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Notes on a Scandal [2006 film] (2006)

by Richard Eyre (Director), Patrick Marber (Screenwriter)

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1434193,114 (3.8)None
Barbara is a cynical schoolteacher who is close to retirement. Her only means of taking the edge off her desperate loneliness is writing in her journal. Sheba is a younger, attractive woman, who joins the faculty as an art teacher. Barbara watches her from afar and has nothing but caustic things to say in her diary. Barbara finds herself reaching out to Sheba. Sheba responds by inviting her to dinner at her house to meet Sheba's lecturer husband and their two children. Later, when Barbara discovers that Sheba is having a sexual relationship with a 15-year old student, Barbara realizes that knowledge of this secret gives her power over Sheba which she can use for her own purposes. Sheba becomes uneasy with Barbara's friendship. The tenuous relationship between the two women reaches a crisis point when Barbara's cat is dying and she asks Sheba to go with her to the vet. Sheba chooses to go with her family to see their son in a play instead. In revenge, Barbara sets in motion the scandal that will rock both their lives in ways they never imagined.… (more)
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Showing 4 of 4
298
  freixas | Mar 31, 2023 |
Notes on a Scandal by Zoe Heller - Good, but....

This is a good book - well written, but I didn't like it.

Two main characters, both teachers: Sheba, a new member of staff and Barbara, an older, more experienced teacher. An obsessional, manipulative, stereotypical old maid, right down to the cat. She sees Sheba as a new friend and when Sheba confides a secret she finds that she can single her out, cut her off from everyone else and make her totally dependent.

Listed in the 102 Greatest Books by Women:
http://www.buzzfeed.com/ariannarebolini/how-many-of-the-greatest-books-by-women-...
( )
  Cassandra2020 | Jan 24, 2016 |
Sheba, a young and yummy female art teacher in a not marvelous London school begins an affair with one of her (male) pupils, Connolly, and commits the sin of enjoying it despite the fact the boy's an obvious turnip. Disgrace, public humiliation, possibly prison lie at the end of it all, but none of these things matter. The sole clouds on her horizon are her friends among the faculty, the troglodytic Fatty Hodge and the ghastly old spinster Barbara Covett. It's Barbara who's decided to write an account of the whole fiasco, supposedly to help her "friend"; in fact her narrative, which is this novel, is a document that reveals less about Sheba, her motivations and the affair than it does about Barbara herself, in particular her possessiveness, her need to dominate, and possibly (although this is a likely unjustified inference of mine) her suppressed lesbian yearnings for Sheba.

A lot of the time while I was reading this I was reminded of Vladimir Nabokov's Pale Fire, another novel where the commentary is more important than the main narrative, and where the point is the unwitting revealing by the commenter of who the commenter really is. Heller isn't as skilled a player as Nabokov was at this sort of game and isn't up for the kind of narrative trickstery Nabokov managed as if by reflex, and Notes on a Scandal curiously loses out through making fewer and lesser demands on the reader than Pale Fire does; yet there's a huge amount of pleasure -- and a lot of laughter -- to be derived from this book. Notes on a Scandal is unlikely to turn out to be your book of the year, but it could very well turn out to be your book of the month.


ETA: Months later, I've realized that (as have others here) I accidentally linked my review to the screenplay rather than the novel. All the above remarks apply, of course, to the book I read rather than the one I didn't . . .
( )
  JohnGrant1 | Aug 11, 2013 |
Sheba is a new art teacher in a London comprehensive school. Fifteen-year-old Steven Connolly, one of her students, develops a crush on her and, in need of love, she starts a sexual relationship with him. Barbara, another teacher at the school, finds out about it and her jealousy prompts her to report Sheba. ( )
  TonySandel2 | Feb 11, 2013 |
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» Add other authors (9 possible)

Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Eyre, RichardDirectorprimary authorall editionsconfirmed
Marber, PatrickScreenwritermain authorall editionsconfirmed
Blanchett, Catesecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Dench, Judisecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Fox, Robertsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Heller, ZoeOriginal booksecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Maloney, MichaelActorsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Nighy, Billsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
Rudin, Scottsecondary authorall editionsconfirmed
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Barbara is a cynical schoolteacher who is close to retirement. Her only means of taking the edge off her desperate loneliness is writing in her journal. Sheba is a younger, attractive woman, who joins the faculty as an art teacher. Barbara watches her from afar and has nothing but caustic things to say in her diary. Barbara finds herself reaching out to Sheba. Sheba responds by inviting her to dinner at her house to meet Sheba's lecturer husband and their two children. Later, when Barbara discovers that Sheba is having a sexual relationship with a 15-year old student, Barbara realizes that knowledge of this secret gives her power over Sheba which she can use for her own purposes. Sheba becomes uneasy with Barbara's friendship. The tenuous relationship between the two women reaches a crisis point when Barbara's cat is dying and she asks Sheba to go with her to the vet. Sheba chooses to go with her family to see their son in a play instead. In revenge, Barbara sets in motion the scandal that will rock both their lives in ways they never imagined.

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