By James Bowman on 1.26.07 @ 12:02AM
An excellent psychological thriller.
Normally, I don't have much interest in the ways in which movies
differ from the novels, plays, memoirs etc. on which they are
based. A movie should be judged on its own terms and has no
obligation at all, in my view, to be faithful to its source. It's
got to change things no matter what, and it seems to me pointless
simply to count the number of things it has changed. Richard Eyre's
Notes on a Scandal is one of the few movies which demand
some comparison with its fictional counterpart, in this case the
novel What Was She Thinking? Notes on a Scandal by Zoe
Heller. Unfortunately, the point where comparison could be most
instructive is the ending, which is radically different in the book
from what you will see in the movie but which the movie critic's
well-understood code of conduct forbids me to reveal.
What I can say, I think, is that your answer to the question of
whether one of its two main characters, Barbara Covett, is a
psychopath or just a very bad woman -- or, perhaps, both or neither
-- is likely to be determined by whether you are talking of the
Barbara of the novel or of the movie. And the question of what to
make of Barbara is the central problem of the whole enterprise.
Both novel and film are well made and both seek to humanize her,
making her rather disturbingly likable in spite of the fact that
she does some despicable things. But they take quite different
routes to the same destination.
The novel takes the form of Barbara's diary, thus inviting our
sympathy for her on account of the intimacy of our acquaintance
with her interior world. It is a good illustration of the French
proverb that to understand all is to forgive all. It also tells the
story of the scandal in retrospect and more as a part of Barbara's
life story. But the film can't devote so much time to Barbara's
thoughts or stick so frighteningly to her point of view. It
preserves some of the diary in the form of her narrative
voiceovers, as a plot device and as another indication of her
obsessive personality, but its point of view is not only hers. Also
it tells the story going forward, from beginning to end, and over a
shorter period. All its humanizing of Barbara comes out of the
performance of Dame Judi Dench. And what a performance it is! Even
so excellent an actress as Cate Blanchett in the other main role
sometimes seems in danger of being marginalized.
The latter plays Sheba Hart, an art teacher in an inferior
London comprehensive school who, though apparently happily married
to the older Richard (Bill Nighy) and the mother of two children,
one of them handicapped, has an affair with a 15-year-old pupil
(Andrew Simpson). When Barbara finds out about it she uses the
information subtly to blackmail Sheba. What she wants, however, is
not money but friendship. Or sex, if you prefer. Both novel and
film leave the question of the sexual nature of Barbara's interest
in Sheba more or less up in the air, along with the question of her
mental health to which it is presumably related, though the film
more than the novel hints that she is a lesbian "in denial," as
they say, of her sexuality. In both, however, it is obvious that
she wants something more than a girlfriend and a confidante. Now in
her sixties, Barbara is terrified of growing old alone and dreams
of breaking up Sheba's family in order to get her as a "companion"
for herself.
When Sheba confides in her, she sees at once that she has been
given the means to bring this about. All she has to do is betray
her friend's trust -- which the law and professional ethics demand
she do anyway -- but in such a way that Sheba doesn't find out
she's done it. The Barbara of the novel is a much more
Machiavellian and impressive character. In an odd way we are more
sympathetic to her because she understands so well what she is
doing, whereas Dame Judi's Barbara is a little more obviously
unhinged and so inclined to overplay her hand, making mistakes that
her counterpart does not. This impression may be partly owing to
the long and apparently rational self-justifications of the
diary-novel which are not available -- or not so available -- to
the more bitter, less self-contained movie-Barbara.
In the novel, for example, but not the movie she expresses
remorse for her betrayal, though in the context her contrition
looks like part of the elaborately contrived self-justificatory
performance that the diary has become. In both the novel and the
movie, the scandal of the title is incidental. Though utterly
devastating to Sheba, it is for Barbara, who acts as our eyes and
ears, merely a means to an end -- and the only means possible for
her ends. Only with an explosion of this magnitude can she hope to
dislodge Sheba from her family. Yet Patrick Marber's screenplay
imagines a very different Barbara from Zoe Heller's. His Barbara --
and Dame Judi's -- does most of the same things as her prototype,
but the movie-Barbara seems to me to want one thing even more than
she wants companionship, which is to have her pessimistic view of
the world confirmed.
Beneath her self-pity, we realize, she is above all fiendishly
proud of her own discernment of the evils in others that they take
such pains to conceal. And they give her a kind of permission for
the evil in herself. This is a more satisfying -- and perhaps more
pat -- moral exemplum than anything Zoe Heller's dark vision has to
offer. Fans of the novel may resent the change in the ending as
having been dictated by commercial considerations, but I wonder if
it isn't also, in some ways, truer to life?
topics:
Movies, Law