Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist: DVD, Blu-ray Review (2009)
The rhythm of youth, amplified and worth hearing
Directed by Peter Sollett, written by Lorene Scafaria, 90 minutes, rated PG-13.Peter Sollett's “Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist” tells a familiar tale and it tells it well.
It serves two demographics--those who remember a time in their lives when running around New York City--or any city, for that matter--until all hours of the night could lead to an unexpected chance at romance, and those now in their late teens and early twenties who are just finding that out.
Screenwriter Lorene Scafaria based her script on Rachel Cohn and David Levithan’s book, and what she and Sollett have pulled from it is a movie of surprising restraint--at least when it comes to the affections that bloom between its main characters, Nick (Michael Cera) and Norah (Kat Dennings), two shy teens from New Jersey who have a similar love for music and a quick, understated wit that suggests a fine pairing might be at hand.
In this movie, it’s the supporting characters who provide the antics and the energy, which is a shrewd move on Sollett’s part because it allows Nick and Norah to generate something real during the brief time we spend with them onscreen.
Some will argue that the movie is too slight to be significant and that its characters don’t possess enough depth to be interesting, but they’re missing the point. “Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist” is a slice-of-life vignette designed to offer a only glimpse into something deeper. We enter into it on the verge of one memorable evening, we observe what transpires within that evening, and then we leave the characters on the cusp of change in what you sense will be a more profound story that will play offscreen.
About the evening in question--it doesn’t start the way Nick intended. As the movie begins, he’s making CD playlists for his ex-girlfriend Tris (Alex Dziena), a pretty lass who won his heart, but who, unwittingly to Nick, continues to give that heart (not to mention her more intimate body parts) to other men.
When Nick’s buddies drop by in an effort to convince him to go out for the evening so they can seek out an underground band playing somewhere in the city (Nick’s male friends are gay, and one of the movie’s freshest, most appealing aspects is that they never come across as stereotypes and that sexuality isn’t even an issue for the generation in question here), Nick agrees.
And so into the arms of Manhattan they go. Eventually, Nick meets Norah, who has a drunk friend in Caroline (Ari Graynor, marvelous) who is a handful, and who also is frenemies with Tris. Naturally, they all collide at various times during the night and complications, you might say, ensue.
While echoes of Scorsese’s “After Hours” are obvious, Sollett’s movie has a sweetness and a relevancy all its own. It’s a movie that understands its characters and their generation, it refuses to condescend to either, and so it just goes along with both, following Nick, Norah and company through the highs and lows of one of those eventful evenings you somehow get through, and tend to remember with fondness long after it has passed.
Grade: B+
Features:
Closed Caption; Outtakes; Deleted scenes; "Middle Management" music video by Bishop Allen; A Nick & Norah Puppet Show by Kat Dennings; Filmmaker & cast commentaries.
Check out the film's trailer here:
January 31, 2009 at 8:24 PM
I hear this is a fantastic movie. I sure would like to see it.