Story of two female Manhattan book editors fresh out of college, both finding love and themselves while frequenting the local disco.Story of two female Manhattan book editors fresh out of college, both finding love and themselves while frequenting the local disco.Story of two female Manhattan book editors fresh out of college, both finding love and themselves while frequenting the local disco.
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination
- Diana
- (as Sonsee Ahray)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe disco seen in the movie was actually an old picture theater being renovated in Jersey City, New Jersey.
- GoofsEarly in the movie, boxes of glassware in the back of the club have large modern barcodes. An hour into the movie the boxes are shown again, with the barcodes taped over.
- Quotes
Josh Neff: Disco will never be over. It will always live in our minds and hearts. Something like this, that was this big, and this important, and this great, will never die. Oh, for a few years - maybe many years - it'll be considered passé and ridiculous. It will be misrepresented and caricatured and sneered at, or - worse - completely ignored. People will laugh about John Travolta, Olivia Newton-John, white polyester suits and platform shoes and people going like *this*
[strikes disco pose]
Josh Neff: , but we had nothing to do with those things and still loved disco. Those who didn't understand will never understand: disco was much more, and much better, than all that. Disco was too great, and too much fun, to be gone forever! It's got to come back someday. I just hope it will be in our own lifetimes.
[Des, Charlotte, Dan, and Van stare at Josh like he's crazy]
Josh Neff: ...Sorry, I've got a job interview this afternoon and I was just trying to get revved up, but... most of what I said, I, um... believe.
- SoundtracksDoctor's Orders
Written by Geoff Stephens, Roger Greenaway, Roger Cook
Performed by Carol Douglas
Courtesy of Unidisc Music, Inc.
By Arrangement with Celebrity Licensing Inc.
Superb performance by almost the entire cast (the one exception being McKenzie Astin, who was fairly awful, but was barely onscreen so it was shrugable), raised the film to a level above its potential. Kate Beckinsale was the perfect bitch, so annoying that I wanted to pull her out of the screen and shake her repeatedly;) Christopher Eigeman nearly stole the show as Des, he played the character perfectly, his voice and tone always on edge, the defensiveness and womanizing, the stories he told, all a brilliant package. But Chloë Sevigny more than held her own, with her best performance that I've ever seen...everything from her line release to her body language stuck out; she became Alice.
This film is a definite must see...a great soundtrack, great sets, brilliant writing and better acting. It's a bit long, some scenes feel unnecessary, and at times he seems to be over-hammering his point, but Stillman has still provided us with a near-masterpiece, 8/1.
- kergillian
- Jun 22, 2001
- Permalink
- How long is The Last Days of Disco?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $8,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $3,020,601
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $277,601
- May 31, 1998
- Gross worldwide
- $3,020,601
- Runtime1 hour 53 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1