Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (2008)

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008)

In New Jersey, the straight high school student Nick plays bass guitar in the gay band Jerk Offs with his gay friends Thom and Dev. Nick misses his sweetheart, Tris that despises the CDs he gives to her. The teenager Norah that studies in the Sacred Heart school with her best friend Caroline and Tris, has never had a boyfriend and does not know Nick but loves his musical taste, and collects the CDs that Tris throws in the garbage.

One weekend, Norah and Caroline go to see aconcert of the ‘Where’s Fluffy’ band and they see Tris dating Gary. Meanwhile, Nick drives his old Yugo to meet Thom, Dev and his boyfriend Lethario and play in the same club where Norah, Caroline and Tris are. Tris gibes Norah and she asks Nick to be her boyfriend for five minutes without knowing that he was the ex of Tris. When the alcoholic Caroline is completely wasted, Thom and Dev offer to take her back home and ask Norah to date the brokenhearted Nick. During the night, they learn that they are soul mates.

Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist is a 2008 romantic comedy-drama 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 (Michael Cera) and Norah (Kat Dennings), who meet when Norah asks Nick to pretend to be her boyfriend for five minutes. Over the course of the night, they try to find their favorite band’s secret show and search for Norah’s drunken best friend.

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.

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008)

About The Production

Nick: “I don’t want to go. I’m taking a mental health day.”

New York City at night is full of romance, adventure and a hint of the unpredictable. In Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist, a boy and girl embark on an evening of music that neither will ever forget. For Andrew Miano and Kerry Kohansky, producers of this quirky romantic comedy, Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist was a chance to relive a night where parents and school are far out of mind and the night holds endless possibilities. “Kerry and I read this book probably three years ago and we bought it because we just loved the story.” says Miano, whose previous collaborations with Kohansky include The Golden Compass and American Dreamz. “We’d each had a night like it in high school or college. We thought a lot of people would be able to relate to that moment when you have a magical night with a person you might never see again.”

Like the film’s main characters, Kohansky grew up in the suburbs, driving into the city in pursuit of the hottest new bands and boys. “When I read the book, it was with an incredible sense of nostalgia for being that age,” she says. “When you’re a senior in high school, life revolves around being in love and being with your friends. Everything feels so serious and so real and so complex. Nothing is ever black and white. Nick and Norah brought me back to those years.

“Most people can tell stories of that one unforgettable night that they had,” she continues. “It didn’t matter who you were, it didn’t matter what tomorrow was. It was all about that night and spending the hours together, maybe going to a club, or listening to music or whatever, and never knowing if you would ever see that person again. Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist is really about these memories that will last forever. I think people who see this movie will look back and say, `I get it.'”

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008)

Miano says he wanted to recreate the feeling he had when he first saw some of the iconic movies of the 1980s. “There are movies that I grew up with like the John Hughes movies or Say Anything where I walked out of the movie and I felt like I had actually lived through those two hours,” says Miano. “You went along for the ride with these people and you were emotionally satisfied at the end. It made you happy because you cared enough about the characters to be glad when they got together.

“And that’s the ride we wanted to create,” he continues. “We want audiences to walk out of the movie feeling that little tingle of magic because it could happen to them or it did happen to them. That’s the goal, to have people want to tell their friends about the great ride that they just went on.”

Nick & Norah’s Infinite Playlist is based on the novel of the same name, written by Rachel Cohn & David Levithan. Cohn is well known for her realistic and insightful portraits of teen girls, while Levithan has been a pioneer in the genre of young adult literature. In their first collaboration, the authors conjured up a mysterious, magical New York night that brings together two reluctant romantics who may be destined for each other.

The novel provided the filmmakers with rich source material from which to build their movie. “The characters of Nick and Norah are so complex,” says Kohansky. “And their voices come directly from the book. All the stuff was there. All we had to do was add some layers of conflict by playing up the fact that Norah’s friend Caroline gets lost.

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008) - Kat Dennings

“In the beginning, we took the narrative from the book and tried to use it as voiceover, but we ended up not using any of it,” she says. “The voices of the characters were so strong in the book and the screenplay that we realized we didn’t need it. You know, when Norah sees Nick at the club and decides he’s the guy she’s going go up to and kiss, you know exactly what the two of them are thinking.”

The producers approached Peter Sollett, a rising young director who had already been honored at the Cannes and Deauville film festivals. “There’s a short list of people you really want to work with and Pete was on ours,” says Miano. “When we described the story to him, he thought it sounded awesome-New York, music, the whole thing. He called us right back and said he was in.”

Kohansky, who attended NYU with Sollett, calls the decision to have him direct the film “a no-brainer.” His previous feature, Raising Victor Vargas was a critical success and a favorite of both producers. “And it was about a boy and a girl from the Lower East Side meeting and falling for each other,” she says. “We have these two bridge-and-tunnel kids going into the city and having this romp. We just felt that he knew the territory and the way he gets you to fall in love with the characters made him perfect for this project. Pete just did a phenomenal job with it. He is so into the music that he was able to make choices that were absolutely fitting.”

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist (2008) - Kat Dennings

Sollett was immediately attracted to the script because, he says, it was so much like the way he was spending his time in New York. “I was in between films” says the director. “I didn’t have to be up early in the morning. For the first time in my life I was really able taking advantage of how much nightlife New York City has to offer. I recognized a lot of places and experiences that I had been enjoying at the time.”

But the script resonated with the director on a deeper level as well. “There’s an aspect of the film that is about being 18 and falling in love,” he says. “I immediately responded to that as well, because when I was in college, I met somebody I really liked a lot. At the time, I was a bridge-and-tunnel kid and she was living in Manhattan. Every night I’d go to see her and I’d stay with her until about two or three in the morning. And then I’d have to get out of Manhattan to go home. One of the themes in the script is making the most out of every hour of that late night fun time period.”

Over the course of the evening, Nick and Norah cruise the streets of New York, first following the clues to the location of Where’s Fluffy’s performance, then trying to find Norah’s missing friend Caroline. “It’s a sort of magical journey through New York City,” Miano says. “Over the course of one night these two kids are searching for their favorite band, and they also fall in love. But it’s like the night conspires to keep them apart. There are all these obstacles. The adventure really begins when the boys agree to take Caroline home.”

“The trick to making the story work was simply to have characters the audience could relate to,” says Sollett. “It’s not very difficult to paint scenarios that audience members can imagine themselves being in. If even one of the characters in the scene feels a little bit like you, or they’re in a situation that you can relate to, suddenly things start to get funny. “For example,” he says, “when Nick and Norah are suddenly alone in a small automobile and realize that they are very attracted to one another, it is a very relatable situation, sort of like a blind date.

“The film actually says a very simple thing,” according to Sollett. “If you can find the courage to allow yourself to be seen as the person you really are, then you stand a chance of finding just how much you have in common with someone else. “What Nick and Norah have in common is a dedication to the shield that they’ve built around themselves,” continues the director. “During the night, they put lots of individual cracks into each other’s facades and all these little cracks lead them love scene, in which they slowly allow themselves to drop the guard that they’ve been maintaining all night. And that emotional journey is the one that both Nick and Norah are on in the film.”

Continue Reading and View the Theatrical Trailer

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist Movie Poster (2008)

Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (2008)

Directed by: Peter Sollett
Starring: Michael Cera, Kat Dennings, Rafi Gavron, Aaron Yoo, Alexis Dziena, Ari Graynor, Zachary Booth, Jonathan B. Wright, Justin Rice, Christian Rudder, Darbie Nowatka, Giorgio Angelini
Screenplay by: Lorene Scafaria
Production Design by: David Doernberg
Cinematography by: Tom Richmond
Film Editing by: Myron I. Kerstein
Costume Design by: Sandra Hernandez
Set Decoration by: Sara Parks
Art Direction by: Chuck Renaud, Amy Beth Silver
Music by: Mark Mothersbaugh
MPAA Rating: PG-13 for mature thematic material including teen drinking, sexuality, language and crude behavior.
Distributed by: Columbia Pictures
Release Date: October 3, 2008

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