No, but it's easy to think of it as such, as the plot is more linear and the approach more hook-free than any indy movie you ever saw. It's about a guy and a girl, singing music written by that guy and that girl. Every scene is about such. It has minimal editing, and you think that's a conceit to a budget that didn't allow them to do double shots, but I don't think that's it. In one scene, the woman goes to the convenience store late at night to buy batteries, so she can play the song she just wrote lyrics to on her Discman. She walks home five blocks and the camera tracks her singing her new song every step of the way. I thought "Any production that can pull that shot off could afford the reverse angle camera, but they didn't want to." Other technical oopses were there though. At one point, I'm pretty sure saw the set lights reflected in a street window. At another, a baby in the scene reaches out to touch the camera. Also, for a film listing the sound editor as the third closing credit, the sound was pretty bad, with an audible hiss every time they started up another song. I can add more critical gobbledygook about how creativity rescued these two drowning spirits. But it's a really honest story, that you'll either appreciate or think is shite, with music you'll either appreciate or think is shite, but hopefully will appreciate the honesty. I like making music, and liked seeing a film about two interesting people making music. Plus, there's Thin Lizzy content.