Draft:Summer Girl (1983 film)

Summer Girl
Directed byRobert Michael Lewis
Screenplay byAJ Carothers and Caroline Crane
Produced byBill Finnegan, Roberta Haynes, Bruce Lansbury, and Edgar Lansbury
StarringBarry Bostwick, Kim Darby, Martha Scott, and Diane Franklin
CinematographyFred J. Koenekamp
Edited byLes Green
Music byAngela Morley
Distributed byCBS (United States and Canada) and Pro-Mart Video (VHS)
Release date
  • April 12, 1983 (1983-04-12)
Running time
96 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Summer Girl is a 1983 American made-for-television thriller film directed by Robert Michael Lewis that aired on CBS.[citation needed]

Plot

edit

The story revolves around a married couple who hire a live-in babysitter for their two young children during a summer at their beach house. The babysitter, named Cinni, portrayed by Diane Franklin, initially appears plain but transforms into a seductive and manipulative figure. She begins to take over the family, seducing the husband and winning over the children, with sinister intentions to replace the wife.

Cast

edit

Production

edit

Summer Girl was produced by Bill Finnegan. It was distributed by CBS. The movie was filmed entirely in Hawaii.

Release

edit

Summer Girl premiered on CBS television on April 12, 1983.

It was re-aired multiple times over the years, particularly during summer reruns or on cable channels dedicated to older movies or TV shows. After its initial airing, CBS re-aired it a few times in subsequent years.

Reception

edit

Summer Girl, while not a blockbuster or critically acclaimed, offers a snapshot of the television movie landscape in the early 1980s, where psychological thrillers with domestic settings were popular. While not as widely remembered or discussed as some other films of its time, "Summer Girl" is occasionally referenced in discussions about 80s TV movies, especially those involving sinister nannies or babysitter. It was part of a trend of made-for-TV movies that capitalized on domestic thrillers, appealing to a broad audience with its mix of suspense, drama, and a touch of the sensational. While it didn't achieve iconic status, "Summer Girl" contributes to the tapestry of 80s television cinema, reflecting cultural anxieties about family, trust, and the intrusion of external, manipulative forces into the home. See The Babysitter (1980 film). It's noted for its melodramatic elements typical of TV movies from that era, with a plot that might remind viewers of later films like The Hand That Rocks the Cradle (film), though "Summer Girl" predates it.

See also

edit

References

edit
edit