Satan's School for Girls (2000 film)
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (June 2017) |
Satan's School for Girls | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama Horror |
Written by | Jennifer Maisel |
Directed by | Christopher Leitch |
Starring | Shannen Doherty Julie Benz Daniel Cosgrove Taraji P. Henson Kate Jackson |
Music by | Peter Manning Robinson |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
Production | |
Executive producers | Aaron Spelling E. Duke Vincent |
Producers | Robert Berger Murray Shostak |
Cinematography | Sergei Kozlov |
Editor | John Duffy |
Running time | 87 minutes |
Production companies | ABC Spelling Television |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release |
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Satan's School for Girls is a 2000 dramatic horror film directed by Christopher Leitch and starring Shannen Doherty, Julie Benz, Daniel Cosgrove and Kate Jackson. It is a remake of a 1973 ABC Movie of the Week of the same name.
Plot
The TV movie is about a woman, Beth Hammersmith (Shannon Doherty), who attends Fallbridge College for Girls under the name Karen Oxford, to find out why her sister, who attended the college, is believed to have committed suicide. Once she is enrolled, she soon discovers a Satanic cult of witches, who call themselves "The Five", who want Beth to join the cult. The Dean is played by Kate Jackson, who portrayed the character of Roberta Lockhart in the original 1973 film.
Cast
- Shannen Doherty as Beth Hammersmith / Karen Oxford
- Julie Benz as Alison Kingsley
- Daniel Cosgrove as Mark Lantch
- Richard Joseph Paul as Nick Delacroix
- Taraji P. Henson as Paige
- Aimée Castle as Courtney
- Mandy Schaffer as Hillary
- Victoria Sanchez as Lisa Bagley
- Kate Jackson as The Dean
- Irene Contogiorgis as Jenny Hammersmith
- Alan Fawcett as Ruben
- Jessica Goldapple as Kim
- Christian Paul as T.J.
- Adam MacDonald as Blake
- Jonathan Stark as Mr. Hammersmith
Production
The film was directed by Christopher Leitch and is a remake of the 1973 version. The movie was also filmed in the city of Montreal, Quebec and the John Abbott College was used for the movie's campus.
Release
The film aired on March 13, 2000 on ABC.[1]