Staying Alive stars John Travolta, reprising his Saturday Night Fever role as Tony Manero, with Cynthia Rhodes, Finola Hughes, Joyce Hyser, Julie Bovasso, Viktor Manoel and Kevyn Morrow. The title comes from the Bee Gees song of the same name, which was used as the theme song to Saturday Night Fever and is played during the final ...

  7. Mar 7, 1999 · Roger Ebert praises John Travolta's performance as Tony Manero, a Brooklyn disco dancer who dreams of escaping his boring life. He analyzes the themes of the film, such as the desire for Manhattan, the Madonna-Whore complex, and the rape of Annette.