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High Fidelity (2000)
In Stephen Frears' romantic comedy about a painful
breakup with a girlfriend:
- the character of 30-something, commitment-phobic
Chicago LP music store (Championship Vinyl) operator Rob Gordon
(John Cusack) who had just been dumped by his live-in girlfriend
of several years named Laura (Iben Hjejle), a blonde attorney,
and he was wallowing in self-pity; he was first seen listening
(on headphones, seen from the back) to the Thirteenth Floor Elevators'
song "You're Gonna Miss Me"
- after the music faded, he spoke: "What came
first, the music or the misery? People worry about kids playing
with guns, or watching violent videos, that some sort of culture
of violence will take them over. Nobody worries about kids listening
to thousands, literally thousands of songs about heartbreak, rejection,
pain, misery and loss. Did I listen to pop music because I was
miserable? Or was I miserable because I listened to pop music?" -
he asked her: "Do you have to go this second? You can stay
until whenever." Although he asked her to stay for the night,
she left anyway, dragging her belongings down the stairs. He slammed
the apartment door behind her, then began to talk about his past
breakups, directly at the camera: ("My desert island, all-time
top five most memorable breakups, in chronological order, are as
follows: Alison Ashmore, Penny Hardwick, Jackie Alden, Charlie
Nicholson and Sarah Kendrew. Those were the ones that really
hurt. (shouting) Can you see your name on that list, Laura? Maybe
you'd sneak into the top ten. But there's just no room for you
in the top five. Sorry! Those places are reserved for the kind
of humiliation and heartbreak you're just not capable of delivering")
- after opening up the window and yelling out at her: "If
you really wanted to mess me up, you should've gotten to me earlier!",
he sat down in his recliner and began to describe in detail his previous
top 5 heartbreaks, beginning with the earliest: "Which brings
us to number one on the top five, all-time breakup list...Alison
Ashmore..."; his recitation of his compulsive list of romantic
breakups was seen with flashbacks during his junior high, high school
and college days, including the discussion of the top five songs
to make love to with his store employees, and Laura's own listing
of his five top dream jobs, ending with: "record store owner";
he eventually admitted that Laura was his breakup # 5
Compiling a List of Top-five, All-time, Desert
Island
Most Memorable and Painful Breakups with Girlfriends
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- the character of his offbeat, anti-social loudmouth
clerk Barry (Jack Black), one of two "musical moron twins," who
despised customers who didn't like his musical selections; when
an older customer wished to purchase: "I Just Called to Say
I Love You,"
Barry refused to sell it to him: ("Well, it's sentimental, tacky
crap, that's why not. Do we look like the kind of store that sells
'I Just Called to Say I Love You'? Go to the mall....Do you even
know your daughter? There's no way she likes that song. Oh- uh, oh,
is she in a coma?"); the incensed customer replied before storming
out: ("Oh, okay, buddy. I didn't know it was Pick On The Middle-Aged
Square Guy Day. My apologies. I'll be on my way....F--k you!")
- the scene of Rob lying-in-his-empty-bed and remembering
that he and Laura had once been in bed as they listened to their
upstairs neighbor guy Ian 'Ray' Raymond (Tim Robbins); and then Rob's
nightmarish fantasy that Laura was having sex with Ian 'Ray' on a
creaky bed above him: ("You are as abandoned and noisy as any
character in a porn film, Laura. You are Ian's plaything, responding
to his touch with shrieks of orgasmic delight. No woman in the history
of the world is having better sex than the sex you are having with
Ian in my head")
Upstairs Neighbor Ian 'Ray' Raymond
Rob's Jealous Sex Fantasy
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- Rob's discussion of the "Top five things I
miss about Laura" - ("One - a sense of humor. Very dry,
but it can also be warm and forgiving. And she's got one of the
best all-time laughs in the history of all time laughs, she laughs
with her entire body. Two - she's got character. Or at least she
had character before the Ian nightmare. She's loyal and honest,
and she doesn't even take it out on people when she's having a
bad day. That's character. Three - I miss her smell, and the way
she tastes. It's a mystery of human chemistry and I don't understand
it. Some people, as far as their senses are concerned, just feel
like home. (He lip-synched 'four' while holding up four fingers)
I really dig how she walks around. It's like she doesn't care how
she looks or what she projects and it's not that she doesn't care.
It's just, she's not affected, I guess, and that gives her grace.
And five - she does this thing in bed when she can't get to sleep.
She kinda half moans and then rubs her feet together an equal number
of times. It just kills me. Believe me, I mean, I could do a top
five things about her that drive me crazy, but it's just your garden
variety women, you know, schizo stuff and that's the kind of thing
that got me here")
- the funny replays of Rob's fight-fantasy of reacting
to a smug Ian in the record store, after Ian stated: ("So shall
we leave it at that then?") - one of the alternative fantasies
was Rob swearing at him and insulting him to his face: ("...you
pathetic rebound f--k! Now, get your patchouli stink out of my store!
Move it, lard-ass! Dumb motherf--ker"); another was viciously
beating him up, with the help of his friends; in the final scenario,
after Ian said: "Well, think about it, Rob" - Rob didn't
react at all
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Rob Gordon - Speaking or Looking Directly at Camera
Record Store Clerk Barry (Jack Black)
Rob's Despising of His Upstairs Neighbor Ian 'Ray' Raymond
(Tim Robbins)
"Top Five Things I Miss About Laura" Sequence
Fight-Fantasy Replays of Meeting Ian in the Record Store
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