Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Peter Sollett
Produced by Kerry Kohansky Roberts
Andrew Miano
Chris Weitz
Paul Weitz
Written by Lorene Scafaria
Based on Novel:
Rachel Cohn
David Levithan
Starring Michael Cera
Kat Dennings
Alexis Dziena
Ari Graynor
Aaron Yoo
Jay Baruchel
Music by Mark Mothersbaugh
Cinematography Tom Richmond
Editing by Myron I. Kerstein
Studio Mandate Pictures
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Screen Gems
Release date(s) October 3, 2008 (2008-10-03)
Running time 90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $10 million
Box office $33,506,137

Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist is a 2008 romantic comedy film directed by Peter Sollett and starring Michael Cera and Kat Dennings. Written by Lorene Scafaria and based on the novel of the same name by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, the story tells of teenagers Nick (Cera) and Norah (Dennings), who meet when Norah asks Nick to pretend to be her boyfriend for five minutes. Over the course of the night, together they try to find their favorite band's secret show and search for Norah's drunken best friend.

The film came into development in 2003 when producer Kerry Kohansky Roberts found Cohn and Levithan's novel and decided to adapt it for film. Scafaria was hired to write the script in 2005, and Sollett signed on to direct the film in 2006. Principal photography took place over 29 days from October to December 2007, primarily in Manhattan and Brooklyn, New York City. During the course of filming, the cast and crew slept during the day and filmed from dusk to dawn.

The film premiered on September 6, 2008 at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival and was released theatrically on October 3, 2008. It tripled its US$10 million budget with a total gross of US$33.5 million. An accompanying soundtrack was released on September 23, 2008, and the film was released on DVD and Blu-ray on February 3, 2009. It attracted generally positive reviews from critics and received nominations for three Satellite Awards, one GLAAD Media Award, one MTV Movie Award and one Golden Reel Award.

Contents

Plot

A straight bass player in an "all gay band" called The Jerk-Offs, Nick O'Leary (Michael Cera), a teenager from Hoboken, New Jersey, is heartbroken after his girlfriend, Tris (Alexis Dziena), breaks up with him, and continues to make her "breakup" mix CDs. Thom (Aaron Yoo) and Dev (Rafi Gavron), his gay bandmates, convince him to perform at a club because his favorite band—the legendary, publicity-shy indie band "Where's Fluffy"—is performing somewhere in New York City that night. Norah Silverberg (Kat Dennings) attends the same high school as Tris, Convent of the Sacred Heart and though Norah and Tris dislike each other, they have a mutual friend named Caroline (Ari Graynor). Norah, who shares Nick's taste in music, has been recovering his mix CDs after Tris discards them in the trash. That night, the three girls end up at Arlene's Grocery on Manhattan's Lower East Side, where The Jerk-Offs are playing. Norah asks Nick to pretend to be her boyfriend to show up Tris. Norah kisses him, unaware that he is Tris' ex-boyfriend. Caroline gets drunk and Norah wants to take her home, but Nick's bandmates offer to take Caroline home so Norah and Nick can spend time together trying to find the show.

After a confused Caroline escapes from Thom's van, Nick and Norah meet up again with Thom and Dev to try to find her. They first visit a club where Where's Fluffy? are rumored to be playing, but with no success. Tris, eager to win back Nick, follows them and gets a phone call from Caroline, who tells Norah that she has "found Jesus" and an altar boy without pants. They find a drunk Caroline on stage at a gay cabaret dressed as a Christmas tree. When they arrive at Nick's car, Tris is sitting on the hood waiting for him. Before Nick leaves to go to talk to her, Norah tells him how nice it was to meet him, but he leaves without a response. An upset Norah meets up at a club with her friend with benefits, Tal (Jay Baruchel), but soon realizes that he has an ulterior motive and hopes to get a deal for his band with Norah's father, a record producer (Richard Waddingham). She agrees to pay for Tal and his friends' drinks, but she tells the waitress to increase the tab because there was a miscalculation, and she leaves him to pay. Nick, meanwhile, decides to confront Tris, but she tells him she wants to be together again and asks for a ride home. Tris asks Nick to stop by the river, where she tries to seduce him. Whilst she seductively dances in front of the car, Nick reminisces fondly about Norah and the night's events and drives away, leaving Tris behind.

Nick calls Norah, apologizing for leaving, and she agrees to meet him again. Deciding to go somewhere where no one they know will find them, they arrive at Electric Lady Studios, a music studio owned by Norah's father. Once there, Norah gets Nick to play something he wrote in the studio, but then joins him in the recording room. Inside, they kiss and it is implied that Nick fingers her to orgasm. Norah gets a text message from Caroline telling her where she found Where's Fluffy? playing. When they arrive at the show, they meet Tris, who cannot understand why Nick will not take her back, and Tal, who wants the same answer from Norah. Tal starts a fight with Nick, but Thom and Dev's friend, Lethario (Jonathan B. Wright), steps in and headbutts Tal. Nick and Norah share a smile and leave together. At Pennsylvania Station, Nick admits that he does not care about missing the concert, and they kiss on the escalator as the sun rises over New York City.

Cast

  • Michael Cera plays Nick O'Leary, the "straight bass player in a gay band" teenager who is heartbroken after his girlfriend breaks up with him. Cera was the first actor to be cast after being recommended to Sollett by producer Kerry Kohansky Roberts based on his performance in Arrested Development.[1][2] Sollett called him a "genius" and a "terrific actor",[3] as well as a "brilliant improvisational comedian".[4] Cera, who had previously taken improvisation classes, said that "It's fun [to improvise], just having a conversation. It always feels real because it is real."[5] He lived in an apartment in New York's East Village for the duration of filming.[6] He had never driven a stick shift vehicle before filming, and was taught so that he could be shot driving Nick's Yugo.[1]
  • Kat Dennings plays Norah Silverberg, the teenage daughter of a wealthy record producer who shares Nick's passion for music. Dennings was the second actor to be cast (Cera having been first),[1] Sollett saying that "her being liberated from [people's expectations] liberated the film in many ways, and certainly her character from cliché."[7] Dennings felt that she related to Norah more than any other she had played before and "wanted to make sure she was really fleshed out".[8] Her favorite day of shooting was with a group of drag queens at a gay cabaret,[1] but she said that filming Norah's first orgasm was "really uncomfortable... Really, really."[9]
  • Ari Graynor plays Caroline, Norah's alcoholic best friend. Graynor auditioned for the roles of both Norah and Caroline, and was chosen to play Caroline, which she says rescued her from "one of those horrible actor black holes of really thinking that I'd probably never work again".[10] Graynor related to both characters, saying that "I've had many nights as Caroline. And I've had many nights as Norah, taking care of Caroline."[10] Sollett claimed that "everything she did in the movie was her own invention", calling her improvisation "brilliant".[4] She improvised an entire scene taking place at the Port Authority Bus Station in which Caroline talks to a stranger and which was not part of the script.[4] When Caroline vomits, Graynor held a mixture of ginger ale and ginger cookie in her mouth which she spat into a toilet and a bag.[1]
  • Alexis Dziena plays Tris, Nick's unfaithful ex-girlfriend who attends school with Norah and Caroline. Dziena was one of the first actors cast, having done her final read-through audition with Cera, Dennings, and Graynor.[1] She said that the filming period was "a really fantastic time", but complained about the night shoots and having to sleep through the day: "Oh, it's terrible. ... I'm okay as long as the sun's not up when I'm going to sleep but sleeping during the day is rough."[11]
  • Aaron Yoo plays Thom, Nick's friend and the guitarist for The Jerk-Offs. Yoo was supposed to mime playing the guitar when filming The Jerk-Offs' concert, but requested that he be taught the chords to play when he had spare time. He found it very difficult to drive the van featured in the film and jokingly referred to it as a "tank" and a "World War II veteran".[12]
  • Rafi Gavron plays Dev, Nick's friend and the lead singer of The Jerk-Offs. Gavron recorded a song performed by The Jerk-Offs in the film at Electric Lady Studios, where part of the story takes place. Filming The Jerk-Offs' concert at Don Hill's in New York, the owner of the bar, Don Hill, mistook Gavron for a professional musician in spite of Gavron's calling himself a "useless singer".[13]
  • Jay Baruchel plays Tal, Norah's "friend with benefits" and an amateur musician. Baruchel said that the film was "by far the hippest movie I've ever been in—that's for damn sure".[14]
  • Jonathan B. Wright as Lethario, a friend of Thom and Dev.
  • Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, authors of the same-titled novel on which the film is based, cameo as a couple sitting behind Nick and Norah at a diner.[15]
  • Eddie Kaye Thomas, Graynor's boyfriend, cameos as Jesus in a gay cabaret[10]
  • Devendra Banhart, John Cho, Seth Meyers, and Andy Samberg are also featured.[16]
  • Kevin Corrigan agreed to cameo so long as he had no speaking lines; his scene, which was not scripted, was entirely improvised by Graynor.[4]

Production

Writing

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist was originally the novel written by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, which producer Kerry Kohansky Roberts brought into development as a film in 2003.[17] Lorene Scafaria was hired by Roberts in early 2005 to adapt the novel for Chris and Paul Weitz and Focus Features;[18][19] the script was her first film adaptation.[20] Peter Sollett signed on to direct the film in 2006, when the script was in its second draft, and collaborated with Scafaria.[4] Scafaria said that Norah "was me on the page",[20] while Sollett felt that as a teenager he was "not dissimilar to Nick".[4] Both had similar experiences to Nick and Norah, commuting into Manhattan at night, Scafaria from New Jersey and Sollett from Staten Island.[2]

Cohn and Levithan had written the novel in alternating chapters: Cohn wrote every second chapter from Norah's perspective and Levithan wrote every other chapter from Nick's perspective.[21] Cera and Dennings recorded voice-over narration to mimic the first-person perspective from which the novel is written, but the voice-overs were not included in the final cut of the film.[22] Scafaria says that the differences between the novel and the film were "to make it a little more cinematic". She said that Nick and Norah's parents were written out of the script "to absorb what it's like to be young, [because] you're not thinking about your parents when you're out all night".[20] In addition to searching for Where's Fluffy?, Sollett felt that the film needed a second MacGuffin to propel the story forwards, so Norah's best friend Caroline got drunk and then lost, giving Nick and Norah an additional objective.[4]

The characters' names are inspired by Dashiell Hammett's characters, Nick and Nora Charles.[23]

Filming

Shooting on a budget of US$10 million,[24] principal photography of Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist took place from late October to early December 2007.[25] The film was shot over 29 days in one-week blocks,[4][26] and was one of the first to receive a filming subsidy from the state of New York under the "Made in NY" incentive program.[27] Filming took place mainly in Manhattan's East Village and Lower East Side,[9] as well as Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[28] Filming locations included Katz's Delicatessen, Mercury Lounge, Arlene's Grocery, Pennsylvania Station, Port Authority Bus Terminal, the Veselka restaurant and Don Hill's bar.[2][28][29] Union Pool, a bar in Brooklyn, was also used for filming but requested to be called "Brooklyn Pool" in the film,[4] and Norah's father's recording studio was filmed at Electric Lady Studios.[26] Some scenes were shot on a sound stage in a studio in Brooklyn.[9]

The cast did many rehearsals, including on-location rehearsals, which Dennings described as "the most practical thing I've ever heard of".[1] During the course of filming, the actors slept during the day, woke in the afternoon, had their make-up applied on set, and filmed from dusk until dawn.[22] The cast and crew members would often sit inside the The Jerk-Offs' van between takes to avoid the cold, and sometimes stayed inside, out of sight, while scenes were being filmed in the van.[12][30] Reshoots of the film began in May 2008;[30] the film had originally begun at The Jerk-Offs' show where Nick and Norah first meet, and all prior scenes were written in later.[31] Editor Myron Kerstein cut some of the shots on set due to time and budgetary restraints.[32]

Reception

Critical response

Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 72% based on 167 reviews, with an average score of 6.5/10.[33] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 64% based on 32 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[34]

Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, praising Denning's on-screen presence, the "considerable chemistry" between Cera and Dennings, and the "excellent" soundtrack.[35] The New York Times critic A. O. Scott described Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist as a "shy, sweet romance" that "surveys the varieties of teenage experience with tolerant sympathy".[36] James Berardinelli of ReelViews reviewed the film warmly with 3 out of 4 stars, complimenting the soundtrack, the "witty" dialog and the appeal of the film to both adults and teenagers.[37] Michael Ordona wrote for the Los Angeles Times that the film is familiar, but is "fleshed out with atmosphere, a nice blend of broad goofiness and sophistication, and two appealing leads who bring it to life".[38] Entertainment Weekly's Lisa Schwarzbaum graded the film as an A–, giving particular commendation to its nonchalant portrayal of gay teenagers and Norah's Jewish identity.[39] Richard Corliss of Time magazine opined that the film was "smart, sweet, [and] bordering-on-adorable" while the title characters were "worth watching, admiring and cuddling up to".[40]

Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist "doesn't bring much to the party. [...] It's not much of a film, but it sort of gets you halfway there, like a Yugo."[41] Rolling Stone's Peter Travers gave the film 2 out of 4 stars, saying, "I'm yawning just writing this. [...] Sollett, hoping for a Before Sunrise/Before Sunset vibe, sadly settles for a soggy aftertaste."[42] In a review for The Village Voice, Robert Wilonsky likened the film to "something crafted in a lab by 54-year-old hucksters trying to sell shit to the kids under the cheerless guise of 'alternative.' The only thing it's an alternative to? Good."[43] Variety magazine's John Anderson described it as a "sparsely plotted comedy" that is "sweet, no doubt, but a bit too slick for its own good".[44]

Box office

Sollett and the cast at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival

The world premiere of Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist was held on September 6, 2008 at the 2008 Toronto International Film Festival.[45] It was released theatrically in the United States on October 3, 2008, grossing US$11,311,751 from 2,421 screens on its debut weekend, placing third in the box office rankings.[46] The following weekend, it grossed $6,420,474 with a per-screen average of $2,652 and a cumulative gross of $20,730,708, ranking fifth.[46] It earned another $3,693,384 on its third weekend with a per-screen average of $1,648 and a cumulative gross of $26,500,875, dropping to eighth place.[46] The film ended its theatrical run with a total domestic gross of $31,487,293 and a foreign gross of $2,018,844, giving a worldwide total of $33,506,137.[24] It placed 92nd for the highest-grossing films of 2008 and 85th for the year's highest-grossing opening weekends.[24]

The film was screened at the London Film Festival in October 2008[47] and at the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema in March 2009.[48]

Award nominations

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist was nominated for three Satellite Awards, in the categories of Best Film – Musical or Comedy, Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy (Michael Cera), Best Actress – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy (Kat Dennings), but failed to win any.[49] The film was also nominated at the GLAAD Media Awards in the category of Outstanding Film – Wide Release,[50] and Kat Dennings was nominated for an MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance – Female.[51] The film's supervising music editor Andrew Dorfman was nominated for a Golden Reel Award by the Motion Picture Sound Editors for Best Sound Editing – Music in a Feature Film, but did not win.[52]

Home media

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist was released on DVD and Blu-ray in North America on February 3, 2009. The disc includes: one audio commentary with Peter Sollett, Michael Cera, Kat Dennings and Ari Graynor, and another with Sollett, Rachel Cohn, David Levithan, and Lorene Scafaria; the featurettes "A Nick and Norah Puppet Show by Kat Dennings" and "Ari Graynor's Video Diary: A Look Behind-the-Scenes"; a music video for Bishop Allen's song "Middle Management"; storyboard animations with optional audio commentary; a faux interview with Michael Cera, Kat Dennings and Eddie Kaye Thomas; deleted scenes; outtakes; and a photo gallery.[53] The film is currently playing on Starz (TV channel) in the United States.[54]

Soundtrack

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Soundtrack album by Various Artists
Released September 23, 2008 (2008-09-23)
Length 55:52
Label Atlantic Records
Producer Myron Kerstein
Professional reviews

The reviews parameter has been deprecated. Please move reviews into the “Reception” section of the article. See Moving reviews into article space.

Cohn and Levithan's novel contained many musical references, including songs by The Cure and Green Day, as did Scafaria's screenplay, which she originally submitted with a mix CD featuring her ideas for the film's soundtrack, including songs by The Black Keys, Bloc Party, and Frou Frou.[20] In the final cut of the film, however, most of the music was chosen by Sollett, editor Myron Kerstein and music supervisor Linda Cohen.[3] Sollett said that he "got lucky" with the songs that he was able to choose because, within the financiers and the studio, "there was nobody in that group who knew all that much about music or the music that we had in the film".[3] His objective when selecting the music was to find "the best music you haven't heard yet", primarily from bands based in New York City.[4] While filming in New York, he emailed songs "right out of my iTunes [library]" which he thought would suit particular scenes to Kerstein, who was in Los Angeles assembling the film as it was shot.[2]

Track listing
No. Title Performers Length
1. "Speed of Sound"   Chris Bell 5:11
2. "Lover"   Devendra Banhart 3:40
3. "Middle Management"   Bishop Allen 2:44
4. "Ottoman"   Vampire Weekend 4:02
5. "Riot Radio"   The Dead 60s 2:22
6. "Fever"   Takka Takka 3:12
7. "Xavia"   The Submarines 4:34
8. "After Hours"   We Are Scientists 3:52
9. "Our Swords"   Band of Horses 2:26
10. "Silvery Sleds"   Army Navy 4:15
11. "Baby, You're My Light"   Richard Hawley 2:54
12. "Very Loud"   Shout Out Louds 4:05
13. "How to Say Goodbye"   Paul Tiernan 3:28
14. "Last Words"   The Real Tuesday Weld 4:57
15. "Nick and Norah's Theme"   Mark Mothersbaugh 5:10

References

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