{"id":420,"date":"2009-08-07T12:00:16","date_gmt":"2009-08-07T12:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/?p=420"},"modified":"2013-11-26T14:42:04","modified_gmt":"2013-11-26T14:42:04","slug":"500-days-of-summer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/?p=420","title":{"rendered":"(500) Days of Summer, 2009"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>Plot<\/strong> Los Angeles, present day. Tom, a greeting-card copywriter and incurable romantic, has been dumped by the beautiful Summer, his ideal girl. He sifts through their 500 days together looking for what went wrong. The movie flashes back to their workplace courtship and his growing infatuation. A karaoke evening brings them together and they start dating \u201ccasually\u201d at Summer\u2019s suggestion. She refuses to believe in love. Tom is entranced by her wacky bohemianism in their blissful early days together. She encourages him to go back to architecture, the career he abandoned. Tom\u2019s romantic streak and Summer\u2019s insistence on a \u201cno label\u201d relationship puts them under stress. They break up, are reconciled, but finally she leaves him and the company. Some months later at a workmate\u2019s out-of-town wedding, they share a romantic interlude. Summer invites him to a party, where his romantic expectations come up against the problematic reality: Summer has become engaged to someone else. Crushed, Tom denounces the cruel mythmaking of greetings cards, quits his job and seeks work as a trainee architect. Later he meets Summer by chance, and she confesses to him that now she believes in fate, after finding her husband. At a job interview, Tom falls for Autumn, a cute fellow-applicant (adapted from Stables 64).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Film Note<\/strong><em> (500) Days of Summer<\/em> (2009)<em>, <\/em>the directorial debut of Marc Webb, can be located amongst an array of semi-independent films that have been released in recent years by Fox Searchlight Pictures, most notably <em>Napoleon Dynamite <\/em>(2004), <em>Little Miss Sunshine <\/em>(2006) and <em>Juno <\/em>(2007). Such films illustrate the changing production trends within contemporary US cinema, whereby the boundaries between major studio and independent filmmaking are beginning to blur. Between the Hollywood blockbuster and the low\u2013budget indie feature there now lies a zone some critics have labelled \u201cIndiewood\u201d, an \u201carea in which Hollywood and the independent sector merge and overlap\u201d (King 1). Hollywood\u2019s reliance on \u201csemi-independent\u201d filmmaking can be traced back to the 1980s, when major studios began to set up or acquire smaller production divisions to produce specialist or obscure films on a low budget. These included studio-created subsidiaries such as Sony Pictures Classics and Fox Searchlight Pictures as well as \u201cformerly independent operations taken over by the studios,\u201d a prime example of which was Disney\u2019s acquisition of Miramax in 1993 (King 4).<\/p>\n<p>Two events paved the way for the major studios\u2019 move into the independent sector: first, <em>sex, lies and videotape<\/em> (1989) won the Palme d\u2019Or at the Cannes Film Festival; second, <em>Pulp Fiction<\/em> (1994) received phenomenal commercial and critical success, leading Xan Brooks to suggest that Quentin Tarantino\u2019s film \u201crepositioned the goalposts of American cinema, blurring the boundary between mainstream Hollywood product and the independent fringe\u201d (11). <em>Pulp Fiction<\/em>\u2013estimated budget $8m, total domestic gross over $100m\u2013can therefore be viewed as being \u201cpart of a wider story of the dismantling, or transformation, of the structures of independent production and distribution which characterised the 1980s\u201d, leading to the search for suitable hybrid terms\u2013\u201coff-Hollywood\u201d, the \u201cmajor-independent\u201d, \u201cIndiewood\u201d\u2013to describe the new economic reality (Hillier 255).<\/p>\n<p>The rise of the semi-independent film is evident in the sheer volume of independent\/semi-independent films being screened at the Sundance Film Festival, with numbers exceeding 5,000 in 2007 compared with only 500 in the previous decade. As John Patterson notes, \u201cmainstream Hollywood has [\u2026] not simply co-opted indiedom, but also been taken over by its sensibility\u201d (2). In this light, the term \u201cindependent\u201d can be viewed as being \u201cmore of a marketing label than a definition rooted in a film\u2019s conditions of production and distribution\u201d (Hillier 258). That is not to say that the quality or independent spirit of films within the Indiewood sector is attenuated, as these subsidiary studios \u201care usually given a significant degree of autonomy from their corporate parents, often including the power to green-light production or make acquisitions up to a particular financial ceiling\u201d (King 6). This is the case with Fox Searchlight Pictures, founded in 1994 as the independent arm of parent company 20<sup>th<\/sup> Century Fox, and home to <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em>. Company president, Peter Rice explains that \u201c[Fox Searchlight] is integrated with the mothership\u201d and as a result receives \u201call the benefits of a big corporate parent\u201d (most notably international distribution) but that the company is also \u201cable to do things in different ways from the main studio\u201d. The deal pivots on one core mandate: every movie that Fox Searchlight produces must be profitable before entering the home video market, something that was achieved with <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> (Thompson)<em>.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>The film\u2019s script, written by Scott Neustadter and Michael H. Weber, had a rather typical Hollywood backstory\u2013it was rejected by all the major studios before finally being optioned by Fox Searchlight after music video director Marc Webb spent three months working up countless storyboards and concept art. The film was then made for an estimated production budget of $7.5m (some of which, it is claimed, came out of Webb\u2019s own pocket). A standing ovation at the film\u2019s January 2009 premiere at the Sundance Film Festival (a reception comparable to that of <em>Little Miss Sunshine<\/em> at Sundance or <em>Juno <\/em>at the Toronto Film Festival), suggested that the film was going to do well.<\/p>\n<p>The marketing team modelled their strategy on that of <em>Juno<\/em> (another Fox Searchlight film) which opened on only seven screens in December 2007 with a box office take of just $500,000 and then, after picking up rave reviews, was given a large-scale release, quickly becoming the first Fox Searchlight picture to surpass $100m. Positioned for release from July 19, a date set to mirror the seasonal title, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> had a similar \u201cplatform release\u201d on only twenty seven screens, with an increase to 1048 by August 7. At the end of its theatrical run, the film had made over $60m worldwide, clearing nearly five times its budget domestically. In proportion to its budget, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> was more profitable than both the 2009 installments of the <em>Harry Potter<\/em> and <em>Transformers<\/em> franchises, demonstrating an exceptional return on investment.<\/p>\n<p>Akin to the style of both <em>Juno <\/em>and <em>Little Miss Sunshine<\/em> (two of Fox Searchlight\u2019s biggest success stories), <em>(500) Days of Summer <\/em>combines an alternative soundtrack (Regina Spektor and Belle &amp; Sebastian), a somewhat unusual cast (Joseph Gordon-Levitt had until this point been cast in dark emotional dramas such as <em>Mysterious Skin<\/em> (2004) and <em>Brick<\/em> (2005)) and an offbeat aesthetic style, including the use of animation and pencil shading. As the box office figures suggest, this mixing of arty and kooky elements with a broader commercial appeal ensured that the film played well in niche as well as mass markets, allowing Fox Searchlight, and especially its parent corporation, to \u201cshare in the windfalls that accrue to occasional large scale independent hits\u201d (King 6). The Indiewood approach has further advantages for the major studios. It provides a way of bringing \u201cnew filmmaking talent into their orbit\u201d who might then go on \u201cto serve mainstream duty\u201d: Marc Webb for instance has been chosen to direct the upcoming Spiderman reboot, while a successful film such as <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> can also launch an actor\u2019s career, as proved by Gordon-Levitt\u2019s subsequent roles in blockbusters such as <em>G.I Joe: The Rise of Cobra <\/em>(2009) and <em>Inception <\/em>(2010) (King 6).<\/p>\n<p><strong>Too-cool-for-school<\/strong> As previously mentioned, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> has much in common not only with <em>Juno <\/em>(both films share producer Mason Novick and director of photography Eric Steelberg)<em>, <\/em>but also with Sony Pictures\u2019 <em>Nick &amp; Norah\u2019s Infinite Playlist<\/em> (2008); the clear affinity between these films is the dominant use of pop-culture and mass-media references, displayed through both product placement and more importantly intertextuality. The film is laden with allusions to film, music, art and consumer culture in general, including references to <em>The Seventh Seal<\/em> (1957)<em>, The Graduate<\/em> (1967), <em>Star Wars<\/em> (1977)<em>, Knight Rider <\/em>(1982-6), The Smiths, Magritte, Goethe, Nintendo and IKEA, to name but a few. Clearly, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> has tapped into a tendency of the contemporary cinema to recycle and reuse culture to heighten or exemplify the core themes of the narrative (the use of IKEA in <em>Fight Club <\/em>(1999) and <em>Wanted <\/em>(2008) work in similar ways, for example). This tendency, whether explored through the film\u2019s soundtrack, or through more overt cases of intertextual referencing (e.g. scenes copied from Fellini or the French New Wave), marks <em>(500) Days of<\/em> <em>Summer<\/em> as an exemplar of postmodern filmmaking. Perhaps aware of the fine balancing act between gathering in knowing fans who like this kind of \u201cplay\u201d and alienating those who are unaware of the references, the film\u2019s intertextuality is not a feature of the promotional trailer.<\/p>\n<p>This reusing of culture within film remains at the heart of debates within the field of postmodern theory. As Robert Stam declares, \u201cwe dwell in the realm of the already said, the already read, the already seen\u201d (304). Following Fredric Jameson, Stam goes on to note that that \u201cmost typical aesthetic expression of postmodernism is not parody but pastiche, a blank, neutral practice of mimicry\u201d (305). Reviewing for <em>Sight &amp; Sound,<\/em> Kate Stables picks up on both the pleasures and perils of postmodern aesthetics, praising the film as being \u201cfascinating to the cinephile\u201d, for it is \u201cobviously a fond Generation-Y retread of <em>Annie Hall <\/em>(1977)\u201d before stating that these \u201ctoo-cool-for-school\u201d references are \u201cgetting stale fast\u201d (64).<\/p>\n<p>Boggs and Pollard argue that many of the intertextual references in the film are \u201clargely detached from [any sort] of historical context and meaning\u201d, or, as in the case of the Nintendo and IKEA placements, function merely as a way for Fox Searchlight to gain funds to put the film into production (172-4). On first viewing, the scene in which Tom and Summer go to IKEA on day (34) of their (500) days together does seem to function in this way but rather than being an instance of empty \u201cbrand placement\u201d this sequence does in fact amplify the film\u2019s central themes\u2013the fragility of love, the passing of time, the faultiness of memory\u2013whilst also situating the action at the heart of consumer society.<\/p>\n<p>The scene begins with a medium shot of Tom and Summer wandering through IKEA searching for trivets, Tom meanwhile mocking the Swedish store by asking Summer if she fancies buying a \u201cFlug\u201d. The depth of field not only allows us to see the vast amount of shoppers scrambling for their next buy, but also to the right of the frame the IKEA logo dominates our attention, the use of brand placement evidently being showcased for the audience to see. The pair then move into the home furnishing section, Tom sitting down on the sofa soon to be joined by Summer who asks, \u201cOur place really is lovely isn\u2019t it?\u201d. She then begins to stare at the blank TV, presented through a shot\/reverse shot, and pretends to be thrilled that <em>American Idol<\/em> is on. This is clearly a parody of the nuclear family, and this point is emphasised further when we see Tom sitting on an IKEA dining table pretending to eat a dinner that Summer, doing her best Donna Reed impression, has prepared for him. The couple then race to the bedroom, running through the IKEA store as if it was their own home. The sequence is intended to trigger pathos, as we know this is a future Tom and Summer will never share, and although this remains one of the happiest scenes within their relationship and a favourite amongst fans, the viewer can\u2019t help but feel a sense of dread that their romance\u2013especially when founded on such a saccharine image of domesticity\u2013is fated to end. The careful use of <em>mise-en-sc\u00e8ne<\/em> also makes an ironic reading possible: in the same vein that products from IKEA are relatively cheap and to a degree temporary, Tom and Summer\u2019s relationship is equally fragile and transient; IKEA in this case could be seen as being a metaphor for their disposable love (as, more overtly, could Tom\u2019s employment as a writer of greeting cards).<\/p>\n<p>Once the couple reach the bedroom, aside from being interrupted by a Chinese family staring at them lying on the bed (another example of the globalisation in our current age), Summer tells Tom that she \u201cisn\u2019t looking for anything serious\u201d. The scene ends with a slow tracking shot displaying the couple leaving the store with the camera lingering on the IKEA logo and the slogan: \u201cWe don\u2019t make fancy quality, we make TRUE everyday quality\u201d. As well as being superb advertising for IKEA, with the eighteen to forty-year old target demographic of the film perfectly matching that of the stores\u2019 customers, the slogan may also refer to how relationships like Tom and Summer\u2019s are part of the everyday, that like the vast reach of IKEA\u2019s global empire, the film\u2019s themes of love and heartbreak are universal. Thus, although the placement of IKEA is likely driven by commercial and opportunist motives on the part of Fox Searchlight, the film takes this brand placement and turns it into something that has depth and meaning, far from the blank \u201cmimicry\u201d theorists of postmodern cinema, like Stam, and Boggs and Pollard, have claimed.<\/p>\n<p>The film\u2019s co-writer Weber notes, \u201cwe were constantly exploring how people\u2019s emotions and relationships are tied up in the culture all around us\u2013in the songs, movies, books, television and art by which we define our identities\u201d (Neustadter &amp; Weber 114). This culture that moulds Tom, from The Smiths song \u201cthere is a light that never goes out\u201d\u2013which acts as the catalyst for his love for Summer\u2013to his misunderstanding of <em>The Graduate<\/em>, was entirely present in the very first draft of the script. So whilst <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> is part of a trend in contemporary cinema, one which is typically informed by a postmodern culture of recycling and reusing, the references are not merely an afterthought but a central part of the film\u2019s appeal. As film critic Roger Ebert puts it: \u201cdirector Marc Webb seems to be casting about for templates from other movies [and songs] to help him tell this story; that\u2019s not desperation, but playfulness\u201d.<\/p>\n<p><strong>This is not a love story<\/strong> For all its intertextuality and postmodern play with film form, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> displays an earnest desire to challenge the codes and conventions of the romantic comedy genre in order to tell a more truthful story about romance (Wiseman 11). As the tagline on the film\u2019s poster states: \u201cThis is not a love story. This is a story about love.\u201d This commitment to deconstructing the romantic comedy genre did not go unobserved, with <em>The Guardian<\/em> reviewer Eva Wiseman suggesting that the film sets out to instruct us that \u201ceverything we&#8217;ve learnt from Sandra Bullock and Kate Hudson, from the last 15 minutes of every \u2018girls&#8217; night in\u2019, is all wrong\u201d (Wiseman 11). Such words chime with Tom\u2019s own diagnosis that the greeting cards he writes, the films he sees and the pop songs he listens to \u201care to blame for all the heartache\u201d.<\/p>\n<p>Two key elements mark out <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> from the wider genre. First, the film\u2019s disjointed and unusual narrative structure (Ian Freer calls the film \u201ca warm \u2018n\u2019 fuzzy <em>Memento<\/em>\u201d (64)). Like <em>Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind <\/em>(2004), which also tells a story of doomed romantic love through a non-linear narrative<em>, (500) Days of Summer<\/em> foregrounds the faulty processes of memory: depending on his mood, Tom can cite the exact same features of Summer\u2019s character as attributes he finds affecting and that make him hate her, something the non-linear construction of the film highlights. This clever play with narrative structure serves as a \u201ckey marker of distinction\u201d from mainstream romantic comedies (King 71).<\/p>\n<p>Second, the film\u2019s use of a masculine point of view places it in marked contrast to the other romantic comedies that came out in 2009, such as <em>The Ugly Truth, The Proposal <\/em>and <em>She\u2019s Just Not That Into You<\/em> (Freer 62). Whereas the \u201cpost classical romantic comedy is usually associated with women, female concerns, female stars and female audiences\u201d, <em>(500) Days of Summer <\/em>exploits the recent \u201cre-gendering of the genre\u2019s narrative\u201d towards male experience, and even relies upon highlighting the presence of this subjectivity for much of its dramatic impact (Jeffers McDonald 146, 148). This is not a neutral exploration of romance; it is the (500) days as Tom remembers them, or rather how he wants to remember them. Michael Ordona, writing for the <em>LA Times<\/em>, comments on how the script\u2019s \u201clarger gestures, such as split screens juxtaposing reality and fantasy, as well as animated sequences, express Tom\u2019s subjective view without mashing wrong notes\u201d. This predominant change in gender roles places the film alongside recent texts such as <em>I Love You, Man <\/em>(2009) and <em>Knocked Up <\/em>(2007), and locates Hollywood\u2019s move into the production of more masculine orientated \u201crom-coms\u201d, or as Jeffers McDonald calls them, \u201chomme-coms\u201d (146). This masculine shift in the romantic comedy genre can be traced back to <em>Swingers <\/em>(1996), a film which \u201cexplores and tests the contours of the genre by repositioning the centre, rehearsing all the generic basics [\u2026] but mak[es] them new by considering them from a male point of view\u201d (Jeffers McDonald 147).<\/p>\n<p>This use of Tom\u2019s point of view does have its limitations\u2013as Kate Stables points out, \u201cSummer in particular, viewed through the rosy prism of Tom\u2019s obsession, is sometimes reduced to a cute, kooky enigma\u201d\u2013yet, this is in part extenuated through the careful thought given to the way the viewer is placed (64). As director Marc Webb explains, \u201cSummer isn\u2019t just a girl. She\u2019s an event we have all experienced, and the attendant point of view shots that the film employs not only makes Tom\u2019s depiction of her more real, but moreover, relatable\u201d (Neustadter &amp; Weber vii). A scene that perfectly captures Tom\u2019s subjective and masculine point of view is the impromptu dance number to the Hall and Oates song \u201cYou Make My Dreams Come True\u201d that follows his first night of passion with Summer. After coming out of his apartment block, the camera zooms in to an enormous grin on Tom\u2019s face. As he struts down the street, we are shown Tom\u2019s point of view as people nod, wave and clap at his success. Tom then stops to look at his reflection in a car window, only to see Harrison Ford as Han Solo wink back at him. We then cut to a long shot of Tom walking in the park, the fountains gushing as he walks past. A dance sequence then takes place, with Tom accompanied by marching band, animated bird and members of the public dressed in blue, a staple of the film\u2019s colour palette used to match the colour of Summer\u2019s eyes. An exposition of Tom\u2019s inner euphoria, this scene indicates the extent to which the film is concerned with showing ostensibly accurate memories as simplified and over-inflated constructions of distilled emotion. By bordering on parody, this scene knowingly places Tom\u2019s reverie into the universal sphere of masculine clich\u00e9 whereby we as an audience relate to Tom\u2019s happiness in a humorous manner, enforcing a reading centred on Tom\u2019s success rather than his sex. The scene therefore functions in a similar manner to the scene in which Tom\u2019s expectations and the reality of his situation are juxtaposed, only\u2013coming earlier in the film than the later split-screen party arrival scene\u2013this musical sequence is more open in its revelry and less tempered by the mundane.<\/p>\n<p>As a \u201chomme-com\u201d, <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em> does not simply attempt to depict a romance from a male point of view. During their break-up, Summer compares her and Tom to Sid Vicious and Nancy Spungen. Yet Summer states that is she who is Sid, who stabbed Nancy to death. This reversal (Tom: \u201cI\u2019m Nancy?\u201d) indicates the gender-slippage in wider contemporary culture and suggests the film is more interested in emotional realism than gendered pleasures (a claim backed up by the absence of overt sexualisation and eroticism). In this way the film moves away from the wider feminised genre of the romantic comedy and into a more realistic (the affair does not end well) and largely postmodern portrayal of love (tongue-in-cheek, knowing, philosophical). In the same way that typically postmodern cinema \u201cgives rise to a popular mood of anxiety, fear, and pessimism\u201d, <em>(500) Days of Summer <\/em>questions these anxieties by asking what truly happens when you fall in love, and more importantly how, as individuals, we react when the person we love breaks our heart (Boggs &amp; Pollard 161). The answers inevitably involve the generic conventions of romantic comedy, just as the film shows needs and desires as inevitably influenced by popular culture and consumerism, but these conventions are revealed to be just as emotionally valid as they are inaccurate and open to interpretation. The film erases the sharp categorical boundaries between fact and fiction, subjectivity and objectivity, male and female. The result is an original romantic comedy (something seldom seen in contemporary Hollywood cinema) that reveals the potential strengths and challenges of the genre.<\/p>\n<p><strong>References<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Boggs, Carl and Tom Pollard. \u201cPostmodern Cinema and Hollywood Culture in an Age of Corporate Colonization.\u201d <em>Democracy &amp; Nature<\/em>, 7:1 (2001): 159-181. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Brooks, Xan. \u201cSpecial relationship: why is Miramax so willing to give Tarantino $55m and carte blanche for his new movie?\u201d in <em>The Guardian<\/em>. July 18 (2003): 11. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Ebert, Roger. \u201cReview: 500 Days of Summer.\u201d <em>Chicago Sun Times. Rogerebert.suntimes.com,<\/em> July 15, 2009. Web. 4 November 2010.<\/p>\n<p>Freer, Ian. \u201c(500) Days of Summer.\u201d <em>Empire,<\/em> n.244 (2009): 62. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Hillier, Jim. \u201cUS Independent Cinema Since the 1980s.\u201d in <em>Contemporary American Cinema.<\/em> ed. Linda Williams and Michael Hammond. New York: McGraw-Hill, 2006: 247-264. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Jeffers McDonald, Tamar. \u201cHomme-Com.\u201d in <em>Falling in Love Again: Romantic Comedy in Contemporary Cinema. <\/em>ed. Stacey Abbott and Deborah Jermyn. London: I.B. Tauris, 2009: 146-159. Print.<\/p>\n<p>King, Geoff. <em>Indiewood, USA \u2013 Where Hollywood Meets Independent Cinema<\/em>.<em> <\/em>New York: IB Tauris, 2009. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Neustadter, Scott &amp; Michael H. Weber. <em>(500) Days Of Summer: The Shooting Script, intro by Marc Webb. <\/em>New York: Newmarket Press, 2009. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Ordona, Michael. \u201cReview: <em>(500) Days of Summer<\/em>.\u201d Los Angeles Times. Latimes.com, July 17. 2009. Web. 4 November 2010.<\/p>\n<p>Patterson, John. \u201cEnd of the indie?\u201d in <em>The Guardian.<\/em> July 18 (2008): 2. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Stables, Kate. \u201cReview: <em>(500) Days of Summer.\u201d Sight and Sound<\/em>,<em> <\/em>19.9 (2009): 64. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Stam, Robert. <em>Film Theory: An Introduction<\/em>. Oxford: Blackwell, 2000. Print.<\/p>\n<p>Thompson, Anne. \u201cSly Fox.\u201d <em>New York Magazine. Nymag.com,<\/em> June 21. 2003. Web.<em> <\/em>4 November 2010.<\/p>\n<p>Wiseman, Eva. \u201cIs there such a thing as \u2018the one\u2019\u2013and what happens if you lose her?\u201d in <em>The Observer. <\/em>August 16 (2009): 11. Print.<\/p>\n<p><em> <\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Written by Harry Ryan (2010); edited by Guy Westwell (2011), Queen Mary, University of London.<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>This article may be used free of charge. Selling without prior  written consent prohibited. Please obtain permission before  redistributing. In all cases this notice must remain intact.<\/p>\n<p>Copyright \u00a9 2011 Harry Ryan\/Mapping Contemporary Cinema<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Production Companies: Fox Searchlight, Watermark <\/p>\n<p>Distribution: Fox Searchlight<\/p>\n<p>Associate Producer: Veronica Brooks<\/p>\n<p>Producers: Jessica Tuchinsky, Mark Waters, Mason Novick, Steven J. Wolfe <\/p>\n<p>Screenplay: Scott Neustadter, Michael H. Weber<\/p>\n<p>Director: Marc Webb <\/p>\n<p>Editor: Alan Edward Bell <\/p>\n<p>Cinematographer: Eric Steelberg<\/p>\n<p>Music: Mychael Danna, Rob Simonsen<\/p>\n<p>Cast: Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Tom Hansen), Zooey Deschanel (Summer Finn), Geoffrey Arend (McKenzie), Chlo\u00eb Grace Moretz (Rachel Hansen), Matthew Gray Gubler (Paul), Clark Gregg (Vance), Patricia Belcher (Millie), Rachel Boston (Alison), Minka Kelly (Autumn). <\/p>\n<p>Running time: 95 mins. <\/p>\n<p>Rating: PG-13 for sexual material and language<br \/>\nBox office gross: domestic $32m \/ worldwide $60m<\/p>\n<p>Tagline: This is not a love story. This is a story about love.<br \/>\n <a href=\"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/?p=420\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":421,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[58,23,59,57,21,11],"class_list":["post-420","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-film-note","tag-58","tag-fox-searchlight","tag-intertextuality","tag-postmodernism","tag-romantic-comedy","tag-us"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/420","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=420"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/420\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":423,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/420\/revisions\/423"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/421"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=420"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=420"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mcc.sllf.qmul.ac.uk\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=420"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}