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  1. Tom is listening to this song in the elevator. Summer tells him that she loves \'The Smiths\'. Plays during Day 8, at the office engagement party for Millie. Tom is thinking and narrating about what he likes about Summer. Tom plays the song on his computer while watching Summer at his office.

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      Tom is listening to this song in the elevator. Summer tells...

  2. The first of the two soundtrack albums titled 500 Days of Summer: Music from the Motion Picture featured various pop songs from the film whose tracklist was released on June 24, 2009, [1] and the soundtrack released through Sire Records launched on July 13, 2009.

  3. Oct 22, 2018 · Summer expresses to Tom how much she loves the English band and even sings the famous lyrics, “To die by your side is such a heavenly way to die”. This elevator scene is such a defining moment for the film as it is the start of Tom’s infatuation with Summer.

  4. First, initial reactions to a first watch tend to side heavily with Tom, the hopeless romantic whom was scorned by the heartless villain, Summer. Second, a reaction to the initial reaction, and upon rewatch, people have widely recognized that this sympathy for Tom is entirely misplaced.

    • Us - Regina Spektor
    • Sugar Town - Nancy Sinatra
    • Bookends - Simon & Garfunkel
    • She's Got You High - Mumma-Ra
    • Quelqu'un m'a Dit - Carla Bruni
    • She's Like The Wind - Patrick Swayze
    • Please, Please, Please, Let Me Get What I Want - The Smiths
    • You Make My Dreams - Hall & Oates
    • Sweet Disposition - The Temper Trap
    • Hero - Regina Spektor

    In a bright and hopeful beginning to 500 Days Of Summer, side-by-side montages of Tom and Summer's childhoods are accompanied by Spektor's cheerful trills, singing of immortality and fun. This introduces the film as predominantly light-hearted despite its bleak depiction of relationships in the 21st century. The song choice bursts with childlike in...

    A key quality of any "manic pixie dream girl," despite the fact that it's a term its creator regrets (according to Salon), is a stellar taste in music. Although Summer doesn't technically fit into this category, since she refuses to fulfill Tom's fantasy, this feature remains and allows Summer to quickly seal her grip on both Tom and the viewer. Sh...

    Given that The Graduate is one of the key culprits behind Tom's quixotic idea of love, the soundtrack would be incomplete without Simon & Garfunkel. Considering how dear the movie is to Tom, Summer's visible sadness upon watching it, enveloped by the soft guitar, signifies that things are no longer rosy. As Summer grows more distant and Tom strains...

    Ending Tom's story with Summer and beginning a new one with Autumn requires the appropriate anthem. Despite what may appear to be a disappointing conclusion to Tom and Summer's romance, this indie-rock tune injects a sense of hope, as Tom offers the camera a knowing look before the number of days drops down to zero, representing a fresh start. RELA...

    A peaceful song during a less tempestuous period of Tom and Summer's relationship offers a taste of languorous, everyday bliss not often depicted between the two. Beneath the mellow guitar, however, the lyrics hint towards the approaching breakup and underlying melancholy that infects their relationship. Music is proved to be in the very fiber of t...

    Used multiple times in the movie to highlight how Tom's opinion of Summer transforms from adoration into disgust, the song from the romantic classic, Dirty Dancing,accentuates another key attribute of Summer as "manic pixie dream girl," in that she is unattainable. Just like the wind, Summer is impossible to hold onto. At their relationship's begin...

    While Tom's love life pre-Summer is not explored in great depth, it can be inferred from his talking head's inability to define love and his sister's advice based on previous relationships that his track record is less than satisfactory. RELATED: 10 Best Hipster Movies Of All Time, Ranked Tom's desire to find "The One" is perfectly captured by The ...

    At the height of his blossoming relationship, Tom finds himself in the middle of his very own musical number, complete with backup dancers and animated bluebirds. The fantastical elements of this scene are complemented by the joyous sound of Hall & Oates to create a sense of euphoria and brand this as Tom's happiest moment onscreen. "You Make My Dr...

    Another recycled song, indie-rock classic "Sweet Disposition" charges the film with intense emotion and elation, particularly in its second use. As Tom and Summer interact for the first time since parting ways, they are cast in the warm glow of sunset as the world outside the train window rushes by in a blur, leaving them at the center of it all. A...

    (500) Days Of Summer's most gut-wrenchingly real sequence is one that best exhibits Webb's unique directorial style, and it is accompanied by a heartbreaking Regina Spektor song to directly counter the sunny optimism of the opening credits. Two shots of the same scene are displayed side by side to present Tom's expectations of Summer's party versus...

  5. Dec 14, 2023 · What makes this film the most compelling is its use of the soundtrack to drive the plot by mirroring the emotional state and psychological conflicts of Tom Hansen through his 500 day...

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  7. Aug 7, 2009 · (0:03) Rachel comes over Tom's apartment to console him after his breakup with Summer.

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