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Can't Stop the Music

Can't Stop the Music

  • Status: Released
  • 20-06-1980
  • Runtime: 124 min
  • Score: 4.97
  • Vote count: 67

A loose biography of seminal disco hit-makers The Village People and their composer Jacques Morali.

Alex Briley

Village People: G.I.

David Hodo

Village People: Construction Worker

Glenn Hughes

Village People: Leatherman

Randy Jones

Village People: Cowboy

Felipe Rose

Village People: Indian

Ray Simpson

Village People: Policeman

Valerie Perrine

Samantha Simpson

Caitlyn Jenner

Ron White

Steve Guttenberg

Jack Morell

Paul Sand

Steve Waits

Tammy Grimes

Sydney Channing

June Havoc

Helen Morell

Barbara Rush

Norma White

Altovise Davis

Alicia Edwards

Marilyn Sokol

Lulu Brecht

Russell Nype

Richard Montgomery

Jack Weston

Benny Murray

Leigh Taylor-Young

Claudia Walters

Dick Patterson

Record Store Manager

Bobo Lewis

Breadwoman

Paula Trueman

Stick-Up Lady

Portia Nelson

Law Office Receptionist

Selma Archerd

Mrs. Williams

Murial Slatkin

Mrs. Slatkin

Aaron Colt

TV Reporter

Vera Brown

Ritchie Family

Jacqui Smith Lee

Ritchie Family

Dodie Draher

Ritchie Family

Greg Zadikov

Singing Vendor

Danone Camden

Stewardess in Record Store

Rasa Alileen

Mime

Gabriel Barre

Mime

Don Blanton

Relief DJ

Roger LeClaire

Disco Photographer

Cindy Roberts

Jean Harlow

Maggie Brendler

Marilyn Monroe

Bradley Bliss

Betty Grable

William Bartman

Wino

Victor Davis

Buster Sirwinski

William L. Arndt

Construction Commercial Director

Jerry Layne

Ventriloquist

Terry Dunn

James the Flame

Maria Roosakos

Steve Waits' Secretary

Michael Battlesmith

Milk Commercial Director

Richard Bruce Friedman

Recording Technician

Bill Anagnos

Moped Rider

Debbie Ash

Dancer

Wade Collings

Dancer

Jane Eve

Dancer

Edyie Fleming

Dancer

Roy Hamlyn Gayle

Dancer

Virginia Francis Hartley

Dancer

Alison Jane Hierlihy

Dancer

Richard King

Dancer

Kim Elizabeth Leeson

Dancer

Perri Lister

Dancer

Sarah M. Miles

Dancer

Gene Montoya

Dancer

Floyd Anthony Pearce

Dancer

Blane Savage

Dancer

Peter Tramm

Dancer

Robert Warners

Dancer

Christine Ann Wickman

Dancer

Jimmy Baron

Press Photographer (uncredited)

adorablepanic

CAN'T STOP THE MUSIC (1980) - It's interesting to note that disco - a much-maligned and often marginalized style of music - once served as a dynamic catalyst for a serious, streetwise drama about working class dreams and realities; propelled in equal measure by a star entering his absolute zenith as a dramatic actor and sex symbol, as well as the efforts of veteran singers and songwriters who were able to tap into all of disco's strengths while keeping the material intelligent and relevant beyond the dance floor. That film, of course, was SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER (1977). This film is what happens after you pop a little too much amyl nitrate and start to operate under the delusion that crossing Busby Berkeley with the Continental Baths has blockbuster written all over it. Nominally a pseudo-factual relating of the formation of the Village People, there are several other story threads, one which somehow involves the American Dairy Association (don't ask). Now obviously, no one is here for plot development; they're here to camp away a few hours - and in that regard, the "Y.M.C.A." sequence delivers: Acres of well-oiled male flesh in startlingly-brief man-Dukes; slow-motion examinations of new techniques in pommel horse; dozens of soapy young men crowding the shower, getting clean before having a good meal or doing whatever they feel (all strategically sudsed to maintain that PG-rating). Otherwise, it's over two hours of mostly cringe-worthy thesping (as actors, the Village People make Bruce Jenner look like the Village People); cringe-worthy dialogue; and yawn-inducing attempts at narrative. And yes, this runs in excess of two hours (even longer than this review). It starts to feel like you've plopped yourself down in front of von Stroheim's uncut GREED (1924) if that film were a gay sitcom. Oh well, at least we'll always have ROLLER BOOGIE (1979) around for credibility.