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Miss Nobody 2010

  Climbing the corporate ladder can be murder.  A mild-mannered secretary discovers that she has a talent for murder as she ascends the corporate ladder.

Climbing the corporate ladder can be murder. A mild-mannered secretary discovers that she has a talent for murder as she ascends the corporate ladder.

Does Miss Nobody have end credit scenes?

No!

Miss Nobody does not have end credit scenes. You can leave when the credits roll.

Take the Ultimate Miss Nobody Movie Quiz

Challenge your knowledge of Miss Nobody with this fun and interactive movie quiz. Test yourself on key plot points, iconic characters, hidden details, and memorable moments to see how well you really know the film.


Miss Nobody Quiz: Test your knowledge of the 2010 film *Miss Nobody* with these ten mixed‑difficulty questions.

What is Sarah Jane's job at the beginning of the film?

Full Plot Summary and Ending Explained for Miss Nobody

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Read the complete plot summary of Miss Nobody, including all major events, twists, and the full ending explained in detail. Explore key characters, themes, hidden meanings, and everything you need to understand the story from beginning to end.


Sarah Jane McKinney Leslie Bibb is an ordinary secretary at Judge Pharmaceutical, but she longs for a bigger future and finds that drive echoed by her mother, who pushes her to climb the corporate ladder. In a church flashback, a young Sarah Jane participates in a beauty pageant, a choice she makes under her mother’s insistence. Her father storms into the church to announce he’s divorcing, causing a scene, and as he exits a statue of St. George topples and kills him. This eerie moment plants the first seeds of the belief that Saint George is watching over her, a notion that will thread through her life. In another rough flashback, Frankie [Christopher Carley] [Frankie Sheftell] is Sarah Jane’s boyfriend in high school, but he mistreats her and ultimately faces consequences for his actions, a memory she carries with her as an increasing sense of justice—however twisted—takes root in her.

Back in the present, Sarah Jane applies for a junior executive position at Judge Pharmaceutical, still living with her mother in a boarding house where a senile resident, Mr. Ketchum [Geoffrey Lewis], adds a faintly comic but tense undertone to her daily routine. The application process is sabotaged by the very people who should be supporting her: her demanding mother and her best friend Charmaine [Missi Pyle], who encourage Sarah Jane to cheat to snag the role. The plan works in a sense—the job lands in her hands, yet not quite as she expected. Early on, she discovers Milo Beeber [Brandon Routh] has already claimed the path upward by landing the same junior post; his explanation that he’s simply hoping to move up because the top executives will retire soon hints at the ambitious, cutthroat world she’s entering. Beeber sees a real chance to advance by leveraging a drug called Clarity, designed to help elderly people maintain their mental faculties.

Beeber becomes more than a rival when he invites Sarah Jane to dinner and then to his apartment. The evening turns awkward as he reveals he’s texting his fiancée and insists he’s “always had sex with his secretaries,” suggesting a pattern of manipulation. While Sarah Jane is on a ladder reaching high shelves, she pushes him away, and he falls, an umbrella accidentally acting as the catalyst that ends his life. With the police likely skeptical of her, she exits the scene and silences the truth for the moment. In the aftermath, the death of Beeber unexpectedly clears the way for Sarah Jane to keep Beeber’s intended office space and, more importantly, to claim the job he had been aiming for. Her access to Clarity deepens as she studies its effects, especially on her unpredictable old boss, Mr. Ketchum.

Nan Wilder [Vivica A. Fox] becomes her boss. Nan is a savvy, demanding figure who quickly detects the advantage Sarah Jane gains from Beeber’s demise. She demands a sizable portion of Sarah Jane’s salary in exchange for her silence, a harsh reminder that advancement often comes with a price. As Sarah Jane begins to settle into her new role, she and Nan share a tense moment on the subway platform, where a misstep leads to Nan’s death when Sarah Jane, bending to retrieve something, accidentally pushes her into oncoming traffic. Nan Wilder dies on the tracks, and Sarah Jane inherits Nan’s position, stepping into the shoes of the department head.

Now in control more than ever, Sarah Jane faces a new obstacle: Charmaine’s boss, Pierre JeJeune [Patrick Fischler], and the pressure he imposes on the team. Charmaine’s own mismanagement has cost her standing, and Sarah Jane secretly plots to keep everyone in line by shuffling personnel. She rehires Charmaine to ensure loyalty and to keep her close, knowing that Charmaine’s influence could be both a threat and a tool. Pierre, ever the schemer, is shown cutting corners—copier pranks and a stubborn disregard for propriety—while Sarah Jane quietly manipulates the conditions to secure her power. Her plan continues to unfold as she orchestrates a dangerous sequence: she triggers the sprinklers to short-circuit the system, causing a fatal shock that kills Morty Wickham [David Anthony Higgins], an associate who seemed friendly but became a liability once his true intentions were revealed. The death appears as a tragic accident, but the web of manipulation tightens around Sarah Jane.

Bill Malloy [Adam Goldberg], a detective newly stationed at the boarding house, officers a wary, capable presence who begins digging into the string of “accidents” surrounding Judge executives. Detective Malloy’s investigation unsettles Sarah Jane, who balances charm with calculation as she maintains a relationship with him while navigating a maze of lies. At the same time, she confesses her actions to Father Grisham [Barry Bostwick], a priest who has stood by the church and her life for years. Father Grisham reassures her that she has not truly harmed anyone—though the evidence of her schemes grows more troubling—and he reminds her that someone is watching and that secrets never stay buried forever. Messages from an unseen source begin to arrive, suggesting that someone knows what she did, adding a chilling layer of doom to her ascent.

Mr. Ketchum suffers a stroke as a consequence of the ongoing drug trials he’s been given. At the hospital, Sarah Jane experiences difficulty breathing and is treated with an asthma inhaler, with strict warnings about aspirin use—an important detail she must heed given the surrounding medical experiments. She becomes wary of Leonard Ormsby [Richard Riehle], another executive with leverage over her, and she contemplates using aspirin to counter his possible blackmailing, a dangerous plan that could backfire at any moment. To shield herself, she initiates a more intimate ruse with Joshua Nether [Eddie Jemison], seducing him and making his alleged embezzlement seem like a trap he set for himself. She hides the money and arranges for him to leave the country, effectively severing him from the company’s reach. Yet Malloy witnesses their closeness and misreads it as infidelity, a suspicion that could threaten Sarah Jane’s carefully maintained facade.

Mr. Ketchum ultimately dies, and his funeral is a display of the town’s admiration for a man who had lived a long life. In a dark finale twist, Sarah Jane manages to hide Joshua Nether’s body and the missing funds in the same closed casket as Mr. Ketchum’s burial, a macabre ruse that cements her control over the situation—at least for the moment. When the blackmailer finally confronts her, Charmaine stands revealed as the mastermind behind the web of murders and misdirection. She explains how she arranged each accident and how she framed others to take the blame. Charmaine attempts to kill and bury Sarah Jane, but the chase ends atop a bell tower, where Charmaine falls to her death.

With Charmaine gone, the police believe she was the architect of the entire scheme, and Sarah Jane appears to be free of direct involvement—at least publicly. L.J., the new, dutiful secretary who replaces the bottle of water, remains in the shadows of the office, and Sarah Jane drinks from a bottle that once belonged to Leonard Ormsby, realizing too late that danger still lies in wait. The film closes on an unsettled note, leaving the audience with a sense that Sarah Jane’s ascendancy may have come at a heavy, unseen price, and that the truth may surface when least expected.

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Cars Featured in Miss Nobody

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Explore all cars featured in Miss Nobody, including their makes, models, scenes they appear in, and their significance to the plot. A must-read for car enthusiasts and movie buffs alike.


Checker

1974

Taxicab

Chevrolet

1975

Nova

Ford

2005

Mustang

Lincoln

1962

Continental

Miss Nobody Other Names and Titles

Explore the various alternative titles, translations, and other names used for Miss Nobody across different regions and languages. Understand how the film is marketed and recognized worldwide.


Bloody Secretary Uma Secretária de Morte Bayan Hiçkimse Мисс Никто Miss Senki Panna Nikt 无名女士 גברת אף אחד (גברת מי את?) Госпожица Никоя 미스 노바디 Міс Ніхто Nenápadná slečna

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