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Secretary

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Secretary

A young woman, recently released from a mental hospital, gets a job as a secretary to a demanding lawyer, where their employer-employee relationship turns into a sexual, sadomasochistic one.

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Release : 2002
Rating : 6.9
Studio : Slough Pond,  double A Films,  TwoPoundBag Productions, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Assistant Property Master, 
Cast : James Spader Maggie Gyllenhaal Jeremy Davies Lesley Ann Warren Stephen McHattie
Genre : Drama Comedy Romance

Cast List

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Reviews

Greenes
2018/08/30

Please don't spend money on this.

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Fairaher
2018/08/30

The film makes a home in your brain and the only cure is to see it again.

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Numerootno
2018/08/30

A story that's too fascinating to pass by...

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Erica Derrick
2018/08/30

By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.

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dhavaljiya
2018/08/06

Other then that the movie is quite boring and forgettable.

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skettimon
2017/09/14

This is one of those really really bad movies that are somehow made good simply because of the actors at the time. The last 20 minutes or so were just completely off the wall. Not entirely sure why this was marketed as a comedy. I can get behind dark comedies and amusing premises, but this was marketed entirely as a comedy. Nothing about this was funny. This entire movie was a joke. It seemed like it didn't know if it wanted to be a serious movie or something that people would laugh outright at. The whole premise is supposed to be about this guy who essentially gives this girl what she needs, but then it just spun in a completely different direction-they get married? Suddenly they're living a domestic life? And since when is there a tub/shower room at the top of the building? And someone mentioned it having kinky sex in the movie-there wasn't really ANY sex in the movie, just him spanking her hard and masturbating on her naked behind. The only sex "scene" between the two mains lasted less than 30 seconds on screen. The other sex scene was just an awkward scene. I want to say I hated this movie. I probably did. I don't know what I just watched. It was awful.

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Kingslaay
2017/04/08

This is a terrible film. One does not have to be a conservative to dislike this film but just be sane and have common sense. Secretary fails to include what most average films have, a plot. There seems to be no coherent or realistic plot. A number of reviewers have raved about it being a dark love story. Simply not true and utter nonsense. One moment these two disturbed people are not close and the next we have to believe they are in love over some sick desires for domination they share. A lot of unrealistic love stories have been made but this takes the cake. This film also has parallels to fifty shades of grey which was equally disturbing. People who actually like this film probably need some mental help. Perhaps they like watching or experiencing torture, maybe their favorite film is Schindlers list for the wrong twisted reasons. This film is not worth a watch.

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life_is_deth
2017/03/15

Released in 2002 to a low rumble of critical attention, and touted as a film that brought BDSM to the masses, I had dismissed Secretary for quite some time as some kind of mass-appeal erotica - a 50 Shades- esque film that people drag their spouses to for some mild titillation before bedtime.Happily, I was wrong. Oh, how I was wrong.What Secretary appears to be, and what it actually is, are two very different beasts, and I dare say that it was misrepresented in its marketing in an attempt to catch a wider mainstream audience - it is far from a mainstream movie, and it certainly isn't bargain-basement titillation. What is ostensibly described as 'a film exploring the relationship between a dominant man and his submissive secretary' (thank you, Wikipedia) is actually an incredibly quirky, often unsettling, and always unpredictable look at the lives of two deeply troubled individuals, and the story of how they manage to find, amidst the chaos of their individual minds, a welcoming embrace in the chaos of one another.Maggie Gyllenhaal, in the role that brought her mainstream attention, is Lee Holloway, a woman with a history of self-harm, just released from psychiatric care following a nervous breakdown. Upon her re- entry to the real world, Lee quickly falls back into her old habits after failing to deal with the stresses of her fractured family and her inadequacy relative to her sister, and in an effort to broaden her horizons, takes typing lessons and applies for a job as a secretary for James Spader's enigmatically- named lawyer, E. Edward Grey (thankfully no relation to the Grey of '50 Shades'). Lee is a tender creature, constantly battered by the harshness of her environment, and seemingly not built to weather the ups and downs of her daily life – a fragility that Gyllenhaal, to use a dreadfully clichéd but apt term, embodies. I chose my words carefully when I said that she is Lee Holloway, as from her first moment on screen it becomes truly difficult to make the distinction between the performer and the performance, and Gyllenhaal has since admitted that she took aspects of the character home with her without intending to. She strikes a deft balance between disturbing and endearing, mixing a gentle sweetness and naiveté in a coy smile and a shy glance with a darkness that is largely hidden from the audience, internalised, and manifesting in either her self-harm, or channeled into a carnal confidence in her growing experimentation with BDSM.But in BDSM, as in sensual Latin dance, it takes two to tango, and Gyllenhaal is matched and countered by a near-inconceivable level of oddity from James Spader, who performs his own balancing act in one of the best performances of his career as Lee's deeply eccentric boss – a lawyer existing solely for his work and for his delicately tended orchids. Spader's Grey is almost completely opaque in his motivations, shunning any kind of deeper emotional connection with others, and from the outset he appears to be, for lack of a better term, a complete bastard. But, wooed by Lee's almost indefatigable desire to follow commands, he one day chooses to punish her for repeated spelling errors by spanking her across his desk, a directive that she hesitantly but willingly follows. From here their relationship unfolds as Lee begins to crave this outlet for her pain and the connection she feels with Grey, while Grey himself struggles with disgust at his sexual habits, and his fear of emotional connections.The world of Secretary almost feels like a Terry Gilliam fever dream. It seems to exist in no single decade, simultaneously modern and retro in its technology and aesthetic, and Steven Shainberg's direction pushes his actors to shed all inhibition in pursuit of his bizarre pseudo-reality, and to great effect. It's a peculiar world filled with recognisable features and colourful, broken characters, but remains distinct from any single real point in time, and this style and slightly unhinged perspective helps one feel as if it's not the characters of the film that are out of place, but you yourself. The film reveals honestly from the get-go that the content found within might not be something that you're familiar with, and that it's up to you to fit in, not the other way round. One repercussion of this is the occasional feeling that the film progresses in an almost stream-of-consciousness manner, and it can be hard to decipher the motivations behind some of the more bizarre choices made by the characters, but, for all that happens, and the peculiar nature of many of the scenes, it's surprisingly easy to follow the general flow of the narrative.In saying that, Secretary isn't always an easily digestible film and can be quite dark in its themes at times, but it's an unconventional exploration of an unconventional topic, and in pulling BDSM out of the dungeon and into the office, and throwing in a good deal of quirky humour and real pathos, it throws a light on the subject and attempts to explain it, at least in this context, as a way for two alternative people with alternative tastes to find their own special place in the world at each other's side. Secretary speaks of human relationships - of fear, and trepidation, and uncertainty, and mistrust and of other such baggage that we all accumulate in life - and challenges us to reflect on the fact that regardless of the thoughts that threaten to destabilise us, be they fleeting or chronic, ingrained or accumulated, 'normality' is but a construct, and if you can find someone out there who fits you like a glove, then even the most unconventional person can hope to build normality for themselves.

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