The writer-director quickly drafted Scarlett Johansson to star as an American student in London who becomes involved with an aristocrat (Hugh Jackman) in “Scoop” (2006), though that follow-up came and went without much fanfare.
Her next outing was “The Black Dahlia” (2006), Brian De Palma’s take on James Ellroy’s complicated and richly-textured noir thriller about two hard-edged cops (Josh Hartnett and Aaron Eckhart) who descend into obsession, corruption and se*ual degeneracy while investigating the infamous brutal mur*der of a would-be actress (Mia Kirshner).
Again, Johansson was believable as a sensual, smart woman able to woo men against their better judgment, but the film was not well received.
She rebounded with the well-reviewed blockbuster “The Prestige” (2006), a Victorian-set supernatural thriller about two stage magicians (Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale) in an ongoing feud that takes them both to the top of their careers, but with terrible consequences.
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Fast-forwarding to the 1930s, Johansson co-starred in the unsuccessful attempt to bring Oscar Wilde’s Lady Windermere’s Fan to the screen with “A Good Woman” (2006).
While the actress was now a presence in the Top Ten lists of men’s cheesecake magazines like Maxim and FHM, the well-grounded actress hardly took her new H๏τ symbol status seriously, and continued with a run of decidedly non-male oriented films, starting with the surprisingly commercial comedy “The Nanny Diaries” (2007). The adaptation of the bestseller did not survive its reinvention as a screen comedy and underperformed at the box office.