Eleven love stories set in one of the most loved and hated cities of the world, New York City.Eleven love stories set in one of the most loved and hated cities of the world, New York City.Eleven love stories set in one of the most loved and hated cities of the world, New York City.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
- Anna (segment "Yvan Attal")
- (as Robin Wright Penn)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe various filmmakers were asked to adhere to three guidelines: They had only twenty-four hours to shoot, a week to edit, and needed to give the sense of a particular neighborhood.
- GoofsThe photo of Molly that Ben shoves into the mailbox is wallet-size (it was in the stolen wallet), maybe 3" long, judging by the size of his hand holding it. However, when he passes the mailbox later, the photo that pops out is at least an 8 x10" (judging by the size of a standard USPS mailbox) when the frame is frozen. Then, when he picks it up, it is almost 6" long, as big as his entire hand, and more suitable to a frame on a desk. The same photo is three different sizes. Is the mailbox magical?
- Quotes
Camille: Hey, David, it's Camille. You know, when Dostoevsky was writing The Gambler, he signed a contract with his publisher saying that he would finish it in twenty-six days, and he did it, but he had the help of this young stenographer. This girl, she... she stayed with him and she helped him. And... afterwards they actually got married. Ha, isn't that cool? That's how he met his wife. Anyway I found this story in the preface for Crime and Punishment so I was thinking that... and, this would have to be between you and me, but... I was thinking that I could read the books and tell you what's going on and that way you could just focus on your music. But only if you're comfortable with this, and if you're not then you can just forget it, and you can quit, but if you are... then open this door.
David: Open... this door?
[crawls to his front door and opens it]
Camille: Okay, a deal's a deal.
David: Does this mean we're getting married?
Camille: I have a lot of reading to do...
Camille: Hi, I'm Camille.
David: Hi, I'm David.
- Crazy creditsThe last segment segues into scenes from the film, viewed as if projected on parts of buildings. After, the end credits begin, accompanied by stills, both of the characters and behind the scenes.
- Alternate versionsWhen the title was shown at Toronto Film Festival it included two additional segments These Vagabond Shoes (2009) and Apocrypha (2009), these were removed for the wide release but are included in the DVD extras.
- ConnectionsEdited into These Vagabond Shoes (2009)
- SoundtracksNo Surprises
(1997)
Performed by Radiohead
Courtesy of Parlophone Records
Under License from EMI Music Group
Written by Jonny Greenwood (as Greenwood), Colin Greenwood (as Greenwood), Ed O'Brien (as O'Brien),
Phil Selway (as Selway), Thom Yorke (as Yorke)
Published by WB Music Corp. (ASCAP)
Most of these New York City stories manage to wrap up with a twist. This O. Henry-style surprise element is the structural key that gives several segments their sense of closure, especially in Yvan Attal's two-part entry about encounters between smokers outside a restaurant. In one encounter, Ethan Hawke as a fast-talking young writer brazenly tries to pick up a woman (Maggie Q) with unexpected results; in the other, Chris Cooper and Robin Wright Penn share some tantalizing conversation with an equally unexpected resolution.
Almost as good are a strange prom date between an awkward boy (Anton Yelchin) and the wheelchair-bound daughter (Olivia Thirlby) of an eccentric, pushy pharmacist (James Caan) and a slick bit wherein Hayden Christensen as a smart alecky pickpocket goes up against Andy Garcia as a college professor who turns the tables on him in the manner of Miriam Hopkins and Herbert Marshall in the 1932 classic TROUBLE IN PARADISE.
Standing apart from all other segments is the lovely character study of a married couple (Eli Wallach and Cloris Leachman) bickering gently as they walk to the seashore to commemorate their 63rd wedding anniversary – beautiful acting by two old masters.
In Allen Hughes's segment there is some excellent internal monologue writing by Alexandra Cassavetes and Stephen Winter about two insecure people on their way to their second date with each other, wonderfully enacted by Drea De Matteo and Bradley Cooper.
Other segments - including Mira Nair's with Natalie Portman as a Hassidic Jew momentarily smitten with a Jain diamond merchant (Irrfan Khan) on the eve of her wedding, and Shekhar Kapur's with Julie Christie as an aging singer who checks into an ethereal hotel staffed by a crippled Shia LeBouef and a haggard John Hurt – have their moments, but peter off into nowhere. Too bad the reunion of Christie and Hurt almost exactly 40 years after their only other co-starring film, IN SEARCH OF GREGORY, couldn't at least have shown them together clearly, from the front, in the same frame, just once.
Other than one episode in Brighton Beach and one in Chinatown, the action takes place in well-heeled sections of Manhattan. The black and Puerto-Rican population is barely represented, though the age range of subjects covers about 7 through about 90. The boroughs of the Bronx, Queens and Staten Island are ignored completely. Few of the stories concern themselves with themes or situations unique to New York. Most of them could just as easily take place in London or Berlin or Buenos Aires or Tokyo. But the rapidly shifting focus, the large and interesting cast and occasional sharp writing, keep one reasonably entertained despite the occasional misfires.
- How long is New York, I Love You?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Languages
- Also known as
- Nueva York, te amo
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $14,700,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $1,588,015
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $380,605
- Oct 18, 2009
- Gross worldwide
- $9,961,023
- Runtime1 hour 43 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1