The Secret Disco Revolution is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Jamie Kastner and released in 2012.
[1] Profiling the disco genre of music and the club culture surrounding it, the film is structured around academic Alice Echols's thesis that the genre played an important role in spurring advances in gender, racial and LGBTQ equality in the late 1970s and 1980s.
[2] Figures appearing in the film include Thelma Houston, Gloria Gaynor, Martha Wash and members of The Village People.
"[3] Dennis Harvey of Variety criticized the film for that narrative framing, particularly Kastner's use of three fictional characters who are presented as deliberately orchestrating the creation and rise of the genre.
also criticized the framing device, calling it confusing and offputting, and writing that "letting the text speak for itself, with a bit of clever editing, would have been far more effective.