IMDb RATING
7.3/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
A single New England woman responds to an advertisement by a Midwestern widower in which he asks for a bride to help him raise his two children.A single New England woman responds to an advertisement by a Midwestern widower in which he asks for a bride to help him raise his two children.A single New England woman responds to an advertisement by a Midwestern widower in which he asks for a bride to help him raise his two children.
- Won 1 Primetime Emmy
- 1 win & 10 nominations total
Malgorzata Zajaczkowska
- Maggie Grant
- (as Margaret Sophie Stein)
Lawrence Moran
- Jedidiah
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
10shark-43
I had always heard good things about this film but never got around to seeing it. My 8 year old daughter loves books on the prairie life and we saw the video at the library so we watched it and we were both so moved, so impressed. A lovely film, wonderfully acted - Walken is a nice surprise - after a long, Hollywood career playing weirdos and sickos - he gives a fully realized, delicate, heartbreaking performance as a widower Kansas farmer. The children stay away from cliched, hammy acting and the whole thing is touching and sweet.
Nice little movie about life in the Prairie and about how a young widower can make a new life, and how his two children can relate to a new women coming to their home to "replace" their mother. No clichés (there could have been scores of them), sensitive story, good casting. Never before that movie had I sensed how Kansas and Maine, two states in the same country, can be so far apart, geographically and culturally.
This seems to be a minority opinion, but I actually liked the book "Sarah, Plain and Tall" much better than the movie. The book is spare, poetic and lovely. The romance of Jacob and Sarah is in the background, but Anna and Caleb's hopes to have a new mother are almost palpable. The lack of details allows rich play for the imagination, and Patricia MacLachlan is an absolute master at evoking the sights, the sounds, the very texture of the world in which her characters live. When Jacob puts his arm around Sarah for the first time in the book, it is a delightful surprise and it means so much because we are seeing it through the eyes of the children who so very much want Sarah to stay. The movie, by filling in all the gaps, and filling it with conversations which to me, felt too modern for the times, lost a lot of the magic of the story. Glenn Close did a wonderful job of embodying Sarah, but she was a little too adept in her ability to analyze Jacob's lingering grief and anger -- in those days they didn't do as much emotional analysis as we do now, and anyway, how would a spinster who lived with three elderly aunts know about a widower's inability to let go of grief? I think perhaps if I hadn't read the book first and loved it so deeply, I may have liked the movie more than I did. The book was a perfect example of the old writing adage, "show, don't tell," but ironically, the movie did way too much telling and not enough showing.
I can name a half a dozen reasons why I like the movie. The plot is good wholesome plot. This is a movie I can sit my children down and not worry about any bad words. It brings the past to life its like you are there. It shows what true love is all about . When you can go through all different things together and still be in love then you have it going on. You can feel the warmth and kindness Sarah shows toward the children.
If you haven'tseen it then I only have onething tosay RUN Don't WALK to your nearest video store.
If you haven'tseen it then I only have onething tosay RUN Don't WALK to your nearest video store.
They had a real nice feel for the time and place with this one....I remember enjoying it alot. Oceans of grass to replace the Maine woods and shore, different mores and a different way of thinking. Walken really plays against type here, he is quiet and turned inwards...Little House on the Prairie done by Hallmark, if you will.
*** outta ****
*** outta ****
Did you know
- TriviaMovie writer, Patricia MacLachlan said that the story was based on a true life event from her family's history.
- Quotes
Sarah Wheaton: The past steps on the heels of the present whether you like it or not.
- ConnectionsEdited into Hallmark Hall of Fame (1951)
- SoundtracksCome all ye fair and tender ladies
Traditional American song
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Hallmark Hall of Fame: Sarah, Plain and Tall (#40.2)
- Filming locations
- Osage City, Kansas, USA(Interior of Home)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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