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Murder at Devil's Glen / The Haunting Passion
Starring: Rick Schroder , Jack Noseworthy , Michael Easton , Jayce Bartok , and Jennifer Jostyn Director: Paul Shapiro , and John Korty Manufacturer: Lance Entertainment ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items: ASIN: B0001JXPL6 Release Date: 2004-05-18 |
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Haunting Passion
Starring: Jane Seymour , Gerald McRaney , Millie Perkins , Ruth Nelson , and Paul Rossilli Director: John Korty Manufacturer: Lance Entertainment ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items: ASIN: B00007KK1Y Release Date: 2004-05-18 |
Amazon.com
Jane Seymour is very much in her Victorian-lace Somewhere in Time mood here, although the action is set in the present day. She and her husband (Gerald McRaney as an ex-football stud, now impotent would-be sportscaster) move into a modern house overlooking a bay, but the new place is troubled by strange sounds and cold breezes. "Do you believe in ghosts?", she asks pal Millie Perkins, but Jane isn't complaining. Soon our overheated heroine is buying old frocks and taking long showers in the company of her ghostly lover, who provides her with considerably more physical attention than her husband can. Director John Korty, a TV-movie veteran, guides the low-key spookiness with a steady hand, although the final act slips into out-and-out romance-novel silliness. Mainly it's a vehicle for Jane Seymour, whose heart-shaped face and impossibly flowing hair are utilized for maximum romantic effect. --Robert HortonCustomer Reviews:
Jane and a Ghost.......2004-03-14
Average customer rating:
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The Haunting Passion
Starring: Jane Seymour , Gerald McRaney , Millie Perkins , Ruth Nelson , and Paul Rossilli Director: John Korty Manufacturer: Lance Entertainment ProductGroup: DVD Binding: DVD Similar Items: ASIN: B00005U12I Release Date: 2002-02-26 |
Amazon.com
Jane Seymour is very much in her Victorian-lace Somewhere in Time mood here, although the action is set in the present day. She and her husband (Gerald McRaney as an ex-football stud, now impotent would-be sportscaster) move into a modern house overlooking a bay, but the new place is troubled by strange sounds and cold breezes. "Do you believe in ghosts?", she asks pal Millie Perkins, but Jane isn't complaining. Soon our overheated heroine is buying old frocks and taking long showers in the company of her ghostly lover, who provides her with considerably more physical attention than her husband can. Director John Korty, a TV-movie veteran, guides the low-key spookiness with a steady hand, although the final act slips into out-and-out romance-novel silliness. Mainly it's a vehicle for Jane Seymour, whose heart-shaped face and impossibly flowing hair are utilized for maximum romantic effect. --Robert HortonCustomer Reviews:
Jane and a Ghost.......2004-03-14
DVD: