Harriet the Spy is a 1996 comedy-drama and mystery film adaptation of the 1964 novel of the same name, drawn and written by Louise Fitzhugh, and starring Michelle Trachtenberg as the title character.
This film was produced by Paramount Pictures and Nickelodeon Movies, and originally released in movie theaters in July 1996.[1] This was the first Nickelodeon Movie. In theaters, the pilot episode of Hey Arnold! was shown before the film.
The film was shot in the Florida cities of Fort Lauderdale and Miami, plus Toronto, Canada.
Plot
Harriet M. Welsch is an outgoing 11-year-old girl aspiring to be a writer and a spy. Harriet lives a privileged life on the Upper East Side, something she reflects on throughout the book. As practice for her future career, she observes others carefully and writes everything she thinks in a notebook. Her nurse, Catherine Golly (known to Harriet as Ole Golly), has encouraged this. It is shown later in the book that Harriet has become so used to writing things down that she cannot think properly without a notebook. Harriet's observations cover her family, care taker, school, friends and spy route. After school, she goes to observe a set of people who have no idea of her existence. They include Harrison Withers, a bachelor with 26 cats; the Robinsons, a very wealthy but boring couple; Mrs. Agatha K. Plumber, an indolent divorcee; the Dei Santis, an Italian immigrant family that runs a grocery store; and the Dei Santis' deliveryman, Little Joe Curry, who has a habit of stealing food from the grocery for snacks and to give to a gang of hungry children who visit him regularly. Harriet considers herself a very good spy, having never been caught. Harriet's best friend is Simon "Sport" Rocque, and she is also friends with Janie Gibbs and Beth Ellen Hansen. (Sport and Beth Ellen eventually starred in their own novels by Fitzhugh.) Janie is interested in science, particularly chemistry, and is quite distrustful of her parents, especially her mother, who is trying to turn her into a "proper lady" by sending her to dancing school. Sport is a very mature boy who takes care of his father and himself by cooking, cleaning, and managing the family's finances (Sport's mother abandoned him and his father and apparently has all the money). The reason this has happened is that his father, as an author, has no regular work and is often oblivious to his family's troubles. Beth Ellen is a beautiful, but very shy and timid, girl from a rich family. Harriet finds Beth Ellen somewhat boring (and Janie outright despises her). Among the other students in Harriet's class at school include rich,popular,class bully,and perpetual teacher's pet, Marion Hawthorne (described by Harriet in her notebook as a potential "lady Hitler"); Marion's second-in-command, Rachel Hennessey; the repulsive Pinky Whitehead, whom Harriet describes as ugly; Laura Peters, who has a habit of smiling at everyone all the time; the somewhat pudgy Carrie Andrews, whose father is a doctor; and a new student, the Boy with Purple Socks, who is so dull no one can remember his real name (Peter Matthews). One evening, Ole Golly and her boyfriend, George Waldenstein, take Harriet out of the house to see a movie. At first, Ole Golly is reluctant to go, because she does not have Harriet's parents' permission; but George and Harriet persuade her that it is only a movie. Harriet adds that her parents are never home until late at night. After seeing the movie and stopping at the drugstore for sodas, the three come home to find that the Welsches have come home early. Mrs. Welsch is hysterical and fires Ole Golly on the spot; everyone is shocked, but Ole Golly stays calm. It is then revealed by Ole Golly that she would have soon left anyway, since she believes Harriet is at the age where she no longer needs a nurse and since George has proposed to her. To Harriet's displeasure and grief, Ole Golly leaves the next day. It is assumed that Ole Golly shortly thereafter marries her boyfriend and moves to Montreal, Quebec. One day during a game of tag, Harriet loses her notebook and is mortified when her friends find it and Janie proceeds to read all of Harriet's secret thoughts to everyone. The children find some of what she wrote hurtful, such as comparing Sport to "a little old woman" for his continual worrying about his father, or "WHO DOES JANIE GIBBS THINK SHE'S KIDDING? DOES SHE REALLY THINK SHE COULD EVER BE A SCIENTIST?" Janie and Sport join the rest of the class in forming the "Spy Catcher Club," of which Marion Hawthorne declares herself president. The club meets regularly at Rachel Hennessey's house to think up ways to make Harriet's life miserable, including stealing her lunch (tomato sandwiches with mayonnaise), passing nasty notes about her in class, and having Rachel spill ink all over her and disguise it as an accident. Harriet regularly spies on them through a back fence. One day, out of utter frustration and envy, Harriet drops a note in the Hennesseys' mailbox for Rachel's mother. It states, "All those kids hate Rachel. They just want your cake. Furthermore they will clutter up the backyard and also they constitute a nuisance." The Hennesseys find it and Rachel later announces to the Spy Catcher Club that a crank note was dropped in her mailbox. She summarizes what the note said, and to Harriet's amusement, Pinky Whitehead states, "Well, it's very good cake." The people on Harriet's spy route fare little better. The bachelor's cats are taken from him and he becomes depressed, the wealthy but boring couple receives a hideous sculpture to show off, the indolent woman reacts hysterically to her doctor's announcement that she must be confined to her bed for the rest of her life, and the immigrant family's truck is ruined by their lazy son. And to her utter fury and humiliation, Harriet is caught in the dumbwaiter by Mrs. Plumber's maid. Hurt and lonely, Harriet resorts to childish tantrums and resolves to get back at her former friends by thinking up a special punishment for each one. She gets into trouble when she carries out some of her plans (including cutting off a chunk of Laura's hair, hiding a frog in Marion's desk, and teasing Rachel about her estranged father). When that fails, Harriet tries to resume her friendship with Sport and Janie as if nothing ever happened, but they both reject her. On top of that, Harriet spends all her time in class writing in her notebook as a part of her plan to punish the Spy Catcher Club (in addition to "writing her memoirs"). As a result of never doing her schoolwork, her grades suffer, and Harriet's parents confiscate her notebook and take her to a psychologist. Exactly what the psychologist tells the Welsches is never found out, despite Harriet's assiduous spying; but before long Ole Golly writes to Harriet, telling her that if anyone ever reads her notebook, "You have to do two things, and you don't like either one of them. 1. You have to apologize. 2. You have to lie. Otherwise you are going to lose a friend." Meanwhile, dissent is rippling through the Spy Catcher Club. Marion and Rachel are calling all the shots, and Sport and Janie eventually get tired of being bossed around by Marion and quit the club, inspiring most of their other classmates to do the same. Eventually all that is left of the club is Marion, Rachel, Carrie, and Laura, playing bridge and Mahjong in the afternoons, a caricature of the stereotypical suburban "ladies' club" of the 1950s. Harriet, spying on them, reflects with brief pity that they will probably do exactly that for the rest of their lives. Harriet's parents speak with her teacher and the headmistress, and Harriet is appointed editor of the class newspaper (replacing Marion Hawthorne). The newspaper -featuring some stories about the people on Harriet's spy route, as well as juicy gossip about her schoolmates' parents (which Harriet has overheard from her own parents) - becomes an instant success. Things improve for those on her spy route as well: Harrison Withers obtains a new kitten, the Robinsons manage to find some people to look at their hideous sculpture, Mrs. Plumber, having received notice from her doctor that she really did not have to stay in bed, becomes full of bountiful activity, and the Dei Santis' "lazy" son becomes a very studious worker after he obtains a job he likes as a trucker. After some time as the editor, Harriet makes amends to her former friends through the paper, offering a printed retraction and saying that the statements in her notebook "WERE UNFAIR STATEMENTS AND BESIDES WERE LIES." Sport and Janie forgive her, and all is well again.
Cast
Soundtrack
The original motion picture soundtrack for Harriet The Spy was released on CD and audio cassette on July 23, 1996, 13 days after the film's theatrical release and Jamshied Sharifi is the composer for the movie.
- "Harriet The Spy" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Trash Tower" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Wack Wack" (Young-Holt Unlimited)
- "Sous Le Soleil De Deodega" (Les Negresses Vertes)
- "Harriet Runs" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Golly Leaves" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Sad Harriet/No Cats" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Agatha Exterior" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Agatha Interior" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Uska Dura" (Eartha Kitt)
- "Arrollando" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Reading The Notebook" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Harriet Confronts Marion" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Crate With Legs" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Evil Harriet" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Her Own World" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Class Vote" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Get Up Offa That Thing" (James Brown)
- "Coyote Mambo" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "Cruisin" (Jamshied Sharifi)
- "The Secretive Life" (Jill Sobule)
The songs "Ran Kan Kan" by (Tito Puente) and "Straitjackets" by (Los Straitjackets) are absent from the soundtrack.
Differences between film and book
- Among the episodes in the novel cut from the film version was Ole Golly taking Harriet and Sport to meet her reclusive (and presumably mentally ill) mother in Chapter One, and a brief subplot about Harriet and Janie rebelling against their mothers' decisions to send them to dance school to make them more "ladylike".
- In the book, Ole Golly leaves the Welsch household to marry Mr. Waldenstein and move to Montreal. In the film, Ole Golly merely decides it is time to move on, and for Harriet to be more independent. Later in the film, Ole Golly returns for a visit to talk to Harriet about white lies and apologies, rather than writing to her.
- A subplot was added to the film, involving the use of pen ink "foot tattoos" as a symbol of Harriet, Sport, and Janie's friendship. When Harriet lost her friends, she was later seen furiously erasing her foot tattoo. When she regained them later in the film, they were seen exchanging foot tattoos again.
- Little Joe Curry, the deliveryman for the Dei Santis' grocery on Harriet's spy route, disappeared from the film version, but his trademark personality traits were given to Ole Golly's beau, Mr. Waldenstein. In the film, Mr. Waldenstein is a delivery boy for the Hong Fat food emporium and passes food through a window to a group of hungry children.
- The film is more racially diverse. Rachel, a white character originally (drawn in the book as having dark hair and freckles and wearing glasses), being portrayed as Asian, and Janie being played by an African American actress, Vanessa Lee Chester; in the book, Janie was a Caucasian girl with blonde hair and freckles.
- In the book, the immigrant family on Harriet's spy route, the Dei Santis, are Italian American. In the film, the family is Chinese American, and the family name is changed from Dei Santi to Hong Fat.
Box office and release
The film was released in US 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 was considered a box office success, earning back double its $13,000,000 budget.
Remake
On November 7 2009, it was revealed that the Disney Channel are to remake the film for television and is due to premiere in 2010. Jennifer Stone from Wizards Of Waverly Place has been cast as the lead character and Melinda Shankar from Degrassi: The Next Generation alongside her.
References
External links