Badmovies.org Forum

Movies => Bad Movies => Topic started by: Mick on November 08, 2004, 02:22:36 PM

Title: XANADU
Post by: Mick on November 08, 2004, 02:22:36 PM
I'm new to this site, and due to time constraint, I went straight to the message boards for some help.

Hopefully some of you have seen that disaster called Xanadu, made in the early 80s with Olivia Newton John and Gene Kelly...

I was coerced into throwing a theme party dedicated to it.  If anyone has any insight into the whole Greek muse/Aging Clarinet Player/Roller Disco/Tormented Commercial Artist thing and has any ideas, please respond?
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: The Burgomaster on November 08, 2004, 07:05:33 PM
Coincidentally, I just bought XANADU on DVD.  Don't ask me why.  But I guess if I own movies like MANOS, THE HANDS OF FATE, BEAST OF YUCCA FLATS, BLOODTHIRSTY BUTCHERS, CURSE OF THE HEADLESS HORSEMAN, and FRANKENSTEIN ISLAND, it shouldn't surprise anyone that I bought XANADU.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: onionhead on November 12, 2004, 10:08:50 PM
Shoulda been Xana-don't, but that's just one man's oh-pin-yun.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: peter johnson on November 12, 2004, 11:43:04 PM
Whatever you do, you have to play it straight --
The whole disco thing was a completely culturally predictable reaction to the 10 previous years of ultra-serious popular music that was going to change the world & herald in The Revolution:  Beatles, Buffalo Springfield, CSNY, Jefferson Airplane, Dylan, etc. etc.  KC and The Sunshine Band and the like were the biggest Reactionary cultural backlash ever seen.  Almost overnight we went from a youth culture of serious, committed souls to ultra-hedonic airheads -- and the thing you remember from that era was how SERIOUS everyone who was into the disco scene was about their ultra-hedonic airheadism.  It was as if by embracing cocaine and flashing lights and pounding repetifive bass-lines as the "thing-in-itself", intentionally having no meaning beyond the surface, that some grand cultural statement was being made.  For all the alleged "fun" going on, nobody was laughing.  It was Dionysianism without genuine ritual.  It was an act of despair that things were ever going to genuinely improve.
"Disco Sucks" was a popular expression of the time, even among those who went to discos.
peter johnson/denny crane
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: Susan on November 13, 2004, 09:43:24 AM
I loved that movie as a kid, mostly *because* it was the 70's, rollerskating disco era. ;-) I have the soundtrack on CD in my car.  I don't know if I could rewatch the movie tho, because it really is a bad movie because it doesn't realize it's bad.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: Mr_Vindictive on November 13, 2004, 10:06:42 AM
Jesus Peter!  Getting a little deep on us?  lol

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: AndyC on November 13, 2004, 10:23:03 AM
peter johnson wrote:
> "Disco Sucks" was a popular expression of the time, even among
> those who went to discos.

I'm not surprised. My friends and I used to frequent a few places, from 1989 to the early 90s, that played nothing but the crappy dance music of the day. We went for the excitement, the booze and the chicks, but we always thought the music sucked, and made fun of the patrons who were a little more into that whole scene than we were. For good music, we went to a little small-town dive close to home, where rock still rules to this day.

Well, if disco was a reaction to the seriousness of the early 70s (and I agree it was), I wonder what the second half of this decade will be like. Popular music today takes itself way too seriously, as do a lot of things right now. I doubt 9/11 or the current political climate helped in that regard. I imagine when the pendulum finally swings back, it will swing pretty far.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: Mr_Vindictive on November 13, 2004, 10:28:39 AM
Andy,

I always kinda thought that the whole 'Rave and Extasy' thing would be this generation's 'Disco and Cocaine'.  It looks like this might be the case being as use of Extasy is rising and electronica is still pretty big in some areas.

I seriously hope I'm wrong though.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: raj on November 13, 2004, 01:57:57 PM
I remember watching Airplane! in the theater when it came out, and the scene where the radio station announces "Where disco lives forever" gets knocked off the air, that got a huge laugh and applause.
Disco sucks was my motto in the 70s.
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: AndyC on November 13, 2004, 02:56:45 PM
Yep, 'disco sucks' was a pretty poular saying around here too. Funny, I don't even mind some of it, 25 years later. Quite a lot of it is still pretty unbearable though.

I get a kick out of the Buck Rogers series of the 70s, where disco survives 500 years and a nuclear war.

Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: raj on November 14, 2004, 01:23:15 PM
AndyC wrote:


> I get a kick out of the Buck Rogers series of the 70s, where
> disco survives 500 years and a nuclear war.

Hmm, disco = cockroaches
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: peter johnson on November 14, 2004, 02:16:33 PM
disco = cockroaches --
that's really a deeper analysis than anything I said prior --
Good one!
Part of the fun of this board is being able to just go off on the occasional tangent.
I too remember the huge screaming cheer that went up in the theatre when the Airplane hit the disco radio antennae.  And then some of those very same people went off to a disco that very same night . . .
peter johnson/denny crane
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: JohnL on November 14, 2004, 06:48:04 PM
Personally, I'm just glad that break dancing didn't survive...
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: dean on November 14, 2004, 10:31:09 PM

Bah, breakdancing is possibly the funniest thing to base a movie on.

Recently, as part of a musicals course at Uni, I have been watching lots of 80's dance musicals in which Breakin' and Breakin'2: Electric Boogaloo and xanadu were included.

Since this is a bad-movie site, these films, along with the likes of Purple Rain and Footloose, deserve their place in b-movie history.
Title: Re: XANADU
Post by: Kory on November 15, 2004, 03:09:50 PM
Don't forget the "breakdance fighting" scene in Zoolander!