The Haunting of Sarah Hardy (TV Movie 1989) Poster

(1989 TV Movie)

User Reviews

Review this title
16 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
5/10
Mommie dearest, would you light the gas lamp?
hitchcockthelegend2 October 2015
Directed by Jerry London and adapted to teleplay by Thomas Baum from the novel, The Crossing, written by Jim Flanagan. It stars Sela Ward, Michael Woods, Roscoe Born, Morgan Fairchild and Polly Bergen.

After a troubled childhood that saw her father die and her mother go mad to the point of suicide, Sarah Hardy (Ward) blossoms into a beautiful woman and marries a handsome man. In spite of her close friends concerns, Sarah and her husband decide to move back to the family home of her childhood, The Pines. It's not long before strange occurrences begin to unnerve Sarah at The Pines. Is her mother not really dead, is it a ghost, or outside influences with ulterior motives?

I genuinely feel bad pouring some scorn on this TV movie, because I so wanted to like it, to grasp a bit of freshness in what has become known as the Gaslight sub-genre of horror. Sadly it's just not very good. It's awash with soap opera operatics, some very poor acting, a confused tonal flow (am I mystery, horror, a message thriller?), an out of place porn movie jazz like musical score, and an ending that beggars belief. The mansion design is great, and there's some nice night time photography during the outer grounds sequences, but it's a difficult film to recommend to those after a good old fashioned mansion based spooker. 5/10
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Good Thriller with a really LAME ending
dwr2464 April 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This movie had me on the edge of my seat until the ending, at which point I was reminded of the story, "The Lady or the Tiger." And to this day, I still wonder, which was it?

The Haunting of Sarah Hardy starts out with young Sarah (Bethany Ward) coming home from her father's funeral to a large house called "The Pines." She is surrounded by her best friends, Lucy (Dawn Prociv) and Alan (Jeff Williams), and the housekeeper, Emily Stepford (Polly Bergen), who appears to be something of a surrogate mother to Sarah. Unfortunately, Sarah's real mother (Janet Penner) menacingly beckons her into her father's study. Encouraged by Miss Stepford, Sarah uneasily goes in, only to be verbally abused by her mother, who runs out of the house, and into the ocean. The body is never found, and the house closed up. Fifteen years later, a now grown Sarah (Sela Ward) is marrying Austin Hardy (Michael Woods), a handsome stock broker. Friends, Lucy (Morgan Fairchild), now an actress, and Alan (Roscoe Born), now a psychiatrist, are in attendance to wish her well. Sarah and Austin choose to live at The Pines, and Miss Stepford is installed as the housekeeper. Everything seems idyllic at first, but Sarah is awakened in the night by noises downstairs, and then by the sound of her mother's harpsichord playing. Concerned for her sanity, she goes to see Alan, whose advice is somewhat inconclusive. Unfortunately, the odd events continue, increasing in frequency, and including "phone calls" from her dead mother, and visions of a shadowy figure downstairs at night. Thinking Miss Stepford to be responsible, Sarah fires her, only to find the incidents continuing to occur. However, when an attack by the shadowy figure causes Sarah to have a miscarriage, she retreats into a depression and disappears, leaving a suicide note. While Lucy and Austin are happy to have Sarah gone so they can have the house - and Sarah's money - to themselves, Alan is suspicious. And when Sarah reappears to him, it's clear that she was aware that something was up. Can she and Alan turn the tables on Austin and Lucy, or will Sarah end up meeting a fate similar to her mother's?

Unfortunately, the major flaw in the movie is that the above question is never answered. The last scene leaves it unclear as to whether Austin has escaped death and returned to kill Sarah, or Sarah has merely lost her mind at last due to the stress of the situation she was in. Otherwise, it is a beautifully crafted thriller, dropping hints, but taking its time to let you know what's really happening.

The acting was superb. Sela Ward is a formidable talent, easily carrying the movie, and giving an excellent performance as a woman who fears for her sanity, but doesn't want to admit that this may be a problem. Morgan Fairchild's are put to good use here as well. She is completely believable as the concerned friend, without a trace of villainy, and yet as soon as her villainy is revealed, she is the perfect vixen. Michael Woods also is convincing as both the loving husband, and the evil murderer. Polly Bergen's performance is as skilled as always, both as the loving friend, and the greedy potential heir. The only performance that was a little flat was that of Roscoe Born, whose concern and love for Sarah show through, but who just doesn't come across as the potential romantic interest he is supposed to be at the end of the film.

Visually and atmospherically, it was a stunning production. The house used for The Pines combines the right atmosphere of beauty and menace necessary to carry off such a story. And both the sight and sound of the ocean help out immeasurably.

This would have been a great thriller if it hadn't been for the weak ending, which pretty much spoiled the movie for me. Too bad, because up until that point, it was one of the best thrillers I had ever seen.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
The only thing that haunts me to this day, is that I chose to watch this
au_law20017 June 2005
Well, what starts out as a suicide story, which is tragic, and possibly the best part of the movie even though it was a bit sad for me, the rest wasn't all that scary nor interesting, I mean it lacked a lot of frightening scenes and was a bit dated, though the scenes of the dead mother was a little scary, especially the phone call which reminded me of Psycho, but still, the rest of the film was not exciting at all, and the ending itself was empty, it wasn't shocking at all, maybe a bit surprising, but not in a good way, it makes you just pause then say a simple "okaaay", that's it, it's done, zip, nada, nothing, the acting okay, and the lead actress was good. Overall not very good at all.
9 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Better than I thought it would be
vchimpanzee5 January 2006
The movie starts with the funeral of Sarah's father. Sarah's mother is being cruel to the girl. Later, Sarah's mother goes from cruel to insane. Miss Stepford, who takes care of the house, provides the poor girl some comfort.

15 years later, Sarah is marrying Austin at a little church next to the cemetery where her mother's gravestone is. The mother's body was never found. Lucy, Sarah's best friend as a child, is a soap actress whose role is being discontinued. Allen, a shrink who was also a friend, is not happy.

Sarah moves back into the mansion known as The Pines, on the Oregon coast, where she has not lived since her mother ran into the ocean and never came back. She seems happy with her new life until she starts hearing her mother's voice again. Then the harpsichord her mother used to play ... only no one is there. Then things really start to get weird.

Sela Ward has a reputation as a quality actress, and I saw potential here, though I wouldn't have said she was that good just from seeing this movie. Morgan Fairchild was better than I expected, and Polly Bergen was fine as Miss Stepford.

This wasn't a horror movie in the classic sense, but more of a mystery with some interesting plot twists, including some that I didn't see coming. As the movie progressed, I liked it better than I thought I would.
14 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
YAWN! Not a Ghost Story
Rainey-Dawn10 September 2019
I like Morgan Fairchild and Selea Ward but this is a terrible film. The film brings nothing new to the table - it's your basic thing: Rich woman, her husband and his lover - the husband and lover wants to drive her to suicide and take "all that money" (as they say). Nothing new - YAWN!

1/10
3 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
I love Sela Ward, but this was terrible.
amanduh_huginkiss8 September 2006
I love Sela Ward, so I watched this movie when it aired on TV last night, and at first it seemed like a campy thriller. It quickly turns into a "Lifetime Original Movie." I thought Sela's acting was terrible, which surprised me. Morgan Fairchild is pretty enough but can't hold a candle to Sela, and the man playing the husband (who I didn't recognize from anything before or since 1989) doesn't help the movie at all. I think it would have been saved by better writing in the latter half and better direction. It starts promisingly and goes downhill fast. It's dated, boring, predictable and the ending itself made me wish I hadn't even wasted two hours. Save yourself and skip this one.. It's too late for me.
6 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Sums up everything I hate about TV movies...
Leofwine_draca20 December 2014
This is a TV movie thriller masquerading as a ghost story, and it's as dim as it sounds. It encapsulates everything terrible about the American TV movie genre of the 1990s (although it narrowly missed that decade by a year): horrible scripting, a lack of decent characters, routine acting, and a storyline that thinks its something special when in actual fact it isn't.

THE HAUNTING OF SARAH HARDY attempts to build a decent Gothic atmosphere along the line of Du Maurier's REBECCA but attempts at building suspense are destined for failure. Instead, this becomes a piece of strictly routine hokum, with characters supposedly sent out of their wits by mysterious hauntings and spooky goings-on. The main issue I had was with the predictability of the storyline, which meant I knew exactly what was going on and guessed the twist well in advance. That makes for a very boring viewing experience.

There are no actors of note in the production, just the kind of faces that appear in this particular genre and never anything else. The lead, Sela Ward, would go on to appear in the horror remake of THE STEPFATHER some 20 years later, seemingly not having aged in the meantime, but given her lacklustre acting on show here you wonder how she ever had a career in the first place.
6 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
An unpredictable TV thriller.
OllieSuave-0076 July 2018
This is a not a bad TV thriller starring Sela Ward as Sarah Hardy, who is haunted by the suicide of her mother when she was 12 years-old. After Sarah moves in to her childhood home with her new husband, she experiences voices, apparitions, and noises in the house, thinking it was from her mother's spirit.

Some good thrills and suspense here, with a very unpredictable second half of the movie. Acting was good for the most part, but there were some plot-lines left unaddressed.

Grade B-
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
2/10
Looking for A ghost movie?, well this it not one!
atinder30 July 2013
t sound like really good ghost with that title, this movie it not even close to A Ghost story at all.

Them movies start Sarah at her Dad funeral and mother at the wake think Sarah wished it was her, so she killed her self by drowning.

Few years later she moves in with her New Husband back into the house but she start losing the plot.

No really spook or any kind atmosphere scene at all and it takes a while to get really in the movies, I which found some part dragged and bored me to death,

The twist and turns in this movie were so Predicable that it was Ridicules, just like the script.

I don't get me started on atrocious ending of this dreadful movie,

There only one good think I can say about this movie, that some of Acting was decent but some of it was really bland

2 out of 10
2 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Well just another T V movie!
mm-3911 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Well just another T V movie! The Haunting of Sarah Hardy looks like one of those Canadian made for T V movies. Done on the cheap and fast! Well edited, directed, casted well, but lacks in story. A slow burn in tension but a little too slow too create any tension. Written in soap opera style with deceit and twists as Sarah Hardy is being pushed to the brink. The bottom third picks up the pace and makes The Haunting of Sarah Hardy interesting. Well I like the twists, but not much for the story. My wife like the mystery/ soap opera style story more. Survey says 5 out of 10 stars.
0 out of 0 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Comparable at times to The Others
kakiolsen11 August 2008
I remember this as one of the first great mystery films that I saw as a child. My parents only let me watch it because Alan's office and Ms. Stepford's kitchen were both located in my family home in Oregon. We still tell the tale of Sela Ward volunteering to babysit my baby brother while Mom drove the three of us girls to elementary school.

Not until I saw The Others have I seen a movie that makes me second-guess myself so much. I love Sela's acting, even if the writing would not have impressed me as an adult.

It also reminds me of What Lies Beneath, the conspiracy of one character who may not believe in supernatural influences preying on the credulous for their own gains.
8 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
A mixed bag--but Sela and Michael are AWESOME together here
Missy C6 May 2002
Warning: Spoilers
POSSIBLE SPOILERS

I caught this one on ABCFamily Channel the other night, and while the setting is beautiful and the actors do a great job with the material they're given, something about the whole thing was just. . .off.

Sela Ward--who stands with Jennifer Aniston and Susan Sarandon as one of the most beautiful women in show biz today--has the title role. We also see Roscoe Born--who played Joe Novak in "Ryan's Hope"--as the childhood friend who's always been in love with Sarah and still is, even though she's chosen another man to marry. And Morgan Fairchild--another beautiful lady who, alas, always gets stuck with the second banana, duplicitous friend role. Michael Woods--a man with a very familiar face, maybe from print or TV ads--is Sarah's sexy new husband. (Someone give this man a starring role of his own--he's worth watching!!) Veteran actress and former cosmetics executive Polly Bergen is almost unrecognizable here as a longtime secretary/housekeeper to Sarah's family.

This film is lovely to look at. Most of the action takes place at the mansion where Sarah grew up and has now returned to live as a newlywed. Both Sela and Morgan are elegantly dressed--although Morgan's clothing is always flashier, where Sela's is more understated and everyday elegant. And don't get me started on Michael Woods again--the man is a hunk:)

The problems with this film begin in about the last half-hour to 45 minutes. It seems as though the directors took too much time setting things up, and then had to race to the finish, leaving out some things in the process. At the end of the film, you realize that there are two main characters who simply vanished from the storyline--and this would have been out of character for them, given the established plot. This is a real problem in the final scene, when it's implied that the previous scene happened early in the day and now it's night-time. The character who does not show up in the last scene would have definitely had time to get there and possibly change the outcome. Hello? What happened? Is there something we didn't see on the cutting room floor?

Like the reviewer below, I think we either need a sequel or to have this one re-released with the Director's cut. But I would watch that first half-hour or so again just to watch Sela Ward and Michael Woods in the wedding and newlywed scenes. Someone give that man a show of his own!!
4 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
Agree With Michael Woods Comments!
mellanoir11 December 2015
I enjoyed this movie! I didn't know what to expect. Morgan Fairchild & Sela Ward are always excellent. Polly Bergen is just so very talented. Such wonderful acting! The actors were all well cast. Watching Michael Woods was definitely swoon inducing! He has been in many films with major leading ladies: Diane Lane, Sharon Stone, Jane Seymour, Jaclyn Smith... just to name a few! I believe he has starred in another movie with Morgan Fairchild before. I also remember seeing him on Oprah when he starred on Private Eye with Josh Brolin. A very handsome & talented actor, indeed. I think I should go refresh myself and watch a few more of his films.
3 out of 4 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Confusing conclusion.
yosef8825 February 2001
Initially interesting movie with a plot that held promise. Sela Ward's performance was better than what audiences have come to expect in television movies. The build up of suspense started with increasing expectancy. I felt that the ending was anti-climatic and sputtered into confusion. I give 3 stars out of 10.
4 out of 7 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Great Movie
falconboy-6650214 February 2020
This is a great mystery thriller, 80s sensation Morgan Fairchild is perfection as Sarah's 'friend'. Polly Bergen, Michael Woods, Sela Ward and Roscoe Born round out the cast. I hope this movie streams somewhere one day soon. Without giving anything away, Tragedy strikes Sarah in the beginning of the movie, next thing ya know she is grown up and haunted by a figure from her past, a loving husband and two loving friends help her through this haunting.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
The End?
godess_in_the_making25 October 2001
I thought the movie was very good. Thrilling. It had me literaly on the edge of my seat. But the ending was rather confusing. When it was over I said "Right, so they end it." I think they should have made a sequel.
3 out of 6 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed