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NICK & NOAH BEST OF Trailer Official (2025)
NICK & NOAH BEST OF Trailer Official (2025)
About Culpa Tuya: A sequel to the global hit My Fault; the love between Noah and Nick seems unwavering despite their parents’ attempts to separate them. But his job and her entry into college open up their lives to new relationships that will shake the foundations of both their relationship and the Leister family itself. When so many people are ready to destroy a relationship, can it really end well?
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In the sequel 'Culpa Tuya,' Noah (Nicole Wallace) and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) face challenges in their romance as their parents try to keep them apart.
The third part of the Culpables trilogy, 'Culpa Nuestra' has already been shot and is set for release in 2025.
Nicole Wallace reflects on playing Noah for three films and shares love for the character's strength.
The second film in the Culpables trilogy, Culpa Tuya, sees Noah (Nicole Wallace) and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) facing new challenges and obstacles to their romance. While their parents work to keep them apart, temptation and someone from the past also play a role, pushing their new relationship to the test in ways that seem insurmountable. With everything, Noah and Nick must decide if their love is worth fighting for.
Based on the popular book trilogy by Mercedes Ron, Noah and Nick’s story started in Culpa Mia and will come to its conclusion with Culpa Nuestra, which has already been shot and is expected to stream on Prime Video in 2025. In the meantime, Collider got the opportunity to chat one-on-one with Wallace about all things Culpables and what it’s been like to play Noah across three films.
During the interview, the rising star talked about why she loves Noah, the craziness of the success of the films, the launch of a UK version that will be out in February 2025, what she learned from her time on the TV series Skam España, and how she’s gained confidence in being a leading lady. The Spanish-American actress also discussed the fun of reliving teenage love, enjoying the stunts so much that she’d be down to do an action flick, the importance of Jenna’s friendship for Noah, the advice she’d give her character, how she feels about that iconic moment with Noah and Nick in the rain, how rewarding it was to complete Noah’s story with Culpa Nuestra, and her desire to cross over into Hollywood productions.
Nicole Wallace Loves the Strength of Her 'Culpables' Character Noah
Nicole Wallace as Noah with a bright smile and her hair down in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
Collider: I love the strength of your character. I love how she goes after what she wants and that she’s able to voice when she’s not happy. What have you loved about Noah, from day one? And what have you enjoyed about getting to explore that growth throughout the story?
NICOLE WALLACE: She’s a very strong character. She’s a very strong woman. I love so many things about her. Just being able to express every feeling that she has so directly and without second guessing is very beautiful and is something that sometimes I don’t do as well. Being able to do it through her has been very fulfilling. And seeing her growth, I’ve been with her for a little over two years, so it has been like seeing a friend grow and go through a breakup and go through everything that she goes through. She’s very strong in her vulnerability, and that’s something that I really like for other girls to look up to and see.
What has been most unexpected about the success of all this? The first film did so well that you pretty quickly got to make a trilogy. How has it been to step into this fandom that was already there and that’s really just built with the films?
WALLACE: Yeah, it’s crazy. It was my first film, ever. It’s not something that happens all the time. For an actress to do her first film and be a lead and for that to become known worldwide is something that I don’t really process. I’m actually processing these days when I’m doing the promotion. When I did the interviews last year, the film wasn’t out, and all of this hadn’t happened. So, I understand the growth of it now.
Matthew Broome in My Fault: London
Related
Noah & Nick Try To Stay out of Each Other's Way in New 'My Fault: London' Sneak Peek
'My Fault: London' debuts on February 13, 2025.
What is your reaction to there now also being a UK version, with My Fault: London? That’s something that sometimes takes years to happen, but we’re getting another version of this story already.
WALLACE: It’s interesting. I didn’t know about it until they were done filming and the whole thing was done. I think it’s fun for the world to keep growing and for there to be another. Obviously, it’s a very cool way to make everything go bigger and to even get the first movie to more places. But yeah, it’s weird because you normally would do it a couple years after you finish. But no, we don’t have any time to waste here.
You did the TV series Skam, early on in your career. What did you learn from playing that character, over a few seasons? What did you learn a lot about acting and being on a set, making that TV series, and did any of that help in stepping in to lead this?
WALLACE: I learned everything, completely. It was my first ever project. I had an amazing opportunity to work with these two wonderful directors and my whole career is because of them. Also, having other castmates that were new to this and we were all learning together was amazing. I learned everything that I know from Skam. I never took classes. I never did anything. I learned how to stand on my mark and wait for the sound to go away. It was like a masterclass for me, being able to do that for two years in a very safe environment and in an amazing workplace. I’m very grateful for that project.
'Culpa Tuya's Nicole Wallace Is Finding Her Confidence as a Leading Lady
The first film was the first time you led a film set. How different did it feel to walk onto the set of the second film? Did you feel more confident and more centered as a leading lady, the second time around?
WALLACE: Yes, 100%. I don’t know if this is a good thing, but I’ve always been into leadership. I’ve always been the person to start projects in school and do all that type of stuff. So, I do feel comfortable in that place. After the first one, I also did a TV show where I was the lead and I worked on a couple more things. And then, I came onto this set and I did feel more confident, especially in my talent and in my voice, and with how to move around a set and how to understand what was going on. But yes, I did feel more confident, thankfully.
my fault social featured
Related
Intense Forbidden Love Blossoms in 'My Fault' Trailer
The romantic thriller film premieres on Prime Video next month.
In the first movie, Noah and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) had to sneak around, so that their parents didn’t know what was going on between them. And in this movie, it’s a bit more of a reality check. She’s graduated high school and turned 18, and he’s working for his father. What was it like to explore this side of them and have them clashing with each other while they’re still trying to figure out who they are?
WALLACE: It’s one of my favorite things, a coming of age story and being able to do that at the same time with a relationship. That period when you turn 18, and you go through all of this, is very life-changing for a person and for a teenager. When I went through it, it was a complete drift of my personality. I learned so much about myself and what I wanted, and what I didn’t want, in relationships and everything. So, it’s very cool to be able to go back and do it again, but just with none of the consequences of it. Just being able to see it from a different perspective, it’s very beautiful, and I think it’s very well done in the film.
Noah is not the only someone who finds herself in car races, but she knows cars and can race herself. Did you know anything about cars or care about them at all before doing this? Is there a stunt or something involving the cars that you got to do, that you had the most fun with?
WALLACE: I’m not a car girl. I wouldn’t say that I’m a car nerd. I do like cars. I do like driving a lot, actually, and I do think I’m a good driver. I don’t know much about cars, and I didn’t learn much about cars for the film, either. In the first film, I did get to do more stunts and more driving scenes. With this one, since we were filming the second one and the third one (Culpa Nuestra) at the same time, we really didn’t have enough time to spend on those scenes, so we did it all on a set with screens and lights and stuff.
Nicole Wallace Would Be Game To Do a Big Action Movie
Nicole Wallace in a promo shot for Amazon MGM Studios looking at the camera for her role as Noah in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
Did it inspire you, at all, to want to be an action star? Would you want to do a whole movie as an action lead?
WALLACE: Actually, when I was on [the promo] tour, one of the movies I kept watching on the airplane was Charlie’s Angels, and I would love to do a Charlie’s Angels reboot. They’re so cool and so badass. I do have so much fun doing those types of scenes, so I would love to do any type of action or superhero thing. You get to look super cool. Why wouldn’t I want that?
The one constant that Noah has in these movies is Jenna (Eva Ruiz). What do you like about that relationship and getting to explore their friendship?
WALLACE: I love it. It’s such a good thing, in a teenage movie, to have two girls that are never against each other and that are always together and always have each other’s backs. Even if one of them does something wrong, they always accept and love each other, which I think is so important to have in real life. They’re two very different girls that have two very different lives, but that found each other. We all have that person, so it’s very nice to see it in a movie.
What Advice Would Nicole Wallace Give Her 'Culpa Tuya' Character Noah When It Comes to Her Relationship With Nick?
Nicole Wallace as Noah laughing with Gabriel Guevara as Nick, who has his arm around her, in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
It’s hard to have and maintain a relationship when your parents are all working against you. If you were a friend of Noah’s during the time of this second film, what advice would you give her?
WALLACE: I would probably tell her, "If it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be. If it’s meant to happen, then it will happen. What is for you is for you, even if people try to take it away from you." I would tell her, “Focus on you. Focus on yourself right now. Focus on your school and on your passion and your friends and knowing yourself. If Nick is going to be, then he’ll be. You have time for that.” That’s probably my advice.
Your Fault Movie Trailer
Related
Noah and Nick Are Torn Apart In New Sizzling 'Your Fault' Trailer
The sequel will arrive on Prime Video this winter.
How did you feel about the ending of this movie? There’s a lot of drama that happens at the end of the film, so thankfully we’re getting a third film, Culpa Nuestra, to tie everything up. What was it like to have that scene in the rain? That’s such an iconic movie moment.
WALLACE: Yeah, it is. It was a very hard scene to film because it was raining a lot. It was 2am in the middle of winter in Madrid, which is completely freezing. I had a wetsuit under the jacket that I was wearing. It was very bad. I was very sick afterward. It was horrible. But it is iconic and it looks amazing. I love it. I actually really like that after everything happens, they actually don’t even talk to each other when it ends. She just passes through him. I don’t think Noah has any guilt. She did what she was feeling and what she wanted to do in the moment, with the hurt that she was feeling and the way that everyone acted. I like that she doesn’t say, “Sorry,” and she doesn’t try to beg for forgiveness. She doesn’t really feel sorry because she doesn’t really feel like she did anything wrong. I really like that scene. It was really cool.
The 'Culpables' Trilogy Will Be Complete With the Release of 'Culpa Nuestra' in 2025
Nicole Wallace as Noah in extreme close-up with Gabriel Guevara as Nick in the poster artwork for Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
What was it like for you to complete telling this story? How hard is it to say goodbye to a character that you’ve played for three movies?
WALLACE: It was very rewarding to finish filming. I haven’t seen the third one, but when I see it, I think I’ll feel very proud. I’ll probably cry. It’s been such a long journey and such a roller coaster of a journey, trusting myself as a young actress in this whole crazy trip that has been this trilogy. It has a bittersweet taste to it. It’s very sad to say goodbye to a character, but at the same time, I’m dying to do other characters. I’m excited for fans to have the whole thing.
Do you know what you’re going to be doing next? Are you hoping to also cross over into Hollywood productions now?
WALLACE: I just finished filming The House of Spirits (La Casa de los Espíritus) for Prime. It was amazing to be able to do that. Those were very, very hard shoes to try to fill, playing Meryl Streep’s character, Clara del Valle. For the next year, the main objective is to try to take advantage of my American roots and be able to work there. I’m also very excited to rest.
01731118_poster_w780.jpg
Your Fault
Romance
Drama
Director
Domingo González
Cast
Nicole Wallace , Gabriel Guevara , Iván Sánchez , Marta Hazas , Victor Varona , Gabriela Andrada , Alex Bejar , Javier Morgade , Felipe Londoño , Goya Toledo , Fran Morcillo , José Manuel Palacios
Runtime
120 minutes
Release Date
December 27, 2024
Where To Stream
Prime Video
Culpa Tuya is available to stream on Prime Video. Check out the trailer:
In the sequel 'Culpa Tuya,' Noah (Nicole Wallace) and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) face challenges in their romance as their parents try to keep them apart.
The third part of the Culpables trilogy, 'Culpa Nuestra' has already been shot and is set for release in 2025.
Nicole Wallace reflects on playing Noah for three films and shares love for the character's strength.
The second film in the Culpables trilogy, Culpa Tuya, sees Noah (Nicole Wallace) and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) facing new challenges and obstacles to their romance. While their parents work to keep them apart, temptation and someone from the past also play a role, pushing their new relationship to the test in ways that seem insurmountable. With everything, Noah and Nick must decide if their love is worth fighting for.
Based on the popular book trilogy by Mercedes Ron, Noah and Nick’s story started in Culpa Mia and will come to its conclusion with Culpa Nuestra, which has already been shot and is expected to stream on Prime Video in 2025. In the meantime, Collider got the opportunity to chat one-on-one with Wallace about all things Culpables and what it’s been like to play Noah across three films.
During the interview, the rising star talked about why she loves Noah, the craziness of the success of the films, the launch of a UK version that will be out in February 2025, what she learned from her time on the TV series Skam España, and how she’s gained confidence in being a leading lady. The Spanish-American actress also discussed the fun of reliving teenage love, enjoying the stunts so much that she’d be down to do an action flick, the importance of Jenna’s friendship for Noah, the advice she’d give her character, how she feels about that iconic moment with Noah and Nick in the rain, how rewarding it was to complete Noah’s story with Culpa Nuestra, and her desire to cross over into Hollywood productions.
Nicole Wallace Loves the Strength of Her 'Culpables' Character Noah
Nicole Wallace as Noah with a bright smile and her hair down in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
Collider: I love the strength of your character. I love how she goes after what she wants and that she’s able to voice when she’s not happy. What have you loved about Noah, from day one? And what have you enjoyed about getting to explore that growth throughout the story?
NICOLE WALLACE: She’s a very strong character. She’s a very strong woman. I love so many things about her. Just being able to express every feeling that she has so directly and without second guessing is very beautiful and is something that sometimes I don’t do as well. Being able to do it through her has been very fulfilling. And seeing her growth, I’ve been with her for a little over two years, so it has been like seeing a friend grow and go through a breakup and go through everything that she goes through. She’s very strong in her vulnerability, and that’s something that I really like for other girls to look up to and see.
What has been most unexpected about the success of all this? The first film did so well that you pretty quickly got to make a trilogy. How has it been to step into this fandom that was already there and that’s really just built with the films?
WALLACE: Yeah, it’s crazy. It was my first film, ever. It’s not something that happens all the time. For an actress to do her first film and be a lead and for that to become known worldwide is something that I don’t really process. I’m actually processing these days when I’m doing the promotion. When I did the interviews last year, the film wasn’t out, and all of this hadn’t happened. So, I understand the growth of it now.
Matthew Broome in My Fault: London
Related
Noah & Nick Try To Stay out of Each Other's Way in New 'My Fault: London' Sneak Peek
'My Fault: London' debuts on February 13, 2025.
What is your reaction to there now also being a UK version, with My Fault: London? That’s something that sometimes takes years to happen, but we’re getting another version of this story already.
WALLACE: It’s interesting. I didn’t know about it until they were done filming and the whole thing was done. I think it’s fun for the world to keep growing and for there to be another. Obviously, it’s a very cool way to make everything go bigger and to even get the first movie to more places. But yeah, it’s weird because you normally would do it a couple years after you finish. But no, we don’t have any time to waste here.
You did the TV series Skam, early on in your career. What did you learn from playing that character, over a few seasons? What did you learn a lot about acting and being on a set, making that TV series, and did any of that help in stepping in to lead this?
WALLACE: I learned everything, completely. It was my first ever project. I had an amazing opportunity to work with these two wonderful directors and my whole career is because of them. Also, having other castmates that were new to this and we were all learning together was amazing. I learned everything that I know from Skam. I never took classes. I never did anything. I learned how to stand on my mark and wait for the sound to go away. It was like a masterclass for me, being able to do that for two years in a very safe environment and in an amazing workplace. I’m very grateful for that project.
'Culpa Tuya's Nicole Wallace Is Finding Her Confidence as a Leading Lady
The first film was the first time you led a film set. How different did it feel to walk onto the set of the second film? Did you feel more confident and more centered as a leading lady, the second time around?
WALLACE: Yes, 100%. I don’t know if this is a good thing, but I’ve always been into leadership. I’ve always been the person to start projects in school and do all that type of stuff. So, I do feel comfortable in that place. After the first one, I also did a TV show where I was the lead and I worked on a couple more things. And then, I came onto this set and I did feel more confident, especially in my talent and in my voice, and with how to move around a set and how to understand what was going on. But yes, I did feel more confident, thankfully.
my fault social featured
Related
Intense Forbidden Love Blossoms in 'My Fault' Trailer
The romantic thriller film premieres on Prime Video next month.
In the first movie, Noah and Nick (Gabriel Guevara) had to sneak around, so that their parents didn’t know what was going on between them. And in this movie, it’s a bit more of a reality check. She’s graduated high school and turned 18, and he’s working for his father. What was it like to explore this side of them and have them clashing with each other while they’re still trying to figure out who they are?
WALLACE: It’s one of my favorite things, a coming of age story and being able to do that at the same time with a relationship. That period when you turn 18, and you go through all of this, is very life-changing for a person and for a teenager. When I went through it, it was a complete drift of my personality. I learned so much about myself and what I wanted, and what I didn’t want, in relationships and everything. So, it’s very cool to be able to go back and do it again, but just with none of the consequences of it. Just being able to see it from a different perspective, it’s very beautiful, and I think it’s very well done in the film.
Noah is not the only someone who finds herself in car races, but she knows cars and can race herself. Did you know anything about cars or care about them at all before doing this? Is there a stunt or something involving the cars that you got to do, that you had the most fun with?
WALLACE: I’m not a car girl. I wouldn’t say that I’m a car nerd. I do like cars. I do like driving a lot, actually, and I do think I’m a good driver. I don’t know much about cars, and I didn’t learn much about cars for the film, either. In the first film, I did get to do more stunts and more driving scenes. With this one, since we were filming the second one and the third one (Culpa Nuestra) at the same time, we really didn’t have enough time to spend on those scenes, so we did it all on a set with screens and lights and stuff.
Nicole Wallace Would Be Game To Do a Big Action Movie
Nicole Wallace in a promo shot for Amazon MGM Studios looking at the camera for her role as Noah in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
Did it inspire you, at all, to want to be an action star? Would you want to do a whole movie as an action lead?
WALLACE: Actually, when I was on [the promo] tour, one of the movies I kept watching on the airplane was Charlie’s Angels, and I would love to do a Charlie’s Angels reboot. They’re so cool and so badass. I do have so much fun doing those types of scenes, so I would love to do any type of action or superhero thing. You get to look super cool. Why wouldn’t I want that?
The one constant that Noah has in these movies is Jenna (Eva Ruiz). What do you like about that relationship and getting to explore their friendship?
WALLACE: I love it. It’s such a good thing, in a teenage movie, to have two girls that are never against each other and that are always together and always have each other’s backs. Even if one of them does something wrong, they always accept and love each other, which I think is so important to have in real life. They’re two very different girls that have two very different lives, but that found each other. We all have that person, so it’s very nice to see it in a movie.
What Advice Would Nicole Wallace Give Her 'Culpa Tuya' Character Noah When It Comes to Her Relationship With Nick?
Nicole Wallace as Noah laughing with Gabriel Guevara as Nick, who has his arm around her, in Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
It’s hard to have and maintain a relationship when your parents are all working against you. If you were a friend of Noah’s during the time of this second film, what advice would you give her?
WALLACE: I would probably tell her, "If it’s meant to be, it’s meant to be. If it’s meant to happen, then it will happen. What is for you is for you, even if people try to take it away from you." I would tell her, “Focus on you. Focus on yourself right now. Focus on your school and on your passion and your friends and knowing yourself. If Nick is going to be, then he’ll be. You have time for that.” That’s probably my advice.
Your Fault Movie Trailer
Related
Noah and Nick Are Torn Apart In New Sizzling 'Your Fault' Trailer
The sequel will arrive on Prime Video this winter.
How did you feel about the ending of this movie? There’s a lot of drama that happens at the end of the film, so thankfully we’re getting a third film, Culpa Nuestra, to tie everything up. What was it like to have that scene in the rain? That’s such an iconic movie moment.
WALLACE: Yeah, it is. It was a very hard scene to film because it was raining a lot. It was 2am in the middle of winter in Madrid, which is completely freezing. I had a wetsuit under the jacket that I was wearing. It was very bad. I was very sick afterward. It was horrible. But it is iconic and it looks amazing. I love it. I actually really like that after everything happens, they actually don’t even talk to each other when it ends. She just passes through him. I don’t think Noah has any guilt. She did what she was feeling and what she wanted to do in the moment, with the hurt that she was feeling and the way that everyone acted. I like that she doesn’t say, “Sorry,” and she doesn’t try to beg for forgiveness. She doesn’t really feel sorry because she doesn’t really feel like she did anything wrong. I really like that scene. It was really cool.
The 'Culpables' Trilogy Will Be Complete With the Release of 'Culpa Nuestra' in 2025
Nicole Wallace as Noah in extreme close-up with Gabriel Guevara as Nick in the poster artwork for Culpa TuyaImage via Amazon MGM Studios
What was it like for you to complete telling this story? How hard is it to say goodbye to a character that you’ve played for three movies?
WALLACE: It was very rewarding to finish filming. I haven’t seen the third one, but when I see it, I think I’ll feel very proud. I’ll probably cry. It’s been such a long journey and such a roller coaster of a journey, trusting myself as a young actress in this whole crazy trip that has been this trilogy. It has a bittersweet taste to it. It’s very sad to say goodbye to a character, but at the same time, I’m dying to do other characters. I’m excited for fans to have the whole thing.
Do you know what you’re going to be doing next? Are you hoping to also cross over into Hollywood productions now?
WALLACE: I just finished filming The House of Spirits (La Casa de los Espíritus) for Prime. It was amazing to be able to do that. Those were very, very hard shoes to try to fill, playing Meryl Streep’s character, Clara del Valle. For the next year, the main objective is to try to take advantage of my American roots and be able to work there. I’m also very excited to rest.
01731118_poster_w780.jpg
Your Fault
Romance
Drama
Director
Domingo González
Cast
Nicole Wallace , Gabriel Guevara , Iván Sánchez , Marta Hazas , Victor Varona , Gabriela Andrada , Alex Bejar , Javier Morgade , Felipe Londoño , Goya Toledo , Fran Morcillo , José Manuel Palacios
Runtime
120 minutes
Release Date
December 27, 2024
Where To Stream
Prime Video
Culpa Tuya is available to stream on Prime Video. Check out the trailer:
We don’t know all that the next 12 months have in store for us, but on the television front, things are looking up. This year will find big show returns like more “Poker Face,” “Andor,” and “The White Lotus”; not to mention the fourth and final season of “The Bear” (though there’s no way that’s really all they are going to do with that hit, right?) and the long, long-awaited return of “Severance” on Apple TV+. But there’s plenty of new stuff to get excited about as well (five words: Michelle Williams Back on TV.)
Below, 10 new television shows we absolutely can’t wait to check out this year. Need even more? Be sure to look at our 2025 Netflix preview for even more goodies to text the group chats about.
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1. “American Primeval” (Netflix, January 9)
The year begins in the Wild West with this limited series from Peter Berg, Mark L. Smith, and Eric Newman, described as a “violent collision of culture, religion, and community.” Berg and Newman previously worked together on Netflix’s “Painkiller,” which also starred Taylor Kitsch. This time around, Kitsch plays the mysterious Isaac, a loner in the lawless territory that Sara (Betty Gilpin) is trying to navigate with son Devin (Preston Mota) — but they’ll find it filled with more foes than friends on a perilous cross-country journey. The cast includes Kim Coates, Dane DeHaan, Jai Courtney, and more as a mix of historical and fictional figures populating the trek. —PK
2. “The Pitt” (Max, January 9)
Noah Wyle. E.R. Sound familiar? “The Pitt” isn’t officially an “E.R.” sequel or spinoff — although ongoing legal proceedings contend it may have started out that way — but it does bring the former Dr. Carter back to the emergency room in a series created by veteran “E.R.” producer R. Scott Gemmill and produced by original “E.R.” showrunner John Wells.
The twist, aside from its Pittsburgh, PA setting and new cast members, is that “The Pitt” plays out in real time: “15 episodes, 15 hours, one shift,” as it says in the trailer. Will counting the seconds be enough to distinguish “The Pitt” from the mega-hit network drama that preceded it? And will fans of the original be curious enough to see Wyle back in scrubs but playing a new doc? Clock in this January to find out. —BT
3. “Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man” (Disney+, January 29)
Here’s another alternative universe from our friends at Marvel: This animated series about Peter Parker’s formative years will ponder what would have happened had Parker been mentored by Norman Osborn instead of Tony Stark. Yikes!
The show is created by Jeff Trammell with Hudson Thames voicing Parker, reprising the role from the Marvel Studios animated series “What If…?” Colman Domingo, Eugene Byrd, Grace Song, Zeno Robinson, Hugh Dancy, and Charlie Cox will also voice characters. The show will debut in weekly installments; check out the official trailer here.
‘The Residence’
4. “The Residence” (Netflix, March 20)
Shondaland is going back to the White House with this “screwball whodunnit” from showrunner Paul William Davies, about a murder at the country’s most prestigious address. The eight-episode series was apparently inspired by the book “The Residence: Inside the Private World of the White House” by Kate Andersen Brower, which dives into various presidencies as told by White House staffers who are deeply acquainted with the building’s 132 rooms — but also, according to Davies, the classic film “Charade.” After a body turns up during a massive White House party, the staff brings in detective Cordelia Cupp (Uzo Aduba) and FBI agent Edwin Park (Randall Park) to solve the case. The cast includes Giancarlo Esposito, Susan Kelechi Watson, Jane Curtin, Jason Lee, Ken Marino, and many more. —PK
5. “The Studio” (Apple TV+, March 26)
Co-created by Seth Rogen, the comedy will follow Matt Remick (Rogen), “the newly appointed head of embattled Continental Studios,” per a press release. “As movies struggle to stay alive and relevant, Matt and his core team of infighting executives battle their own insecurities as they wrangle narcissistic artists and craven corporate overlords in the ever-elusive pursuit of making great films. With their power suits masking their neverending sense of panic, every party, set visit, casting decision, marketing meeting, and award show presents them with an opportunity for glittering success or career-ending catastrophe. As someone who eats, sleeps, and breathes movies, it’s the job Matt’s been pursuing his whole life, and it may very well destroy him.”
“The Studio” will also star Catherine O’Hara, Kathryn Hahn, Ike Barinholtz, and Chase Sui Wonders.
6. “Your Friends and Neighbors” (Apple TV+, April 11)
Jon Hamm! Leading a drama! Hooray!
Jonathan Tropper’s drama will follow Coop (Hamm), a recently divorced and fired finance manager who “resorts to stealing from his neighbors’ homes in the exceedingly affluent Westmont Village, only to discover that the secrets and affairs hidden behind those wealthy facades might be more dangerous than he ever imagined,” per a press release.
The show will also star Amanda Peet, Olivia Munn, Hoon Lee, Mark Tallman, Lena Hall, Aimee Carrero, Eunice Bae, Isabel Marie Gravitt, and Donovan Colan. The program has already been renewed for a second season.
7. “Long Bright River” (Peacock)
“Long Bright River” is an excellent book by Liz Moore, and has plenty of potential to be turned into a great series. Starring Amanda Seyfried, the official logline says the limited series will tell “the story of Mickey (Seyfried), a police officer who patrols a Philadelphia neighborhood hard-hit by the opioid crisis. When a series of murders begins in the neighborhood, Mickey realizes that her personal history might be related to the case.”
Moore is adapting her book for the screen alongside Nikki Toscano, with both also serving as executive producers and Toscano serving as showrunner. A release date has not yet been announced.
8. “Dying for Sex” (FX)
Michelle Williams on TV? We’ll be watching, clearly, and this project sounds particularly exciting.
From writers Liz Meriwether and Kim Rosenstock, as well as director Leslye Headland, “Dying for Sex” is based on the hit Wondery podcast. The podcast is described as: “When Molly’s diagnosed with stage IV breast cancer, she decides to do something bold: she leaves her unhappy marriage and embarks on a series of sexual adventures to help her feel alive. She shares the funniest and most touching details with her closest friend, host Nikki Boyer. As they peel back the layers, we learn that Molly isn’t just grappling with breast cancer: she’s also dealing with some trauma from her past. Along the journey, the friends explore bigger themes that affect us all — like healing, forgiveness and what do we do with the time we have left.”
Jenny Slate will co-star as Molly’s best friend and confidante.
9. “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” (HBO)
It’s HBO’s second “Game of Thrones” spinoff, and after the success of “House of the Dragons,” the pressure is… off? Sure, George R.R. Martin’s fantasy series represents HBO’s biggest franchise to date, and the network would love to keep fans frothing over each new entry by delivering yet another buzzy spinoff. But “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” doesn’t carry the weight of the franchise on its back — at least, not in the same way.
For one, it’s a story of friendship, about “a naïve but courageous knight and his diminutive squire.” For another, it’s based on Martin’s novellas, “Tales of Dunk and Egg,” which exist within the “Song of Ice and Fire” saga but tell their own story, set 90 years before the events of “Game of Thrones.” Rather than giving fans more of the same (as “House of the Dragon” has done so far), “A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms” could walk its own path — and see just how far outside the “Game of Thrones” mold fans are willing to travel. —BT
10. “Alien: Earth” (Hulu, Summer 2025)
Created by Noah Hawley, this upcoming sci-fi horror series is based on the “Alien” franchise. “When a mysterious space vessel crash-lands on Earth, a young woman (Sydney Chandler) and a ragtag group of tactical soldiers make a fateful discovery that puts them face-to-face with the planet’s greatest threat,” a press release notes.
Fans can check out the mysterious, creepy teaser trailer here; the series will also star Alex Lawther, Timothy Olyphant, Essie Davis, Samuel Blenkin, Babou Ceesay, David Rysdahl, Adrian Edmondson, Adarsh Gourav, Jonathan Ajayi, Erana James, Lily Newmark, Diem Camille, and Moe Bar-El.
Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Peter Sollett
Screenplay by Lorene Scafaria
Based on Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist
by Rachel Cohn
David Levithan
Produced by
Kerry Kohansky Roberts
Andrew Miano
Chris Weitz
Paul Weitz
Starring
Michael Cera
Kat Dennings
Alexis Dziena
Ari Graynor
Aaron Yoo
Jay Baruchel
Cinematography Tom Richmond
Edited by Myron Kerstein
Music by Mark Mothersbaugh
Production
companies
Columbia Pictures[1]
Mandate Pictures
Depth of Field[1]
Screen Gems[a]
Distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing
Release dates
September 6, 2008 (TIFF)
October 3, 2008 (United States)
Running time 90 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $10 million
Box office $33.5 million
Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist is a 2008 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Peter Sollett and starring Michael Cera, Kat Dennings, Alexis Dziena, Ari Graynor, Aaron Yoo and Jay Baruchel. 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, 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.
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.
Plot
New Jersey teenager Nick O'Leary is a straight bass player in the queercore band The Jerk-Offs. Heartbroken after being dumped by his girlfriend Tris, he continues making and sending her "breakup" mix CDs. Bandmates Thom and Dev convince Nick to perform at a club and search for a secret show that legendary indie band Where's Fluffy? is performing in NYC that night.
Norah Silverberg attends Convent of the Sacred Heart with her friends Tris and Caroline. She appreciates Nick's taste in music when retrieving his mix CDs that Tris throws away. The three end up at Arlene's Grocery in Manhattan, where The Jerk-Offs are playing.
After Tris teases her about not having a boyfriend, Norah asks Nick to pretend to be one and kisses him, not knowing he is the one Tris dumped. Caroline gets drunk so Norah decides to take her home, but Nick's bandmates offer to do so and encourage Norah and Nick to find the Where's Fluffy? show together.
When Thom and Dev stop at Gray's Papaya for hot dogs, a confused Caroline wakes up and escapes from Thom's van, believing they plan to sexually assault her. Nick and Norah meet with Thom and Dev to try to find her. A confusing phone call leads them to look for her at a club that Where's Fluffy? is rumored to be playing, but cannot find Caroline or the band. They finally locate her when she gives them clues in another phone call.
A jealous Tris catches up with the group, and Nick leaves them to talk to her. An upset Norah meets her on-again-off-again boyfriend Tal at a club. When she realizes he only hopes to get a record deal with her famous producer father, she promptly leaves him. Nick decides to confront Tris, but she pleads for a ride home and flirts with him in the car. They stop, and while 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. They go to Electric Lady Studios, Norah's father's music studio. She gets Nick to play something he wrote in the studio and then joins him in the recording room. They kiss, and Nick gives Norah her first orgasm.
Norah gets a text message from Caroline telling her she learned the location of the Where's Fluffy? show. When they arrive at the venue, they run into Tris and Tal. Tal starts a fight with Nick, but Thom and Dev's friend Lethario steps in and headbutts him.
Nick and Norah share a smile and leave together. At Penn 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.
Cast
Michael Cera as Nick, 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.[2][3] Sollett called him a "genius" and a "terrific actor",[4] as well as a "brilliant improvisational comedian".[5] 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."[6] He lived in an apartment in New York's East Village for the duration of filming.[7] Cera had never driven a stick shift vehicle before filming, and was taught so that he could be shot driving Nick's Yugo.[2]
Kat Dennings as Norah, the beautiful 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),[2] Sollett saying that "her being liberated from [people's expectations] liberated the film in many ways, and certainly her character from cliché."[8] 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".[9] Her favorite day of shooting was with a group of drag queens at a gay cabaret,[2] but she said that filming Norah's first orgasm was "really uncomfortable... Really, really."[10]
Alexis Dziena as 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.[2] 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]
Ari Graynor as Caroline, Norah's 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".[12] 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."[12] Sollett claimed that "everything she did in the movie was her own invention", calling her improvisation "brilliant".[5] 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.[5] 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.[2]
Aaron Yoo as 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".[13]
Rafi Gavron as 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".[14]
Jonathan B. Wright as Beefy Guy (Lethario), a new gay friend of Thom and Dev.
Jay Baruchel as 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".[15]
Cameos
Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, authors of the same-titled novel on which the film is based, have uncredited cameos as a couple sitting behind Nick and Norah at a diner.[16]
Lorene Scafaria, who wrote the screenplay for the film, cameos as Drunk Girl in Yugo
Seth Meyers and Andy Samberg, then working together in the cast of Saturday Night Live, cameo as Drunk Guy in Yugo and Homeless Man, respectively
Eddie Kaye Thomas, Graynor's then boyfriend, cameos as Jesus in a gay cabaret[12]
John Cho cameos as Hype Man
Kevin Corrigan agreed to cameo as Man at Port Authority so long as he had no speaking lines; his turkey sandwich scene, which was not scripted, was entirely improvised by Graynor.[5]
Devendra Banhart, whose song "Lover" plays during the opening credits/scenes, cameos as Customer in Deli.[17]
Production
Writing
Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist is based on the novel written by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan, which producer Kerry Kohansky Roberts brought into development as a film in 2003.[18] Lorene Scafaria was hired by Roberts in early 2005 to adapt the novel for Chris and Paul Weitz and Focus Features;[19][20] the script was her first film adaptation.[21] Peter Sollett signed on to direct the film in 2006, when the script was in its second draft, and collaborated with Scafaria.[5] Scafaria said that Norah "was me on the page",[21] while Sollett felt that as a teenager he was "not dissimilar to Nick".[5] Both had similar experiences to Nick and Norah, commuting into Manhattan at night, Scafaria from New Jersey and Sollett from Staten Island.[3]
Cohn and Levithan had written the novel in alternating chapters: Cohn writing from Norah's perspective and Levithan writing from Nick's perspective.[22] 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.[23] 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".[21] 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.[5]
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,[5][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,[10] as well as Williamsburg, Brooklyn.[28] Filming locations included Katz's Delicatessen, Mercury Lounge, Arlene's Grocery, Pennsylvania Station, Port Authority Bus Terminal, Veselka restaurant, and Don Hill's bar.[3][28][29] Union Pool, a bar in Brooklyn, was also used for filming but requested to be called "Brooklyn Pool" in the film,[5] 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.[10]
The cast did many rehearsals, including on-location rehearsals, which Dennings described as "the most practical thing I've ever heard of".[2] 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.[23] The cast and crew members would often sit inside 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.[13][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
Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist received generally positive reviews from critics. Rotten Tomatoes gives the film a score of 75% based on 186 reviews, with an average score of 6.6/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist combines a pair of charming leads, the classic New York backdrop, and a sweet soundtrack".[33] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 64 out of 100, based on 32 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[34] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[35]
Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars, praising Dennings' on-screen presence, the "considerable chemistry" between Cera and Dennings, and the "excellent" soundtrack.[36] 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".[37] James Berardinelli of ReelViews reviewed the film warmly with three out of four stars, complimenting the soundtrack, the "witty" dialog and the appeal of the film to both adults and teenagers.[38] 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".[39] 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.[40] 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".[41]
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."[42] 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."[43] 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."[44] 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".[45]
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.[46] 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.[47] 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.[47] 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.[47] 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[48] and at the Buenos Aires International Festival of Independent Cinema in March 2009.[49]
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.[50] The film was also nominated at the GLAAD Media Awards in the category of Outstanding Film – Wide Release,[51] and Kat Dennings was nominated for an MTV Movie Award for Best Breakthrough Performance – Female.[52] 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.[53]
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.[54]
Soundtrack
Main article: Nick & Norah's Infinite Playlist (soundtrack)
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.[21] In the final cut of the film, however, most of the music was chosen by Sollett, editor Myron Kerstein and music supervisor Linda Cohen.[4] 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".[4] 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.[5] 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.[3]
See also
Nick and Nora Charles
Notes
The film was originally in production as a Screen Gems film, but was switched over to Columbia Pictures before release. Some posters also credit Screen Gems as presenter along with Columbia and Mandate Pictures, but in theatrical releases the company remains uncredited.
References
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movies trailer
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