Winter Andrews, who plays Cameron, is also a singer and songwriter. One day between set-ups, he wrote a song with the title of the movie in the lyrics and sang it to the cast. Director Nicholas DiBella overheard it and decided it would be the perfect movie-ending song. He had Andrews record it once the production wrapped and added it to the final credits of the film.
The Grove that's featured in the film is Washington Grove, inside Cobbs Hill Park in Rochester, New York. Unlike the movie, it's actually open to the public and local graffiti artists are invited to hang their work on the abandoned water tanks there.
The skeleton patch that Ali and Cameron visit is a real place just outside Canandaigua, New York, in the Finger Lakes Region. Each Halloween the owner of the property sets up a massive display with hundreds of skeletons in the field surrounding his house and families travel from all over the state to see it.
The music store that Ali (Andréa Figliomeni) visits is the House of Guitars in Irondequoit, New York. It's billed as the largest guitar store in the world and many popular singers and bands have stopped there when they were performing in the area. As Ali walks through the store, she moves past walls and pillars that display thousands of autographs acquired over 50 years, including Metallica, Aerosmith, Jon Bon Jovi, Ozzy Osbourne, Motley Crue, and the Ramones.
Andréa Figlomeni (Ali Spencer) twisted her ankle on the first day of production and was limited in many of the soccer scenes. Thoughts of bringing in a stunt double were discussed but Nick DiBella felt that the injury actually helped in selling the idea that Ali, who was supposed to be very talented at soccer, had lost some of her coordination and muscle memory after the crash.