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9 Songs Poster

9 Songs

2 lovers, one summer, and the 9 songs that defined them.
2004 | 69m | English

(25095 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 15 (history)

Details

Matt, a young glaciologist, soars across the vast, silent, icebound immensities of the South Pole as he recalls his love affair with Lisa. They meet at a mobbed rock concert in a vast music hall - London's Brixton Academy. They are in bed at night's end. Together, over a period of several months, they pursue a mutual sexual passion whose inevitable stages unfold in counterpoint to nine live-concert songs.
Release Date: Jul 16, 2004
Director: Michael Winterbottom
Writer: Michael Winterbottom
Genres: Drama, Romance, Music
Keywords london, england, rock 'n' roll, sexuality, cocaine, orgasm, blow job, condom, man woman relationship, concert, love, pubic hair, sexual fantasy, breast, ejaculation, american, couple, desire, sexual desire, cunnilingus, naked, exchange student, rock concert, british man, nude, drug, small tits, woman tied to a bed, sex, sexual, vulva, rock, unsimulated sex, intense, erect penis
Production Companies Revolution Films
Box Office Revenue: $1,574,623
Budget: $1,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Backdrops

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
Kieran O'Brien Matt
Margo Stilley Lisa
Courtney Taylor-Taylor Himself - The Dandy Warhols (uncredited)
Alex Kapranos Himself - Franz Ferdinand (uncredited)
Guy Garvey Himself - Elbow (uncredited)
Robert Levon Been Himself - Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (uncredited)
Peter Hayes Himself - Black Rebel Motorcycle Club (uncredited)
Gruff Rhys Himself - Super Furry Animals (uncredited)
Jason Stollsteimer Himself - The Von Bondies (uncredited)
Marcie Bolen Herself - The Von Bondies (uncredited)
Michael Nyman Himself (uncredited)
Bobby Gillespie Himself - Primal Scream (uncredited)
Name Job
Steve Daly Casting
Julie Dunne Casting
Martyn Richmond Production Assistant
Stuart Wilson Sound
Joakim Sundström Sound Editor
Annemarie Lean-Vercoe Additional Camera
Richard Davey Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Alan Cridford Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Tristan Anika Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Fiona McGuire Head of Production
Molly Tudhope Production Assistant
Jethro Harris Post Producer
Helen Phelps Post Producer
Ross Baker Colorist
Cas Casey Online Editor
Layla Evans Post Production Supervisor
Reno Antoniades Legal Services
Boyd Harvey Other
Michael Winterbottom Writer, Director, Editor
Marcel Zyskind Director of Photography
Mat Whitecross Editor, Additional Camera
Rashad Hall-Heinz Additional Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Michel Houellebecq Thanks
Michael Nyman Thanks
Name Title
Melissa Parmenter Associate Producer
Michael Winterbottom Producer
Andrew Eaton Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 40 54 31
2024 5 45 63 33
2024 6 41 64 30
2024 7 41 59 29
2024 8 38 75 27
2024 9 27 42 23
2024 10 42 75 25
2024 11 44 67 33
2024 12 42 80 31
2025 1 40 53 31
2025 2 34 49 7
2025 3 13 37 3
2025 4 9 14 5
2025 5 10 14 9
2025 6 9 11 7
2025 7 7 10 7
2025 8 7 10 6
2025 9 9 10 6
2025 10 14 17 9

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 10 881 935
Year Month High Avg
2025 9 800 800
Year Month High Avg
2025 8 794 890

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Reviews

tmdb28039023
5.0

Lisa is an exchange student in London. Her affair with Matt has the urgency of the ephemeral. They are enjoying an extended, unofficial honeymoon; we see them dancing, drinking beer, doing drugs, hanging out, having irrelevant conversations and, above all, going to rock shows (all nine of the titula ... r songs are performed live) and having sex (Matt and Lisa have intercourse the same way they talk; ie, like real human beings as opposed to movie characters). There is generous nudity, and the sex is sometimes tentative and sometimes vigorous, and often uninhibited and experimental – as well as explicit and unsimulated (and, might I add, safe). At the same time, the songs, all except one by indie, garage, and punk rock bands (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Elbow, Primal Scream, among others), are raw and stark, as befits a live performance (the film’s short length, a little over an hour, likewise adheres to a minimalist punk ethos). The sex scenes follow the musical numbers, in at least one case overlapping until they merge into an audiovisual orgasm, in which the sexual act and the musical act become one, fleshing out the intangible bond that has always existed between sex and rock 'n' roll. By making Matt and Lisa the only characters with dialogue and individuality, director Michael Winterbottom makes it clear that their relationship is not just about sex; as it happens when two people fall in love (or like each other a lot), the lovers feel like the only two people on the planet, a feeling that the rest of concert-goers, a nameless and faceless mass, does nothing but emphasize. Matt is a glaciologist, and the immediacy of his passion for Lisa is contrasted with the timelessness of Antarctica (“the memory of the planet”), from where he looks back on their romance. After a year, Lisa returns to the US, and the two part without long goodbyes. This is the most realistically happy ending for a relationship, since, as we all know, the honeymoon phase is untenable and, with the passage of time, even sex becomes a chore – something like playing the same song every night. And sure enough, after a while, despite the musical and sexual variety – the latter of which includes cunnilingus, masturbation, blindfolds, hand tying, and manual, pedal (for lack of a better term), and vaginal sex –, the film’s structure becomes repetitive towards the end, although, once again, the brief running time keeps the tedium from becoming unbearable.

Sep 03, 2022