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High Fidelity

A comedy about fear of commitment, hating your job, falling in love and other pop favorites.
2000 | 113m | English

(196440 votes)

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Popularity: 3 (history)

Details

After his long-time girlfriend dumps him, a thirty-year-old record store owner seeks to understand why he is unlucky in love while recounting his "top five breakups of all time".
Release Date: Mar 17, 2000
Director: Stephen Frears
Writer: D.V. DeVincentis, Steve Pink, John Cusack, Nick Hornby, Scott Rosenberg
Genres: Comedy, Drama, Romance, Music
Keywords chicago, illinois, music record, rock 'n' roll, disc jockey, pop, ex-girlfriend, music journalist, relationship problems, record label, flashback, fear of commitment, breaking the fourth wall, falling in love, break-up, record, record album, music scene, thoughtful, breaking up with boyfriend, music culture, record store, top five, dating history, witty, earnest
Production Companies Touchstone Pictures, Working Title Films, New Crime Productions, Dogstar Films
Box Office Revenue: $47,100,000
Budget: $30,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 10, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

International Posters

Full Credits

Name Character
John Cusack Rob Gordon
Iben Hjejle Laura
Todd Louiso Dick
Jack Black Barry Judd
Lisa Bonet Marie DeSalle
Catherine Zeta-Jones Charlie Nicholson
Joan Cusack Liz
Tim Robbins Ian Raymond
Chris Rehmann Vince
Ben Carr Justin
Lili Taylor Sarah Kendrew
Joelle Carter Penny Hardwick
Natasha Gregson Wagner Caroline Fortis
Shannon Stillo Alison Jr. High
Drake Bell Rob Jr. High
Laura Whyte Laura's Mom
Sara Gilbert Anaugh Moss
Rich Talarico Barry's Customer
Matthew O'Neill Beta Band Customer
Brian Powell Middle Aged Customer
Margaret Travolta Rob's Mom
Jillian Peterson Laura's Sister Jo
Dick Cusack Minister
Susan Yoo Girl - 19 year old
Chris Bauer Paul
K.K. Dodds Miranda
Marilyn Dodds Frank Alison's Mom
Duke Doyle Kevin Bannister
Aaron Himelstein Boy In Park
Jonathan Herrington Chris Thompson
Daniel Lee Smith Rock Guy
Leah Gale Mourner
David Darlow Mourner
Erik Gundersen Marco
Bruce Springsteen Bruce Springsteen
Alex Désert Louis
Alan S. Johnson Man In Store
Ian Belknap Party Guest
Andrew Micheli Party Guest
Polly Noonan Party Guest
Philip Rayburn Smith Party Guest
Michele Graff Party Guest
Susie Cusack Party Guest
Liam Hayes Piano Player
Damian Rogers Greenday Girl
Robert A. Villanueva Skateboarder
Joe Spaulding Flea Market Musician
Scott A. Martin Bartender
Heather Norris Laura's Friend
Timothy W. Tiedje Operator (uncredited)
James Azrael Glam Rocker (uncredited)
Ian Michaels Guy in Chem Lab (uncredited)
Susan Hegarty Laura's Mom (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Mick Audsley Editor
Thérèse DePrez Production Design
Kathy Nelson Music Supervisor
Billy Higgins Unit Production Manager
Jeffrey Wetzel First Assistant Director
Aiman A. Humaideh Second Assistant Director
Demetra Diamantopoulos Location Manager
Joan Altman Production Accountant
Tania Blunden Post Production Supervisor
Peter Joly Supervising Sound Editor
David Morenz First Assistant Camera
Carl Fischer Boom Operator
Tarn Harper Post Production Accountant
Chiemi Karasawa Script Supervisor
Jennifer Jobst Costume Supervisor
Heather Pollock Costumer
Gina Panno Costumer
Jeanne Van Phue Key Makeup Artist
Larry Lundy Set Decoration
Derrick Kardos Graphic Designer
Joel Prihoda Leadman
Phillip Ellman On Set Dresser
Timothy W. Tiedje Property Master
Danny Longhurst Dialogue Editor
Michael Redfern Foley Editor
Robert Swander Best Boy Electric
Art Bartels Key Grip
Wendy Weidman Casting Associate
Susan Hegarty Dialect Coach
Melissa Moseley Still Photographer
Terry Baughman Construction Coordinator
Adrian Rhodes Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Brendan Donnison ADR Voice Casting
Ted Swanscott Foley Mixer
Terry Isted Foley Mixer
Diane Greaves Foley Artist
Jason Swanscott Foley Artist
Clare Mahoney Foley Artist
A. Welch Lambeth Transportation Coordinator
Will Gatlin Craft Service
Shari Johanson Music Editor
Joe Lisanti Music Editor
John Stanborough Color Timer
Thomas Coe Stunt Double
Laura Bauer Costume Designer
William R. Nielsen Jr. Camera Operator
Anne Johns Production Coordinator
Margaret J. Orlando Assistant Production Coordinator
Anita Brongiel Production Secretary
Anne Berger Second Second Assistant Director
Deborah Evans Payroll Accountant
Adrienne Swan Second Assistant Accountant
Andy Wheeler First Assistant Accountant
Jeffrey A. Williams Utility Sound
Chad Erickson Camera Intern
Elizabeth Miller Loader
Daniel W. Fuller Second Assistant Camera
Michael D. Gianneschi Assistant Property Master
Mags Arnold First Assistant Editor
Kate Higham First Assistant Editor
Margaret Morettini Assistant Costume Designer
Laura Connolly Key Hair Stylist
Naomi Donne Makeup & Hair
Mark Rose Assistant Sound Editor
James A. Miller Gaffer
Michael Lange Best Boy Grip
Fernando M. Briones Dolly Grip
Sam Barkan Special Effects Coordinator
Louise Spencer Unit Publicist
Dan Koretzky Production Consultant
Jennifer Baron Assistant Location Manager
John David Wolfe Location Assistant
Adam Graham Location Assistant
Ed Rak Score Engineer
Gareth Jones Score Engineer
Anne Devereux Producer's Assistant
Juliette Dow Producer's Assistant
Melissa Sadoff Producer's Assistant
William T. Hogan III Transportation Coordinator
Kenneth w. Bradley Production Assistant
Veloz Gomez Production Assistant
Eric H. Heisner Production Assistant
David Malley Production Assistant
Joanna S. Frank Production Assistant
Dawn Patch Production Assistant
Ed Portoghese Production Assistant
Jon Schluenz Production Assistant
Jeff Sternberg Production Assistant
Adam Rosen Production Assistant
Joan Philo Extras Casting
Edward J. Reardon Set Medic
Michael Cronin Set Medic
Robert Byrnes Set Medic
Patricia Newby Set Medic
D.V. DeVincentis Music Supervisor, Screenplay
Steve Pink Music Supervisor, Screenplay
John Cusack Music Supervisor, Screenplay
Howard Shore Music Arranger, Conductor, Original Music Composer
Seamus McGarvey Director of Photography
David Chapman Production Design
Rick LeFevour Stunt Coordinator
Chris Nolte Stunt Double
Nicholas Lundy Art Direction
Petur Hliddal Sound Mixer
Michael Higham Supervising Music Editor
Kim Taylor-Coleman Casting Associate
Claire Simon Casting
Doug Dearth Music Coordinator
Nick Hornby Novel
Emma Thomas Producer's Assistant
Ronald Kane Construction Foreman
Ray Conchado Special Effects
Stephen Frears Director
Scott Rosenberg Screenplay
Victoria Thomas Casting
Rick Norman Sound
Name Title
Rudd Simmons Producer
Alan Greenspan Executive Producer
Tim Bevan Producer
Mike Newell Executive Producer
Liza Chasin Executive Producer
John Cusack Co-Producer
D.V. DeVincentis Co-Producer
Steve Pink Co-Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 28 50 14
2024 5 32 72 18
2024 6 23 35 15
2024 7 26 45 15
2024 8 23 40 15
2024 9 18 27 14
2024 10 28 50 13
2024 11 18 27 12
2024 12 17 21 13
2025 1 21 49 11
2025 2 14 22 4
2025 3 6 17 2
2025 4 3 4 2
2025 5 3 3 2
2025 6 3 3 2
2025 7 2 3 2
2025 8 3 3 2

Trending Position


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Reviews

John Chard
9.0

What came first - the music or the misery? High Fidelity is directed by Stephen Frears and adapted to screenplay by D.V. DeVincentis, Steve Pink, John Cusack and Scott Rosenberg from the Nick Hornby novel. It stars Cusack, Jack Black, Iben Hjejle and Todd Louiso. Music is by Howard Shore and Cine ... matography by Seamus McGarvey. Record store owner and compulsive list-compiler Rob Gordon (Cusack), embark's upon a what does it all mean mission when his latest girlfriend leaves him. Cusack and Pink take Hornby's hugely popular novel and redirect it to Chicago, with joyous results. High Fidelity is a tale of human love and a love of music, a sort of battle of the sexes with a soundtrack of masculine life. Rob's voyage of self discovery is highly amusing, the trials and tribulations of relationships bringing out a number of scenes and scenarios that ring true, not just tickling the funny bones, but also tugging the heart and cradling the brain. Away from the doomed love angles it's the music threads that literally strike the chords. Rob and his two co-workers Barry (Black) & Dick (Louiso) worship music and continually indulge in making top 5 lists whilst bickering with sarcastic glee in the process. All three actors are superb, a trio of odd balls bouncing off of one and other with a zest that's infectious, though it's decidedly Cusack's show. A perpetual miserablist who addresses us the audience at frequent intervals, Rob in Cusack's hands garners sympathy, pity and laughs in equal measure. In the support slots is a ream of talent well in on the joke, beauties like Catherine Zeta-Jones (dropping F-Bombs like they are going out of fashion), Lisa Bonet & Joelle Carter are complimented by the comic skills of Joan Cusack, while Hjejle turns in a wily and womanly performance as the girlfriend who kicks starts Rob's search for meaning. Elsewhere the sight of Tim Robbins as a new age hippy type - with a black belt in martial arts - is so much fun it reminds of what a good comic actor he can be as well. As with Grosse Point Blank, another Cusack/Pink production, sound tracking is everything, and naturally given the setting of the story there is an abundance of classic tunes to delight in. All told it's a special movie, for all sexes and for all music lovers, but especially for anyone who has had relationship problems. Now what did come first, the music or the misery? Priceless. 9/10

May 16, 2024
JPV852
8.0

Seen this one a few times over the years, still great each viewing with John Cusack in his element, might even argue should've been nominated for an Oscar. I'm not a music fan but still liked that element and features a good supporting cast. **3.75/5** ...

Jun 23, 2021
Wuchak
5.0

**_Romantic head games become tedious_** Released in 2000 and directed by Stephen Frears, "High Fidelity" is a romcom/dramedy starring John Cusack, as Rob, the owner of a Chicago record store, co-starring Jack Black and Todd Louiso as his two employees, Barry and Dick. When Rob's relationship wit ... h his live-in girlfriend, Laura (Iben Hjejle) falls apart, he reflects on the five worst break-ups of his dozen years of dating. His past girlfriends are played by Catherine Zeta-Jones, Joelle Carter, Lili Taylor and Natasha Gregson Wagner. Tim Robbins appears as Rob's rival for Laura's affections while Joan Cusack is on hand as Laura's sister. Lisa Bonet plays a rocker chick, a passing fancy for Rob. Sara Gilbert has a bit part. What's interesting about "High Fidelity" is that it features the five general prototypes of guys' dating life: (1.) the first crush & kiss, (2.) adolescent urgency & loss of virginity, (3.) the hot babe out of his league, (4.) the rebound best friend & soul mate, and (5.) his one true love (maybe). If you've ever made a compilation tape for a babe and worked at a record store you might appreciate this film. You'll particularly like it if you favor romantic head games, which I find irritating and is the main reason I have mixed feelings about the film (speaking as a one-woman type of guy). Because of this, I had a hard time staying with it, although there's enough good in the movie to make it somewhat worthwhile. It's witty and you can tell the creators put a lot of thought into it, but Rob's mopey reflections as he constantly speaks to the camera get tedious after a while. Don't get me wrong, John pulls off the challenging lead role and does so convincingly; I just found his perpetually-smoking character uninteresting. As far as the soundtrack goes, the 90's pop rock struck me as mostly bland. Thankfully, there are several amusing moments. For instance, the scene where someone confronts Rob at the record store in the second half is laugh-out-loud funny, but Rob's relationship with Laura is decidedly Uninteresting; and Laura's emotional instability and indecisiveness become increasingly annoying (anyone who would marry such a relationally fickle person would have to be insane). Actually, most of Rob's romantic relationships become annoying although, like I said, there are amusing bits. Then there's Barry who arrogantly thinks his opinion on music is law; I kept hoping he'd get his teeth knocked in. On a positive note, the mental manipulations of Rob's unstable romantic life are offset by Dick, who shows the way to go. "Empire Records" (1995) is the better movie simply because it doesn't go overboard with the dating/romance head games crap. The film runs 113 minutes and was shot in Chicago. GRADE: C

Jul 26, 2022
Geronimo1967
7.0

“Rob” (John Cusack) is a thirty-something who owns a record shop and is starting to feel a little mortality as he reviews five of the relationships that have peppered his life. That’s not including the two people who clutter his life on a daily basis. Those are the geeky “Dick” (Todd Louiso) and the ... brash “Barry” (Jack Black) who have been imposing themselves on “Rob” and his customers with their diverse varieties of musical snobberies for years. With this eclectic mix of personalities behind the counter and a dwindling interest in vinyl in front of it, this isn’t a business that’s exactly thriving! It’s his latest split from “Laura” (Iben Hjejle) that’s focusing his mind as he felt more certain she was the one! Mind you, he’s thought that about everyone since his first love as a child at school. Cusack mixes the story up engagingly here with some self-revealing pieces to camera interspersed with the retrospectives of his flailing attempts to attract and keep a woman. He’s got hapless down to a fine art, and his own life is quite aptly associated with the variety of tunes that emanate from his store, suiting his ever vacillating mood. Some of his predicaments are relatable and funny as his courting follows lines that will be familiar, I’m sure, to many of us and are sometimes cringingly close to the bone. I always find Jack Black to be too over-the-top and here he manages to carry that off to the point where his character is actually quite one effectively obnoxious, but that actually works quite well with the quieter Louiso’s “Dick” whose more considered choice of indie music resonated more favourably with me (and other Belle and Sebastian fans). It’s a well paced and written observation of a man facing a crisis of confidence that I think is Cusack’s most natural effort on screen to date.

Feb 08, 2025