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Mrs. Harris

  • TV Movie
  • 2005
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 34m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Annette Bening and Ben Kingsley in Mrs. Harris (2005)
Drama

Based on the sensational 1980s media event, famed cardiologist Herman Tarnower meets a particularly brutal end at the hands of his jilted lover, Jean Harris.Based on the sensational 1980s media event, famed cardiologist Herman Tarnower meets a particularly brutal end at the hands of his jilted lover, Jean Harris.Based on the sensational 1980s media event, famed cardiologist Herman Tarnower meets a particularly brutal end at the hands of his jilted lover, Jean Harris.

  • Director
    • Phyllis Nagy
  • Writers
    • Shana Alexander
    • Phyllis Nagy
  • Stars
    • Annette Bening
    • Ben Kingsley
    • Cloris Leachman
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Phyllis Nagy
    • Writers
      • Shana Alexander
      • Phyllis Nagy
    • Stars
      • Annette Bening
      • Ben Kingsley
      • Cloris Leachman
    • 30User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 12 Primetime Emmys
      • 6 wins & 35 nominations total

    Photos25

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    Top cast73

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    Annette Bening
    Annette Bening
    • Jean Harris
    Ben Kingsley
    Ben Kingsley
    • Herman Tarnower
    Cloris Leachman
    Cloris Leachman
    • Pearl 'Billie' Schwartz - Tarnower's Sister
    Lawrence O'Donnell
    Lawrence O'Donnell
    • Judge Leggett
    • (as Lawrence O'Donnell Jr.)
    Frank Whaley
    Frank Whaley
    • George Bolen
    Bill Smitrovich
    Bill Smitrovich
    • Joel Arnou
    Frances Fisher
    Frances Fisher
    • Marge Richey Jacobson
    Michael Gross
    Michael Gross
    • Leslie Jacobson
    Ronald Guttman
    Ronald Guttman
    • Henri
    John Patrick Amedori
    John Patrick Amedori
    • Young David Harris
    Brad McCoy
    Brad McCoy
    • Young Jimmy Harris
    John Rubinstein
    John Rubinstein
    • Tarnower's Best Friend
    Brett Butler
    Brett Butler
    • Tarnower Ex #1
    Lee Garlington
    Lee Garlington
    • Tarnower's Ex #2
    Ellen Burstyn
    Ellen Burstyn
    • Former Tarnower Steady
    Cristine Rose
    Cristine Rose
    • Suzanne
    Jessica Tuck
    Jessica Tuck
    • Wife #1
    Robert Cicchini
    Robert Cicchini
    • Det. Siciliano
    • Director
      • Phyllis Nagy
    • Writers
      • Shana Alexander
      • Phyllis Nagy
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    5.91.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10Idioteck-1

    Bening's Performance as Harris ...

    ... Is among her best work: it is nuanced, studied and whip-smart. She has a flair for bone-dry humor that is on full display here.

    HBO continues to show that it is the go-to network for actresses over a certain age, providing them with some bravura roles.

    Jean Harris could have easily descended into caricature and vapidness, but Bening finds her heart.

    When I first saw that the film was being made (it was first made for television with Ellen Burstyn as Jean in 1980), I thought "why again?" but the filmmakers have proved their case: the film works on every level, but especially the performances. They are compulsively watchable.

    Her performance is expertly modulated and as the film unwinds she becomes very human: her crime is not such a surprise and her motives seem justified.

    The actresses interplay with Kingsley is a wonder to behold.

    If you are a fan of singular acting, this will be worth your while.

    Mary McDonnell, Philip Baker Hall, Brett Butler, Frances Fisher, Cloris Leachman and the original Harris, Burstyn, all show up for great cameos.

    This is not a film you will ever see in a theater, HBO has cornered the market on interesting, vital character studies.
    md_dc

    Riveting Performances by A Cast of Veteran Actors

    I always wanted to know the details of the Jean Harris murder story. However, because I kept to scholarly reading, I didn't want to take the time or money to buy the books & magazines about her circumstances.

    Now that I've seen the show, I have a greater understanding of the background history & consequential events that led to Harris's trial & conviction.

    My knowledge grew because I witnessed riveting performances by a host of veteran actors: ones that I have grown to trust NOT to be involved in shameless mockeries of the truth, like the "Path to 9/11" is. I'm more curious to go back & read the books, newspapers & magazines about "Mrs. Harris."
    6jotix100

    The diet doctor

    The incident in which this HBO film is based upon, was fodder for the sensational press during the time it was front page news. Phyllis Nagy adapted the material for the screen, as well as directed. Ms. Nagy makes a point for not taking sides in the way this tale is presented. Jean Harris plays the most important part since, after all, she was the only one that lived to tell her story. How much of it is fiction, and how much it is true?, let the viewer arrive at his own conclusion.

    The basic problem with this ambitious production is the casting of the two principal characters. Annette Benning, obviously acting on the text Ms. Nagy wrote, comes across as a silly woman. We don't get to see a dignified Jean Harris, or at least the woman one saw in pictures, and on the television news. Ms. Benning is a good actress, as she has proved herself in other films. Jean Harris, alas, is not one of the best roles she has played.

    Ben Kingsley, the wonderful English actor, plays Dr. Herman Tarnower, the victim of Jean Harris' jealousy. Mr. Kingsley's take on this doctor is not convincing. His Dr. Tarnower comes across as a man who had a roving eye for attractive women of a certain class, which is what made him fall for Mrs. Harris, to begin with. According to Ms. Nagy, this doctor had an indecisive nature paying more attention to his mother when she bluntly questions why is he marrying the poor Mrs. Harris.

    The opening credits show us how other women, at least in film noir, have dealt with men their own way. What Ms. Nagy's screen play does is to take the viewpoint that maybe Mrs. Harris didn't intend to kill Dr. Tarnower, at all, when the facts of the case tell us she fired a few shots during that fatal encounter.
    6gelman@attglobal.net

    Good Actors Wasted

    For anyone who remembers the shooting of the Scarsdale Diet Doctor at the hands of the school mistress from Madeira, the fancy girl's school in Potomac, MD, this film is a soap opera scandal which should have been allowed to rest in yellowing newspaper clippings (though those are probably on line now in incorruptible digits). Annette Bening is Mrs. Harris, the abandoned and lovelorn teacher. Bening is a fine actress and while she succeeds in bringing her character to life, all that is accomplished is to demonstrate once again that Mrs. Harris was pathetic. Kingsley has much less to work with and all he is able to demonstrate is that Herman (Hy) Tarnower was an unmitigated son-of-a-bitch, which we already knew. Why did Ellen Burstyn and Cloris Leachman allow themselves to be roped into this? One assumes for the money, certainly not the art. Could this have been a better picture? Given the facts of the case, which are reproduced more or less as they were presented at the time, I would guess not. Neither of the principals has much of a back story to be unpacked and, while the details of the murder made headlines for days at the time, at the end of the day it's merely a sad, sordid, essentially uninvolving tale.
    10WildConvergence

    Best movie I saw at Toronto Film Festival

    My husband and I sat through 20 films this year and this one, along with Michael Haneke's "Cache," was by a long way the best and the most surprising we saw. You go to a gala at a film festival and you're prepared for mostly safe stuff chock full of movie stars, so many of them, like curios in cabinets ("Walk the Line" and "North Country" are two such examples; there are others), that you lapse into a deep sleep just looking at the credits, knowing the exercises in taste and decorum that will follow. I wasn't encouraged by the cast list of "Mrs. Harris" but was really interested in the whole Jean Harris story so along we went to the screening.

    For those of you who are not familiar with the tale, this is the murder of the Scarsdale Diet doctor saga in 1980. Jean Harris was an uptight headmistress who, so the media spun it at the time, in a fit of jealous rage drove from Virginia to New York in a blinding rainstorm and pumped the doctor full of bullets because he wanted to marry another woman.

    What seems like a pretty straightforward narrative turns out to be anything but that, principally because of the way the story is told in this version and the incredible performances, not just from Annette Bening, though I have never seen such subtlety from this actress but also from Ben Kingsley, Cloris Leachman, Frances Fisher, Mary McDonnell and a host of others in truly perfectly judged cameos.

    The first-time writer and director of "Mrs. Harris" never judges the characters and thus wisely puts the responsibility for making any judgments solely in the laps of the audience. The tonal shifts in this film are dizzying but never confusing and perhaps the most brilliant thing about it is the way in which you're seduced into laughing at or with all the insanity and then immediately are shown something that makes you question why you laughed in the first place.

    It's not an easy ride or the most comfortable of films to watch, but it's one of the finest depictions of obsession, dependency and love gone wrong I've seen in a long time. It's not for everyone. My husband, who also loved it, had a heated debate with another couple we saw it with who hated it and mostly hated it because of the way it refuses to score easy victim versus villain points. It's divisive and from time to time you wonder about certain shots or the juxtaposition of certain scenes but these are minor quibbles. This is a debut feature that outclasses most of what I've seen in multiplexes this whole year. Go if you want to think and feel as a result of that thinking.

    I heard a rumor that the film is not going to be released in movie theaters but will air on HBO. That, if true, is a pity because it's something that should be seen and the performances, writing and direction are first rate.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Ellen Burstyn received an Emmy nomination for her performance, even though her character only appears on-screen for eleven seconds, and has only two lines.
    • Quotes

      Jean Harris: I realize that you are just a secretary and weren't as fortunate as I in graduating magna cum laude from Smith, but surely any well-read 10-year-old knows the meaning of the word "bizarre".

    • Connections
      Edited from Loulou (1929)
    • Soundtracks
      Put The Blame On Mame
      Written by Doris Fisher and Allan Roberts

      Arranged by Brad Dechter

      Performed by Judith Owen

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 25, 2006 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Official site
      • HBO (United States)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bà Harris
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles Center Studios - 450 S. Bixel Street, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • HBO Films
      • Killer Films
      • Number 9 Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 34m(94 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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