A group of young adults in their twenties, who share an apartment in the city of Seattle, ponder on love and face all the challenges of adulthood.A group of young adults in their twenties, who share an apartment in the city of Seattle, ponder on love and face all the challenges of adulthood.A group of young adults in their twenties, who share an apartment in the city of Seattle, ponder on love and face all the challenges of adulthood.
- Awards
- 1 win & 3 nominations
Jim True-Frost
- David Bailey
- (as Jim True)
James Le Gros
- Andy
- (as James LeGros)
Christopher Masterson
- Steve at 10
- (as Christopher Kennedy Masterson)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBased on a script that Cameron Crowe originally wrote in 1984, which took place in Phoenix, Arizona. After Andrew Wood, the lead singer of Seattle bands Malfunkshun and Mother Love Bone, died of a drug overdose in March 1990, Crowe noticed the music community in Seattle coming together to process the loss. He rewrote his script with the incident in mind, changing its setting to Seattle, which had been the location of his previous movie, Say Anything... (1989), which featured a song from Mother Love Bone in the soundtrack, "Chloe Dancer/Crown of Thorns" - the same song is on the 'Singles' soundtrack.
- GoofsDebbie's frantic bike ride on her video date has her darting all over the city. She starts at the first restaurant at the end of lake union. To get to the second restaurant on first avenue downtown, she circles all the way around to Waterfront park on the Sound. After leaving the second restaurant, she crosses a draw bridge over the ship canal, only to suddenly end up back downtown near post alley and first avenue (where she just left the second restaurant). After getting a flat tire, she finally walks all the way home to the apartment on Capitol Hill (nearly 2 miles away).
- Quotes
Steve Dunne: I just happened to be nowhere near your neighborhood.
- Crazy creditsOuttakes after credits on video version
- Alternate versionsThe Blu-ray has the 2003 Warner Bros. Pictures logo at the beginning of the movie. The YouTube version retains the plaster but also included its accompanying fanfare which in-turn cut the first few seconds of the song "Waiting for Somebody".
- ConnectionsFeatured in Paul Westerberg: Dyslexic Heart (1992)
- SoundtracksWaiting for Somebody
Written and Produced by Paul Westerberg
Performed by Paul Westerberg
Courtesy of Sire Records
Featured review
SINGLES is a charming, romantic movie and one of Cameron Crowe's best.
An oft-heard criticism of this film is that it's not an authentic portrayal of the Gen-X culture of the early 90's, but I've yet to see that done well in any film.
More importantly, the film never claims to be a Gen-X film. It's set in Seattle during the height of Seattle Sound but the cast is made up of driven professionals and slackers alike. It's more of a cross-section of 20-somethings, not a focus on Gen-X or Grunge. The characters, settings and themes are all to a certain degree idealized, which is a staple of Crowe's style.
Where this film's charm really lies is in capturing the spirit of the early-90's and the anti-classist sentiment embraced by teens and young professionals in opposition to the "status is everything" 1980s. It's nice to remember a time when being socially and environmentally conscious was actually fashionable for a time.
Sadly we all got sucked into the dot-com thing and realized we can be just as bad as our parents.
An oft-heard criticism of this film is that it's not an authentic portrayal of the Gen-X culture of the early 90's, but I've yet to see that done well in any film.
More importantly, the film never claims to be a Gen-X film. It's set in Seattle during the height of Seattle Sound but the cast is made up of driven professionals and slackers alike. It's more of a cross-section of 20-somethings, not a focus on Gen-X or Grunge. The characters, settings and themes are all to a certain degree idealized, which is a staple of Crowe's style.
Where this film's charm really lies is in capturing the spirit of the early-90's and the anti-classist sentiment embraced by teens and young professionals in opposition to the "status is everything" 1980s. It's nice to remember a time when being socially and environmentally conscious was actually fashionable for a time.
Sadly we all got sucked into the dot-com thing and realized we can be just as bad as our parents.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Vida de solteros
- Filming locations
- 1820 E. Thomas St, Seattle, Washington, USA(The apartment building where Cliff, Janet, Steve, and Debbie live.)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $18,471,850
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $4,184,875
- Sep 20, 1992
- Gross worldwide
- $18,471,850
- Runtime1 hour 39 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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