Little Black Book | |
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Theatrical release poster
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Directed by | Nick Hurran |
Produced by | Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas Deborah Schindler William Sherak Jason Shuman |
Screenplay by | Melissa Carter Elisa Bell |
Story by | Melissa Carter |
Starring |
Brittany Murphy Holly Hunter Ron Livingston Julianne Nicholson Kathy Bates |
Music by | Christophe Beck |
Cinematography | Theo van de Sande |
Edited by | John Richards |
Production
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Distributed by | Columbia Pictures |
Release date
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Running time
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111 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $35 million |
Box office | $22 million |
Little Black Book is a 2004 satirical comedy film directed by Nick Hurran, and starring Brittany Murphy and Ron Livingston in the main roles. Holly Hunter, Julianne Nicholson, Josie Maran, Rashida Jones and Kathy Bates all serve in supporting roles. Carly Simon makes a cameo appearance at the end of the film.
Stacy Holt (Brittany Murphy), an associate producer on a daytime talk show (syndicated out of Trenton, New Jersey), is convinced that her boyfriend Derek (Ron Livingston) is the right man for her, though he has an apparent phobia of commitment, and he's vague about his past relationships. Taking the advice of colleague Barb (Holly Hunter), she looks at his Palm Tungsten C and its record of the names and numbers of three ex-girlfriends: a French supermodel (Josie Maran); a gynecologist (Rashida Jones); and a cook (Julianne Nicholson).
She sets up an interview with each woman, in an attempt to learn more about and get closer to Derek. However, Stacy's plan suffers a setback when she develops a friendship with one of the women.
Stacy is eventually betrayed by Barb when Stacy, Derek and the ex-girlfriends are brought together on stage for a live broadcast during sweeps season. During the show, Stacy comes to the realization that she is not the right one for Derek and lets him go. On the way out, Stacy is met by Barb, who is clearly out of her mind. Barb tells Stacy that her actions were not premeditated, goes on to call the "event" a masterpiece and says that she hopes Stacy will one day understand that she got what she wanted: her life back. With a live camera behind her, Stacy responds with, "I should tear your eyes out right now. But how will you be able to look at yourself in the morning?", which the audience cheers on. Stacy then departs from the studio as the camera stays on a humiliated Barb.