Notes on a Scandal (film)
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Notes on a Scandal | |
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Promotional movie poster for the film. |
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Directed by | Richard Eyre |
Produced by | Redmond Morris Scott Rudin Robert Fox |
Written by | Patrick Marber (screenplay) Zoë Heller (novel) |
Starring | Judi Dench Cate Blanchett Bill Nighy |
Music by | Philip Glass |
Cinematography | Chris Menges |
Editing by | John Bloom |
Distributed by | Fox Searchlight Pictures |
Release date(s) | December 25, 2006 |
Running time | 98 min. |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Ratings | |
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Australia: | MA |
Ireland: | 16 |
Singapore: | M18 |
United Kingdom: | 15 |
United States: | R |
Notes on a Scandal is a 2006 Academy Award-nominated film adapted from the 2003 novel Notes on a Scandal by Zoë Heller. The screenplay was written by Patrick Marber and the film was directed by Richard Eyre. A soundtrack was composed by Philip Glass. It is a drama in which the characters' conflicting passions are juxtaposed to tragic effect.
The DVD is set to be released on April 17th, 2007.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
Barbara Covett (Dench) teaches history at a comprehensive school in London, England. A lonely old spinster, Barbara's primary relationship is with herself by means of a diary which she keeps compulsively, the only "intimate relationship" in her life. She is unpopular among her students and colleagues, but an effective disciplinarian. At the start of the school year, a new teacher, Sheba Hart (Blanchett), begins to teach art at the school. When two male students get into a fight despite Sheba's attemps to separate them, Barbara intervenes, discovering in the process that one of the boys was fighting the other because the latter had impugned Sheba's honor. Barbara and Sheba begin a friendship during the course of which Barbara learns of Sheba's family, her much older husband and two children, a boy with Down's Syndrome, and a girl. Sheba admits to her that she is unhappy with her life and had planned it differently. Barbara is thrilled with her new friendship and begins to place her hopes on it.
Not seeing Sheba at the school play, Barbara goes looking for her and witnesses her having an amorous encounter with fifteen-year-old Steven Connelly (Simpson), the boy who had earlier fought for her. Barbara is shaken and confronts Sheba, demanding to know everything. Sheba explains that Steven had been making passes at her during their after school tutoring sessions, and that she had succumbed after learning that his father is abusive and that his mother is dying from kidney failure. Barbara sees this as her opportunity to cement the relationship she always wanted. She agrees not to inform anyone if Sheba ends the affair, noting everything down in the diary.
Sheba's gratitude and Barbara's increased hope intensify their friendship. Sheba, however, has not been able to resist Steven's desire for her, or her own feelings. They are interrupted while making love by Barbara's unexpected visit, during which Barbara attempts a physical seduction of Sheba, who is visibly desperate to return to Steven, left waiting for her. Barbara glimpses the shape of a boy in the back yard, Sheba's cell phone rings and both women lunge for it. Barbara is first to take the call, only to hear Steven's graphic, seductive language. She again forces Sheba to promise to cut off the relationship. She again tries and fails, discovering in the process that Steven's tale of woe about his family was a lie.
Matters are brought to a head when Barbara, distraught over her cat's death, seeks out Sheba's companionship. She meets up with her as Sheba and her family are leaving for a long-planned school play involving her son. Barbara confronts Sheba with the demand to choose there and then between her and her family, resorting to blackmail. Sheba says that her loyalties lie with her family and goes off to the school play. A teary-eyed and furious Barbara buries her cat alone. Later that night, she hints to one of her colleagues, himself in love with Sheba and seeking an adulterous relationship, that Sheba is having an affair with Steven. He, humiliated and incensed, lets the truth out. Steven's mother storms into Sheba's home, accuses her before her family of sleeping with "a child" and physically attacks her. Sheba's husband blames her for giving in to feelings that "everyone" has but is able to suppress.
Within a short amount of time, Sheba is questioned by the police in a headline investigation. The school headmaster believes Barbara was aware of the affair and questions her, but is unable to find any evidence. He does, however, mention a previous incident where a "friend" of Barbara's moved away after requesting a restraining order against her, claiming she had stalked her previously. Barbara is forced into retirement a year early and is stalked by the press as well.
Barbara visits Sheba, who has been cast out by her family, in particular her husband and daughter. Believing that Steven had been the one to divulge the relationship, Sheba goes to live with Barbara. While Barbara fantasizes about renewed intimacy with her, Sheba discovers the diary. Disgusted, Sheba exposes Barbara to herself as a deluded fool, and returns to her family and a sentence of ten months in prison.
A few days later, Barbara meets Anabelle, a woman Sheba's age, reading about Sheba in a newspaper. She talks to Anabelle about having met Sheba, and a new possible friendship begins.
[edit] Cast
Actor | Role |
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Judi Dench | Barbara Covett |
Cate Blanchett | Bathsheba 'Sheba' Hart |
Bill Nighy | Richard Hart |
Andrew Simpson | Steven Connolly |
Juno Temple | Polly Hart |
Max Lewis | Ben Hart |
Michael Maloney | Headmaster Sandy Pabblem |
Joanna Scanlan | Sue Hodge |
Philip Davis | Brian Bangs |
[edit] Soundtrack
[edit] Reception
The film opened to generally positive reviews, received a Rotten Tomatoes certified fresh rating of 86%.
[edit] Trivia
Cate Blanchett played Queen Elizabeth I in the 1998 film Elizabeth. The character of Anabelle, in the film's final scene, is played by actress Anne-Marie Duff, who played Elizabeth in Masterpiece Theatre's 2005 miniseries The Virgin Queen. In real life, Duff followed Blanchett in taking on the role of Good Queen Bess, just as in the film Anabelle (one might assume) follows Sheba in taking on the role of the object of Barbara's obsession. Judi Dench also played her in Shakespeare in Love, receiving an Academy Award for the role.
[edit] Awards and nominations
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Adapted Screenplay — Patrick Marber
- Nominated: Best Original Score — Philip Glass
- Nominated: Best British Film
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Adapted Screenplay — Patrick Marber
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Picture
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
Chicago Film Critics Association Awards
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Adapted Screenplay — Patrick Marber
- Nominated: Best Original Score
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards
- Won: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
Florida Film Critics Circle Awards
- Won: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Actress in a Motion Picture, Drama — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Screenplay — Patrick Marber
London Film Critics Circle Awards
- Nominated: Actress of the Year — Judi Dench
- Nominated: British Actress of the Year — Judi Dench
- Nominated: British Supporting Actor of the Year — Bill Nighy
Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Awards
- Won: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
Online Film Critics Awards
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Original Score — Phillip Glass
Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards
- Won: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
- Nominated: Best Actress — Judi Dench
- Nominated: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
Toronto Film Critics Association Awards
- Won: Best Supporting Actress — Cate Blanchett
Evening Standard Film Awards
- Won: Best Actress — Judi Dench