Growing up under terrible circumstances in a loveless home, a girl who finally finds happiness refuses to let anyone take it from her.Growing up under terrible circumstances in a loveless home, a girl who finally finds happiness refuses to let anyone take it from her.Growing up under terrible circumstances in a loveless home, a girl who finally finds happiness refuses to let anyone take it from her.
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaThe video game Josh is playing is a poor-quality version of the 1997 video game GoldenEye 007 which was made for Nintendo 64.
- GoofsWhen Sadie steals Dylan's action figures, her backpack is unzipped as she leaves the classroom, it is then zipped when she comes out the door in the next scene.
- Quotes
Sadie Connell: [to Elana] You were bad, Grandma. Very bad. And you upset my mom. You deserve what you get.
- SoundtracksWhisper Wind
Written and composed by John DaFarla
Performed by Gabrielle Graves
Played during the opening titles
Featured review
This is a disheartening story of a troubled young girl who is played admirably by the young actress Emma Hentschel who plays an 11 year old school girl named Sadie Connell with a very troubled mind. Young Sadie's mind plays tricks on her that she is not loved when in fact her mother Theresa Malcolms (Fiona Gublemann) and her step father Aaron Myers (James Gallanders) are deeply in love and want to join their two families together. Aaron has a teenage son of his own named Josh (Mikael Conde) who quickly identifies that his younger step sister is not simply quirky but quite troubled and he brings to his father Aaron's attention some of the strange things he has witnessed about his younger step sister Sadie.
This is not a suspenseful made for TV film, nor is the young Sadie believable as a cold-hearted and premeditated psycho killer, but once the family comes to terms that Sadie (and her parents) are in dire need of some family counselling and psychiatric help the tail end of the film becomes more realistic and the closing few scenes in the film remind us that not all families live a normal life, and yet other families struggle with mental illness and how to cope with it.
The film may not end up on your preferred personal happy ending theme, but it will leave everyone with somethings to consider and paying more attention within our own family dynamics that require family discussions on whether to seek external support(s).
I give this made for TV film a 6 out of 10 simply for the decent and somewhat realistic way that the film handled the mental illness issue.
This is not a suspenseful made for TV film, nor is the young Sadie believable as a cold-hearted and premeditated psycho killer, but once the family comes to terms that Sadie (and her parents) are in dire need of some family counselling and psychiatric help the tail end of the film becomes more realistic and the closing few scenes in the film remind us that not all families live a normal life, and yet other families struggle with mental illness and how to cope with it.
The film may not end up on your preferred personal happy ending theme, but it will leave everyone with somethings to consider and paying more attention within our own family dynamics that require family discussions on whether to seek external support(s).
I give this made for TV film a 6 out of 10 simply for the decent and somewhat realistic way that the film handled the mental illness issue.
- Ed-Shullivan
- Sep 23, 2019
- Permalink
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $1,500,000 (estimated)
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