The High Note
The High Note
The High Note | |
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Official promotional poster | |
Directed by | Nisha Ganatra |
Produced by | |
Written by | Flora Greeson |
Starring | |
Music by | Amie Doherty |
Cinematography | Jason McCormick |
Edited by | Wendy Greene Bricmont |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Focus Features |
Release date |
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Running time | 113 minutes[1] |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | ~$20 million[2] |
Box office | $2.5 million[a] |
The High Note is a 2020 American comedy-drama film directed by Nisha Ganatra and written by Flora Greeson. The film stars Dakota Johnson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Kelvin Harrison Jr., Zoë Chao, Bill Pullman, Eddie Izzard, and Ice Cube, and follows a famous singer's personal assistant who wants to become a music producer.
The High Note was released in selected theaters, and through Premium VOD on May 29, 2020, by Focus Features. It received mixed reviews from critics, although the cast was praised.
Plot[edit source]
Maggie Sherwoode is the longtime personal assistant to legendary R&B singer Grace Davis who still has a successful touring career despite not releasing new material for a decade. Maggie is also an aspiring music producer, remixing Grace's songs in her free time. Grace's manager, Jack Robertson, believes that her time has passed and she should accept a Las Vegas residency and continue releasing live albums rather than record new material.
At a grocery store, Maggie meets aspiring musician David Cliff and watches him perform outdoors. He invites her to a party at his place, where to her surprise she learns that despite slumming it as a musician he is quite wealthy. Impressed by his voice, she lies about being a professional producer and offers to work with him on an album. He accepts and the two begin work together with Maggie coaching him through his nerves.
Grace is displeased when a popular music producer remixes one of her songs to modernize it with excessive synths and pop elements. Appalled, Maggie shows Grace her own version of the song, and Grace decides to release Maggie's version, without payment or credit. While Maggie is pleased to be producing for Grace, Jack pulls her aside to reveal how her tactlessness ruined potential future deals. Grace later expresses her interest in recording a new album to her record label. They discourage the idea and push her towards the Vegas residency to Grace's embarrassment. Maggie encourages Grace to disregard the label and create new material but Grace lectures her on how women of her age and race rarely succeed in music.
Maggie and David begin a romance as recording for his demo comes to a close. At the same time, Maggie learns that Ariana Grande has backed out of opening for Grace's album launch. She initially books Dan Deakins to open for Grace before realizing the album launch would be the perfect place for David to perform his songs. She enlists Dan's assistant to help but is surprised when Dan himself, after listening to David's songs, decides to step away to allow him to perform.
The night of the party, Maggie tells Jack and Grace that Dan has backed out and promises to fix it. She then asks David, who believed they were going on a date, to sing. After hearing that the party is for Grace Davis, David leaves in a huff, refusing to perform. Maggie tells Jack and Grace she was unable to deliver a backup performer and Grace berates her, mocking her ambitions to become a producer when she cannot even succeed as an assistant before firing her.
Maggie moves back home with her dad Max, a radio DJ, and starts planning her future. After encouragement from her father, Maggie reaches out to David to continue work on their album and to Grace to thank her for her time working for her. At the same time, Grace realizes that she misses Maggie who was a faithful assistant who never used her.
Grace arrives at Maggie's home and reluctantly offers a roundabout apology. After complimenting her production work on the live album, she reveals that she has never worked with a female producer before but wants Maggie to be the first, also telling her that she has begun writing new material. As she is singing for Maggie, David arrives. Before Maggie can introduce them to one another, David reveals that Grace is his estranged mother, something she has kept from the public. David also tells Maggie that Dan Deakins has been passing around his material leading him to receive an offer of representation from a studio.
Later on, David performs at a music festival. He asks Grace to join him on stage, revealing she is his mother, and the two sing a duet as Maggie watches. Later in the studio, Maggie produces Grace's new album.
Cast[edit source]
- Dakota Johnson as Maggie Sherwoode
- Tracee Ellis Ross as Grace Davis
- Kelvin Harrison Jr. as David Cliff
- Zoë Chao as Katie
- Ice Cube as Jack Robertson
- Jonathan Freeman as Martin
- June Diane Raphael as Gail
- Deniz Akdeniz as Spencer Cliff
- Bill Pullman as Max
- Eddie Izzard as Dan Deakins
- Diplo as Richie Williams
- Eugene Cordero as Seth
- Marc Evan Jackson as Alec
- Neil Lane as Himself
- Melanie Griffith as Tess Sherwoode
Production[edit source]
Flora Greeson's screenplay, then titled Covers, was featured in the 2018 Black List, compiling the best unproduced scripts of said year. In February 2019, it was announced Nisha Ganatra would direct the film. Tim Bevan and Eric Fellner would serve as producers on the film under their Working Title Films banner.[5] In May 2019, it was announced Dakota Johnson, Tracee Ellis Ross, Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Zoë Chao had joined the cast of the film.[6][7] Ice Cube and June Diane Raphael were added in June.[8][9] Bill Pullman, Eddie Izzard and Diplo were added to the cast.[10]
Principal photography began in May 2019 around Los Angeles.[11] In February 2020, the film was re-titled The High Note.[12]
Soundtrack[edit source]
The High Note soundtrack was released on May 29, 2020 through Republic, Universal. The lead single titled "Love Myself" by Ross was released on May 15.[13]
Release[edit source]
The High Note was released in selected theaters, and through Prenium VOD on May 29, 2020.[14] It was originally scheduled for a wide theatrical release on May 8, 2020, but due to movie theater closures that started in mid-March because of the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, it was cancelled.[15]
The film made $87,800 from 50 theaters (mostly drive-ins) in its opening weekend.[16] In its third weekend it made $59,000 from 64 theaters, for a running total of $293,000.[17] By June 28, the film had grossed $420,000 in the United States.[3]
The film was also released in several overseas countries with relaxed COVID-19 theater restrictions, including South Korea, the Netherlands and France, and grossed $1.7 million, as of August 28.[4][18]
Reception[edit source]
VOD sales[edit source]
In its opening weekend, The High Note was the second-most rented film on FandangoNow, third-most from the iTunes Store, and 11th-most on Prime Video.[19][2] In its second weekend the film fell to fourth on FandangoNow and 10th on iTunes, but ranked second on Spectrum.[20][21] It remained in the top 10 on all services in its third weekend.[22] After lowering its rental price, the film returned to the 10-spot on FandangoNow and Apple TV in mid-July.[23][24]
Critical response[edit source]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 70% based on 177 reviews, with an average rating of 6.10/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "The High Note doesn't quite soar above rom-com formula, but audiences seeking some comfort viewing should find themselves solidly in harmony with this well-acted genre entry."[25] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 58 out of 100, based on 34 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews."[26]
Writing for Forbes, Scott Mendelson gave the film a positive review, writing: "It's leisurely-paced, relatively grounded and rooted in the specific pleasures of watching good actors play nice people who deal with their specific conflicts as nicely as possible."[27]
Owen Gleiberman of Variety said the film "can't decide if it's a behind-the-music-industry drama or a go-for-your-dream fairy tale" and that "the feel-good factor hovers over this movie like a fuzzy bland cloud."[28]
Awards[edit source]
- Drama Movie by People's Choice Awards (nominated)
- Drama Movie Star by People's Choice Awards - Tracee Ellis Ross (nominated)[29]
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