A notch **reject** filter with 40 dB or so built as a twin-T is a piece of cake. They work because one side of the T causes phase lag and the other phase lead. The two outputs are added together and at some frequency they exactly cancel out. Because the signals cancel, the depth of the notch is close to zero, which is pretty impressive on a log scale. Without some positive feedback, the input impedance is low, and the circuit can only be driven by a similarly low output driver, and the output impedance is high. The width of the notch is also extremely wide. None of these are nice charactersitics. Usually you want a high input and low output impedance, and a narrow notch.
A notch **pass** filter can be built, but the output is only slightly peaked, because doubling two signals gives a 3 dB improvement, whereas subtracting them gives an infinite dB improvement. The pass version doesn't have a similar frequency where everything cancels except the frequency of interest.
As noted above, you could build a passive resonant L-C circuit that would provide reasonable functionality, but without any active devices would still have input and output impedance problems, and the amount of peaking would be limited by the drive and load characteristics.
If your goal is -140 dB, you need to consider the non-linearity of the capacitors and/or inductors. The design issues as you go past 60-100 dB in any area become those of managing second order effects. I suspect a good op-amp would end up being one of the more predictable components in a design with this many constraints requesting this much performance.
DspDad