Harriet the Spy (film)

Summary

Harriet the Spy is a 1996 American coming-of-age comedy film directed by Bronwen Hughes in her feature film directorial debut, and starring Michelle Trachtenberg in her major film acting debut. It co-stars Rosie O'Donnell, J. Smith-Cameron, Gregory Smith, and Vanessa Lee Chester. Based on the 1964 novel of the same name by Louise Fitzhugh, the film follows a sixth-grade student who aspires to become a writer and spy.

Harriet the Spy
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBronwen Hughes
Screenplay by
Adaptation by
Based onHarriet the Spy
by Louise Fitzhugh
Produced by
  • Marykay Powell
  • Nava Levin
Starring
CinematographyFrancis Kenny
Edited byDebra Chiate
Music byJamshied Sharifi
Production
companies
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • July 10, 1996 (1996-07-10)[1]
Running time
102 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$12 million
Box office$26.6 million

Filming began in the fall of 1994 in Toronto and was completed by the end of 1995. Produced by Paramount Pictures, Nickelodeon Movies and Rastar, it was the first film produced under the Nickelodeon Movies banner and the first of two film adaptations of the Harriet the Spy books. In theaters, the pilot episode of Hey Arnold! called Arnold was shown before the film.

The film was released in theaters on July 10, 1996. It made $26.6 million worldwide on a production budget of $12 million.[2] The film was released on home video on February 25, 1997, with an orange clamshell packaging.

Plot edit

Eleven-year-old aspiring spy and writer Harriet M. Welsch lives a privileged life in New York City with her parents, Violetta and Ben, and her nanny, Catherine "Ole Golly", in whom Harriet confides. Harriet and her best friends Simon "Sport" Rocque and Janie Gibbs are enemies with elitist rich girl, editor of the sixth-grade newspaper, and class president Marion Hawthorne.

One night when Harriet's parents are out, Golly invites her friend George to dinner which she burns, so the three go out for dinner and a movie. But when the three return home late in the evening, Violetta becomes enraged at Golly that she had let Harriet stay out past her curfew and she fires her. But Golly concedes that it is time Harriet were on her own. Before leaving, Golly encourages Harriet not to give up on her love of observing people and promises to be the first to buy an autographed copy of Harriet's first novel. Depressed and withdrawn, Harriet breaks into the mansion of Agatha Plummer and is caught hiding in her dumbwaiter.

After school, Marion discovers Harriet's private notebook and begins reading aloud Harriet's comments about her friends, such as how she suspects Janie will grow up to be "a total nutcase", and criticizing Sport's father's low earnings. Sport and Janie turn their backs to shun Harriet, and her classmates create a Spy-Catcher club to start tormenting her.

When Harriet begins avoiding her homework her parents take away her notebooks and ask her teacher, Miss Elson, to search her for notebooks daily. During art class, Marion and her friends pour blue paint on Harriet as revenge for writing nasty things about them in her notebook. Harriet responds by slapping Marion in the face and flees the school. She exacts revenge by exposing that Marion's father left her family for his secretary, cutting off a chunk of Laura's hair, sabotaging Janie's science experiment, and humiliating Sport with a picture of him in a maid outfit. Her classmates further alienate her.

Harriet's parents send her for evaluation by a psychologist who assures them that Harriet is fine. Harriet gets her notebook back, and in a surprise visit Golly tells her that in order to make things right again, she must do two things which she will not like: apologize and lie. Harriet says it is not worth it but Golly disagrees, saying Harriet is worth it as an individual, and her individuality will make others nervous. She adds: "Good friends are one of life's blessings. Don't give them up without a fight."

Harriet tries to apologize to Sport and Janie, who initially rejected her before accepting her apology after finally coming to their senses and consequently quit Marion's bully group as a result of being treated unfairly by her, much to Marion's dismay. Harriet opines to Miss Elson that Marion's appointment as editor was done unfairly, and Miss Elson opens it up for a vote. Harriet is voted in to replace Marion as editor. She writes an article apologizing to the class, all of whom (except Marion) accept her apology. At the opening of the 6th grade pageant, Janie, Sport, and Harriet set off a stink bomb as all the students, teachers, and audience dance to James Brown's "Get Up Offa That Thing".

Cast edit

Production edit

Screenplay edit

The screenplay was adapted from Louise Fitzhugh's 1964 novel of the same name.[3] Director Bronwen Hughes commented on the adaptation: "Certain things about the '60s story, especially the relationship between kids and their parents, had to be adjusted to make sense because you don't have that same kind of formality that you had in the book in the '60s between parents and kids. So those things needed to be made more natural for the 1990s kids audience. But it was very important to me that the things that really affected Harriet in the book would be the things that really affected Harriet in the movie."[3] The result mixed elements from various decades, but Hughes aspired to create a "timeless" film that featured little technology.[3]

Filming edit

Harriet the Spy was filmed in Toronto during the fall of 1994 and winter of 1995.[4] Director Bronwen Hughes recalled: "It was Paramount's financial decision to make Toronto look like New York, although to tell you the truth, nothing looks like a row of brownstones and stoops like New York, so we just started choosing great locations to create a visual experience."[4]

Michelle Trachtenberg recalled the shoot beginning on October 11, 1994, her ninth birthday.[3] She and co-star Vanessa Lee Chester had known each other prior, having filmed a commercial together in New York City when they were five years old.[3] Charlotte Sullivan recalled of the shoot: "When [Bronwen] would direct us, if we were walking she's like, 'Okay, you'll go bop-bop this way then bop-bop this way', she was always dancing. I don't remember her not dancing on set. And music was always playing. It was very cool and in terms of performance art she was pretty ahead of her time. It was a great way also to direct children. It was a way to keep things alive."[3]

Release edit

Box office edit

The film was released in U.S. theaters on July 10, 1996, and the film grossed $6,601,651 on its opening weekend, averaging about $3,615 per each of the 1,826 screens it was shown on.[2] The film went on to gross a total of $26,570,048 by November 10, 1996, and is considered a modest box office success, earning back more than double its $12 million budget.

Home media edit

Harriet the Spy was released on VHS by Paramount Home Video on February 25, 1997. The cassette also contained two Rugrats music videos, and customers were able to receive $5 rebate if they bought the movie in an orange clamshell case plus two eligible Rugrats videos.

The film was later released on DVD on May 27, 2003.

Reception edit

Critical response edit

The film received mixed reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes it has an approval rating of 48% based on reviews from 31 critics. The site's consensus: "Harriet the Spy is a rapid-fire mystery movie that doesn't have much to offer beyond the two decent lead performances."[5] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave it a grade B+.[6]

Rita Kempley of The Washington Post was critical of the film, deeming it a "tedious" adaptation of the source novel, adding: "Harriet the Spy isn't really a story, but a dark slice of this ruminative child's inner life. Like the more clearly comic Welcome to the Dollhouse, this film finds more wrong than wonder in these terrible, tenderfoot years."[7] Roger Ebert praised the performance of Trachtenberg, but conceded: "It is not a very technically accomplished movie--the pacing is slow and there are scenes that seem amateurish--but since Harriet doesn't intend to inspire anyone to become a movie critic, perhaps it will work a certain charm for its target audience."[8] Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly, a self-proclaimed fan of the novel, wrote that the film "has its sticky, Afterschool Special side (the ending is way too pat), but at its best it’s like a Welcome to the Dollhouse for preadolescents. What Fitzhugh’s book had, and what the movie gets, is the glee and neurotic terror of a kid lurching into adult consciousness, learning just how dangerous that notebook we all carry around in our heads really is."[9]

John Anderson of the Los Angeles Times also commented on the film's darker elements, writing that it is "fun, yes, but [it] isn't afraid to expose the nastiness of youth or the offhanded cruelty of one girl's ego. This is not a happy little movie about the sweetness of childhood."[10] Barbara Shulgasser of The San Francisco Examiner dismissed the film, describing the protagonist as "the kind of kid I'm not looking forward to meeting as a grownup...  While the well-loved novel was apparently about the admirable battle a kid must wage in order to become an artist in the face of peer disapproval, the movie seems to be about a mean-spirited tyke who has no scruples. If that kind of person wants to become an artist, it's OK by me, but I don't have to root for her."[11]

Accolades edit

Year Award Category Recipients Result Ref.
1997 Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Movie Actress Rosie O'Donnell Won [12]
Young Artist Awards Best Performance in a Feature Film – Leading Young Actress Michelle Trachtenberg Won [13]
Best Performance in a Feature Film – Supporting Young Actress Vanessa Lee Chester Won
Best Family Feature – Drama Harriet the Spy Nominated
Best Performance in a Feature Film – Supporting Young Actor Gregory Smith Nominated

Remake edit

Another adaptation of Harriet the Spy was released as a television movie in 2010 titled Harriet the Spy: Blog Wars, with Jennifer Stone in the title role. In 2021, an animated TV series based on the novel, with Beanie Feldstein as the titular character, was released on Apple TV+. In April 2023, it was announced that Trachtenberg would make a guest appearance in the series.

References edit

  1. ^ "Harriet the Spy". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Los Angeles: American Film Institute. Archived from the original on April 26, 2019.
  2. ^ a b "Harriet the Spy (1996) - Box Office Mojo". www.boxofficemojo.com. Archived from the original on 17 October 2018. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Schildhause, Chloe (11 May 2016). "Which Is Why I Am A Spy: An Oral History Of 'Harriet The Spy'". Uproxx. Archived from the original on August 8, 2016.
  4. ^ a b Brody, Caitlin (November 15, 2016). "Harriet the Spy 20th anniversary: Blue paint scene gets an oral history". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on August 4, 2018.
  5. ^ "Harriet the Spy (1996)". Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 23 March 2019 – via www.rottentomatoes.com.
  6. ^ "CinemaScore". CinemaScore. Archived from the original on April 13, 2022. Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  7. ^ Kempley, Rita (July 10, 1996). "'Harriet the Spy': A Growing Pain". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on August 10, 1997.
  8. ^ Ebert, Roger (July 12, 1996). "Harriet the Spy". Chicago Sun-Times. Archived from the original on December 11, 2017.
  9. ^ Gleiberman, Owen (July 19, 1996). "Harriet the Spy review: Read EW's original 1996 take". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on July 7, 2018.
  10. ^ "'Harriet': A Smart-Kid Film with Some Tough Lessons". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. July 10, 1996. pp. F4–F5 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ Shulgasser, Barbara (July 10, 1996). "Harriet the nosy". The San Francisco Examiner. San Francisco, California. Archived from the original on February 1, 2014.
  12. ^ Shaw, Jessica (May 2, 1997). "Celebrities turn out for the Kid's Choice Awards". Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on April 26, 2019.
  13. ^ "Eighteenth Annual Youth in Film Awards". Young Artist Awards. Archived from the original on August 18, 2000.

External links edit