“Flashdance… What a Feeling” — Irene Cara
“Flashdance… What a Feeling” is one of the purest examples of an 80s movie song becoming bigger than the movie itself. It took the film’s blue-collar dancer fantasy and turned it into a pop anthem about ambition, movement, sweat, and the possibility that your entire life could change if the lighting was dramatic enough.
The song works because it does not simply describe the movie. It sells the emotional promise of the movie. It makes discipline sound glamorous, dancing sound heroic, and leg warmers seem like a reasonable life choice. Irene Cara’s vocal gives it lift, while the production gives it that early-MTV glow: bright, urgent, and just synthetic enough to feel modern.
Lifestyle-wise, this song belonged everywhere: aerobics rooms, school talent shows, radio countdowns, bedroom mirrors, and any moment where someone briefly believed they were one montage away from becoming unstoppable. The 80s loved self-transformation, and this song made transformation sound like it came with a smoke machine.
For Gen X, “What a Feeling” is not just attached to Flashdance. It is attached to the era’s whole dream of reinvention. Work hard, dance harder, wear something off the shoulder, and maybe the final chorus will fix your life. Delusional? Maybe. Effective pop culture? Absolutely.