Satan's School for Girls (TV Movie 1973) Poster

(1973 TV Movie)

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6/10
The bad parts are pretty bad, but the good parts are creepy as hell.
Anonymous_Maxine24 April 2005
This made for TV horror thriller is a lot better than it's ridiculous title would have you believe, which is really saying something since the title is actually a pretty apt description of what goes on in the movie. It starts out with a girl acting really strangely, running away something that isn't identified and then turning up dead. Her sister doesn't accept the police's quick decision to label it a suicide and close the case. Surely there is plenty of evidence to suggest that they are right, but then again, they don't take supernatural explanations into account so her sister Elizabeth decides to take the investigation into her own hands.

Suspicious that the girl's school that her sister attended at the time of her death may have had something to do with what happened to her, Elizabeth enrolls into the school to do some investigating of her own. I don't know how fresh the idea of that premise was in 1973, but it works pretty well here. There are some slip-ups, like when Elizabeth meets the Head Mistress for an interview and spouts some nonsense like "Picasso was a realist painter before he was an impressionist." Not that I don't accept that someone her age would have any knowledge about that (it is, after all, not exactly the kind of knowledge reserved for geniuses), it's just that it's so out of place in this movie. I guess I should respect such an attempt at three dimensional characterization though. Horror movies are, after all, historically lacking in this area.

I got Satan's School for Girls on a 10-movie collection that I bought for $15, since I have something of a love of old, crappy horror movies (and you can't beat that price!), otherwise I would never have seen it. To be sure, this is one of those movies that is actually worth watching but has a title that is incredibly efficient in making people want to see it. Who would want to watch a movie with a title like this? I imagine that's part of the reason that the remake with Shannon Dougherty came and went instantaneously with little to no attention. And this really is unfortunate, because the movie certainly has some tense moments. The scene where Elizabeth goes searching the basement for the room where the painting of her sister took place is wonderfully creepy. Even that painting itself is a great prop.

The psychology teacher in the movie is a little too obvious. I think it's safe to say that no character should ever act as evil or nutty as this guy did. When he's not threatening girls with a huge knife he's making rats go insane in his lab. This guy can NOT be well balanced. It actually is a pretty clever technique to have designed the cavernous basement like the rat maze in his classroom, but if the person acting insane turns out to be the bad guy then the movie is too predictable, and if they turn out to be completely innocent then it becomes too clear that the movie was trying to deliberately lead you in the wrong direction, which in turn requires a Scooby-Doo ending because they need to explain why we were wrong the whole time in thinking exactly what they wanted us to think.

The movie takes something of a downturn in the third act, as the cheesy acting starts to tip the scales against the creepy atmosphere, which is no longer creepy enough to justify overlooking how bad the acting is. There is a ludicrous scene where the professor can't get out of a pond because there are girls all around him poking him with sticks. If they had established earlier on that he can't swim, fine, but any warm-blooded human being, man or woman, would have simply grabbed onto the first stick that poked him or her and yanked the girl holding it right into the pond. It would not be hard to do, obviously.

But there I go nitpicking. I just have a hard time with scenes like that. It's like when someone takes a person hostage, holding a gun to their head while the whole police force stands with their guns aimed, and they all drop their guns like incompetent morons. In all my years of movie watching, only twice have I seen anybody acknowledge how effective it would be to just shoot the guy (one was RoboCop, and the other was Charlie Sheen in Navy Seals). You wouldn't even have to kill him, Shooting the gunman in the arm would usually not endanger the victim at all and would completely incapacitate the gunman from being able to fire.

There I go nitpicking AGAIN. Stop me next time, will you? I don't remember there being any shooting in Satan's School for Girls (although there is a gun), and there is little to no gore either, the movie is almost solely driven by its atmosphere, which most of the time is not very effective but a few times is VERY effective. For 70s horror, this is definitely one of the better ones (excluding the giants, like The Exorcist, which are, of course, in a class all their own). Certainly worth seeing for horror buffs.
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5/10
mediocre 70s late night horror show has its moments
funkyfry31 October 2002
TV movie (Aaron Spelling co-produced) delivers chills roughly along the lines of contemporary drive-in fare. We get a bevy of satanic schoolgirls, led by Thinnes as the visionary art professor who turns out to be Satan himself. We even get a wannabe Sacey Keach in the supporting cast. No nudity, actually a minimum of catfights, but surprisingly good suspense is generated a few times (though not at the film's conclusion, by which time everything is pretty much clear and obvious. Notably bad editing. The DVD from "Platinum Disc Corp" is from a very bad print.
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6/10
Where can I enroll?
BandSAboutMovies22 October 2017
Satan ran the early 70s. I first learned about Anton LaVey and the Church of Satan as a child by reading the TV Guide Book of Lists. They asked him what the most Satanic TV shows were and he replied with a list that included so many of my favorite shows. It scared me as a twelve year old — could I be taken by devil worshippers and be made to celebrate the Black Mass?

Made for TV movies reflected the Satanic bent of the early 70s. This Aaron Spelling produced, David Lowell Rich (Eye of the Cat, Airport 79 – The Concorde) directed affair brings the devil to the boarding school, along with plenty of attractive girls ready to give their souls to the Son of the Morning Star.

Martha Sayers is running from a mysterious stranger who may or may not be related to Torgo from Manos: the Hands of Fate. She locks herself in her sister Elizabeth's (Pamela Franklin, Necromancy, The Legend of Hell House, The Food of the Gods) house and hangs herself. Of course, the police just think it's a suicide. But we know better — The Salem Academy for Women had to have something to do with it. Martha's roommate tells Elizabeth to stay away, but she is having none of it.

She takes the name of Elizabeth Morgan and enrolls at the school where she's welcomed by Roberta (Kate Jackson!), Jody Keller (Cherly Ladd!) and Debbie Jones (Jamie Smith-Jackson from Go Ask Alice, who is married to Michael Ontkean, Sheriff Harry S. Truman from Twin Peaks). The fact that Alice and two of Charlie's Angels (Sabrina Duncan and Kris Munroe, I'll have you know) playing devils in a movie thrills me to no end. And throw in Alice and we have a movie!

Read more at http://bit.ly/2yALwjp
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one of my all-time favorite made-for-TV movies.
verna5528 October 2000
OK, everybody is always ragging on made-for-TV movies because yes, more often than not, they are really cheesy. But keep in mind made-for-TV movies are made-for-TV, so they are, of course, made on a much smaller budget. However, this is one TV film that rises above its low-budget status. This, for the most part, has to do with the supremely talented cast involved. '70's Scream Queen Pamela Franklin, fresh out of Richard Matheson's nail-biting, edge-of-your-seat suspense thriller THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE, stars as a young woman who enrolls in a distinguished all-girls' school to probe her sister's mysterious suicide. The plot reminds me of Dario Argento's horror classic SUSPIRIA, but this TV movie was actually made four years before Argento's film, so perhaps Argento pilfered from this little seen gem. Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd, before they became 'Charlie's Angels', co-starred as two of Franklin's fellow classmates. Incidentally, Jackson later played the Jo Van Fleet role of THE HEADMISTRESS in the 2000 remake. Aaron Spelling produced both versions.
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4/10
the lukewarm touch of evil...
Jonny_Numb7 October 2005
With good intentions and a title that's impossible to live up to, this early-70's movie of the week finds its strength in scattered moments of suspense and performances that give the hammy material every chance to transcend its lower tier. A pre-"Legend of Hell House" Pamela Franklin (cute as a button, a dead ringer for Thelma from "Scooby-Doo") infiltrates a girl's school to try to find out why her sister committed suicide; she is aided in her quest by a pre-"Charlie's Angels" Kate Jackson. The adults are, like, squaresville, and the student body seems to be harboring some far-out secret, which leads to a totally unsatisfying climax. The restrictions of network television show throughout–despite being set in an all-girls school, there is no flesh on display (not even skimpy negligee), and instead of throat-slashings, we have to make do with death by bamboo sticks.
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5/10
A Finishing School with a Dark Nature
Uriah4327 September 2018
This film begins with an attractive young woman named "Martha Sayers" (Terry Lumley) driving extremely fast down the highway with a look of complete fear upon her face. It's at this time that she spots a telephone booth and attempts to make a phone call but is subsequently frightened by the appearance of a man and drives off to her sister's apartment overlooking a beautiful lake. Once inside, however, something goes terribly wrong and her body is found by her sister "Elizabeth Sayers" (Pamela Franklin) later that afternoon. Not convinced that her sister committed suicide Elizabeth decides to go to the finishing school Martha had been attending to find out the real truth. What she doesn't count on, however, is the dark nature of the students and faculty there. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was an okay film for its time which benefited greatly from the casting of several attractive actresses most notably Kate Jackson (as "Roberta") and Cheryl Ladd ("Jody"). To that end, although it's definitely not a great horror movie by any means, it's worth a watch for those who might be interested in a film of this type and I have rated it accordingly. Average.
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3/10
a pre-"Charlie's Angels" gathering in a devil's den...
moonspinner5523 November 2006
Campy title for a rather mundane Aaron Spelling spook show has the sister of a suicide enrolling in a private school for young women to uncover the truth about what occurred there. Two of the students are Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd, future TV detectives (too bad David Doyle's Bosley isn't around to referee the cat-fights). If you're yearning for a "Charlie's Angels" episode about witchcraft and devils, this may be as close as you'll ever get. Unfortunately, the film is given such a blasé treatment, with listless direction and uninspired writing, that even one surprise about a character's true identity goes almost unnoticed. Purely from a filmmaking standpoint, this seems awfully undernourished, though it is interestingly cast and has moments of lowbrow fun.
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7/10
Much better than I expected
planktonrules23 September 2016
With a rather low score of 5.1 and a silly title, I expected "Satan's School for Girls" to be a lousy film. However, this made for TV picture actually hols up pretty well and I have no idea why its score is this low. In fact, I strongly suspect that this film was the inspiration for the Dario Argento classic "Suspiria".

When the film begins, Martha is on the run...being pursued by some unseen enemy. She eventually makes it to her sister's home but when Elizabeth arrives home, she finds Martha dead and hanging in the house! Martha had never been suicidal and despite the police ruling it a suicide, she decides to investigate. The trail leads to a weird 'girls' school (many of the actresses are 23-30) where there is a very strange sense of foreboding and some rather weird dealings. What is going on here?!

In many ways, it reminds me of "Suspiria". Both are set at a women's school and both have a great sense of foreboding instead of actually scary stuff happening most of the time. Both lead to similar finales as well. Plus, if you see it, you get to see "Charlie's Angels" stars of the future, Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd, as two of the girls enrolled in this bizarro school. Worth seeing.
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4/10
High on the cheese factor
AshenGrey25 March 2005
Warning: Spoilers
If you miss Charley's Angels, then this is the movie for you. It's got two out of three angels in this campy witchcraft flick.

Poor SALEM! The town just can't live down that unfortunate witchcraft hysteria from 400 years ago. So here's another Devil film for Salem. This movie was pretty goofy, but I liked how the students called the administror "Dragon Lady" and never referred to her as anything else.

I only ever saw two teachers in this film. The animal psych teacher was a mad sadistwhile the art teacher was a lecherous hippy. The headmistress (aka Dragon Lady) was a useless old drunk. The Salem School seems to have been a pretty big place and yet they seemed to have about 30 students (evidenced by the use of only two transport vans when they evacuated the school). I've also never heard of a college that uses alarm bells to signal the end of various classes.

It's a shame that no effort was made to restore this film. My biggest beef with this film is just how bad the DVD transfer was. It had vertical lines all over the place, very muddy color, and more pops and hiss than a winter hearth full of wet wood.
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7/10
Nifty little 70's made-for-TV horror item
Woodyanders29 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Feisty young Elizabeth (a fine and lively performance by the adorable Pamela Franklin) investigates the mysterious death by suicide of her sister at an elite all-girls school. It turns out said school is harboring a deep dark secret.

Director David Lowell Rich keeps the enjoyable story moving along at a constant pace as well as develops a reasonable amount of tension and presents a fun ooga-booga spooky atmosphere. This Aaron Spelling teleflick not surprisingly provides a pleasing plethora of tasty female eye candy: Kate Jackson as the sassy Roberta, Jamie Smith-Jackson as the sulky Debbie, Cheryl Ladd as the spunky Jody, Terry Lumley as the troubled Martha, and Gwynne Gilford as Martha's roommate Lucy. Moreover, there are solid performances by Roy Thinnes as hip art teacher Clampett, Lloyd Bochner as the stern Delacroix, and Jo Van Fleet as the batty dragon lady headmistress. The big final plot twist is pretty obvious and predictable, but at least does prefigure the similar "Suspiria" by a few years. Worth a watch.
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5/10
It's Alright
Rainey-Dawn7 September 2019
Elizabeth's sister was found hanging in Elizabeth home. Elizabeth does not believe her sister committed suicide so she joins the girl's school that her sister went to in order to conduct her own investigation as to what happened to her sister.

The title gives away the ending of the film. It's not a bad movie but not as good as I expected it to me - I had higher hopes for it.

5/10
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8/10
Unusual movie which has gone by unnoticed
lockwood-1030 July 2006
This is another movie which I have looked for over the years to see on latenight channels but is no longer available I believe. I really liked this because it had an overall scary plot running throughout the movie. Both of my kids, (Nate and Ryann like these types of movies and they are at the right age to spot good quality. I hope if anyone knows if this is still being shown around the country to let me know because I can't find it for anything. If you get a change to watch it, by all means do so. It will not let you down and is a little above a B grade movie. Look at how young all the pre Charlie's Angels are in this flick... Enjoy!
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7/10
A Tale Of Two Jacksons
robertconnor21 March 2005
Can someone take on the challenge of restoring and preserving all those 'made for TV' movies from the 60's and 70's? Here we have a curious masterpiece... a young woman goes snooping at a spooky American private girls' school in 1973, and gets more than she bargained for.

Pamela Franklin plays like a prototype Winona Ryder, short and short-haired amidst the tall, long-haired 'California' girls. Having spent much of her career playing skewed or disturbed British girls, here she is the 'straight' heroine, years before all those current Britishers took on the dialogue coach.

She confronts not one but TWO Jacksons, Kate and Jamie Smith-. Both were striking and imposing, both tall and long-haired... and when contrasted with poor Cheryl Stoppelmoor, both quite fascinating. Jamie is quite captivating playing the freaked and frightened Debbie. Kate is a mess of contradictions - beautiful yet straight-laced (check the night-gowns - Jamie sports a slinky red number, Kate is buttoned up in high neck and frills)... one Jackson sadly retired (as did Franklin - why?), the other unwisely shyed away from unsympathetic roles and found fame as a glam' detective (in polo-necks and neck-covering scarves).

Ultimately not the best entry in 1973's TV movie offerings, yet in the 21st century it's worth a look for the fantastic casting choices!
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5/10
Beware of beauty, brains, and breeding. It's all for the spawn of Bealzibub.
mark.waltz10 September 2015
Warning: Spoilers
Poor Terry Lumley. Driving around in a frantic state, trying to reach her sister by phone, and feeling like she's being stalked like some rat caught in a trap with a cat lurking nearby. Approached by some unseen creature of darkness, she begins to scream, and all of a sudden, she turns into what looks like a Dali painting, her thin face becoming as equally horrific as the fate she is about to meet. This sets up the rest of this somewhat silly 1970's T.V. movie which has a cult following and includes such familiar faces as Pamela Franklin (as the poor victim's sister), Kate Jackson (as a student who becomes Franklin's pal when she enrolls to try and find out what happened to her sister), Roy Thinnes (as a new wave thinker and art professor), Lloyd Bochner (as another eccentric professor), and in a rather campy part, Oscar Winner Joy Van Fleet as the headmistress nicknamed "The Dragon Lady". Van Fleet isn't exactly a dragon lady; In fact, she seems an unwilling participant in the mayhem and macabre goings on, and having given a few camp performances, she is far from as melodramatic as some of those past performances. Certainly, something terrible is going on in the school as half a dozen girls are found dead in the sinister looking basement, and nobody can figure out why, whether it was suicide or murder, and if murder, what kind of motive lead to it. To be honest, I frankly found it dull, and having seen it years ago at a more impressionable age, it doesn't hold up all that well. Many T.V. movies did better jobs with equally horrific tales, most memorably "The Devil's Daughter" and "The Initiation of Sarah", but frankly, they are all the spawns of "Rosemary's Baby".
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Underrated, spooky film
ehoshaw21 January 2001
I caught this on USA while I was home sick with the flu. Even though I was half awake and in a daze, I enjoyed it. Pamela Franklin was likable as a young woman who enrolls in the exclusive Salem Academy under a false name, in order to investigate the strange death of her sister Martha, who had gone to school there. Once she arrives, she meets up with strange faculty and students, and eerie occurences. There are great shots of Pamela crawling the hallways at night with a lantern in her hand as a storm rages outside, and there is an eerie climax. Catch this one if you can. I haven't seen the remake yet.
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5/10
Not as Enganging as I'd Hoped
peterphelps-732553 October 2020
A young woman returns home to find her younger sister hanging from her ceiling due to an apparent suicide. When she's not satisfied with that answer, she poses as a student at the boarding school where her sister attended to get some answers and see if, perhaps, she was murdered.

Satan's School For Girls isn't as much fun as the premise might suggest and mostly amounts to Pamela Franklin walking around the school at night with a lantern, trying to find something sinister. The ultimate reveal as to what's going on here feels anti-climactic and that's a shame, because the concept is really strong.

Being a TV movie, I'm sure there were some limitations, but story shouldn't have been one of them.
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3/10
Hot Actresses steal the show
edeighton2 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
My review of "Satan's School for Girls (1973)" (SPOILERS):

I never watched many made for T.V.. movies when I was a kid in the 1970's. I am pleasantly surprised by how good the ones we have reviewed in this group have been.

Kate Jackson, Cheryl Ladd and Aaron Spelling are all involved in this movie and then went on to make Charlies Angels later in the decade. For my money, Kate Jackson steals the show! She is captivating. She is beautiful, stylish, gives off a great energy and really carries the scenes she is in. But all of the girls in this movie are knockouts. Aaron Spelling seems to really have discovered a winning formula in this 1973 movie which he carries over to Charlies Angels later in the decade and then 90210 in the next decade: cast young attractive actresses and keep the story light and easy to follow.

The script is not bad. It plays more like a Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew episode than a horror movie. There are some intriguing concepts presented in this movie: modern experimental psychology used to break peoples' wills, the philosophy of satanism as an embracing of rejected people and ideas and the forbidden student-teacher sexual relationship.

The psychology professor, Delacroix, is the hero of the movie in a wired plot twist. He arranges the props from various school plays in the basement to make it resemble his rat maze. He was trying to wake the female students up from their stupor and make them realize that they were the rats in the maze being driven crazy and suicidal by the Devil/Professor Clampett. In the end, Delacroix is killed by the very girls he tried to protect.

The headmistress was another interesting character.She seems to have a split personality: on one side was the Devil's minion and on the other side she tried to protect the girls. In her first scene, she actually gave the main character, Elizabeth, the only weapon she would need to defeat the devil: a kerosene lantern. I grew tired of everyone incessantly referring to her as the "Dragon lady". It was cliche the first time and overdone throughout the movie.
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5/10
satan who?
gpolice_9713 March 2002
I would have to say, I like this film,even own it on Dvd....however, I dont classify it in the same category as friday the 13th etc....like the other reviewer here...why? because its a completely different type of film, its NOT a slasher film..more of a thriller...maybe something Dario Argento could have made better with his touch of atmosphere..

this film was a made for tv movie, so it doesnt have gore, or anything truly objectionable....and the Devil never makes an appearance..hahaha

its a plug to get you to watch the movie...see it though....its a cool flick....that and Cheryl Ladd is SOOOOOOOOOOOOOO hot!!!
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7/10
The ending ruined it
diegofer-5568911 September 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The more you think about it, the dumber it is. So Satan wants them to kill themselves for him. And the girls that previously refused, went away and killed themselves anyway. So what changes? Mission accomplished from the start of the movie then. Maybe he needs "8 sacrifices at the same time". But then why go for the new girl? He didn't have time to win her over and manipulate her like he had with the rest, every girl in the campus has fallen for him. Look at the way that girl looks at him the one that tells him that "there are still 8 girls in the campus", so much admiration. She worships him, even the dragon lady does as he says. They are all under his control. So why go for the only one in the campus that isn't? Even if he wants her specifically for some reason not stated in the movie, he made no attempt in the entire movie to connect with her. They had 1 conversation in class in front of everyone and that's all.

And then he tells them to wait while there is fire in the room and won't even hurry to catch the girl, and why go after her anyway, she needs to "sacrifice willingly" so there is no point in catching her. So they all die then, but they weren't 8 girls like he needed, just 7, so now he needs another 8 and do it all over. It's just stupid, Satan is stupid lol

Weakest scene in the movie is the death of Professor Delacroix. He fell on a pond and some girls started to poke him with sticks to stop him from getting out and... he died from that. Slowly drown in there I guess? That's just... I don't even... Girls poking him with sticks, really? Even if he can't swim and the movie forgot to state this, couldn't he have grabbed one of their sticks and get out of there? He surely could have overpowered any of them and gotten out out of there. It's just very hard to not roll your eyes on that part, that's all.
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5/10
Some chilling moments without much else going on
Vomitron_G21 March 2013
'Satan's School For Girls' really looks like a cool vintage seventies satanic horror-thriller, but regardless its über-cool title, that doesn't necessarily make it a great movie. When Elizabeth Sayer's (Pamela Franklin, delivering a decent performance) sister commits suicide, she works her way into the private school her sister went to. It doesn't take too long for her to discover other girls have been dying too. The concept is nice and it's not a boring watch, but the mystery is a little weak and the denouement is underwhelming. Features a bunch of good-looking seventies beauties, but no skin and no blood. Some ladies do die, and those scenes are pretty much the only shocks this film has to offer.

Interesting trivia: during the '70s, legendary producer Aaron Spelling ('The Love Boat', 'Dynasty', 'Beverly Hills 90210', 'Melrose Place',...) produced several made-for-TV horror movies, and with having watched at least one more of them (the amusing 'Cruise Into Terror', 1978), I strongly suspect they all might be enjoyable watches. So is 'Satan's School For Girls' to some extent, even if it's a quite forgettable film. Makes me curious to see what the remake from 2000 (also made-for-TV and produced by Spelling) might have turned into.
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6/10
Starts off with a bang, ends with a whimper.
Space_Mafune21 January 2006
That's the whole problem with this film. The opening scene is fantastically done with Terry Lumley as Martha Sayers on the run from some unseen but clearly deadly menace that it seems can get to her no matter where she runs and/or hides. It's too bad this level of suspense and thrills could not be maintained when it was star Pamela Franklin's turn (as Elizabeth Sayers) to be terrorized at the school for girls her sister had previously attended. Sure a nice effort is made by a very talented cast including Roy Thinnes, Kate Jackson, Jamie-Smith Jackson and Lloyd Bochner to keep the excitement going but in the end this falters and loses that hard edge it had when it opened. Perhaps some of this is the fault of the limitations inherent in this appearing on television in the 1970s but honestly I feel the real reason is that they reveal too much in terms of clues and visuals making the previously terrifying and mysterious menace seem much less threatening when it is finally revealed, in fact it proves somewhat anticlimactic.
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5/10
Milder than the title would suggest.
dgaither20 May 2004
Don't be fooled by the title or the sanguine cover art. This is a moderately suspenseful movie that probably wouldn't make a 10-year-old lose any sleep. As a result, it's not a bad "spooky" movie to watch with the family. Although it's unrated, it would be at most PG for some mild violence. The only people who might be offended by this would be those who find the whole concept of witches and devil worshipers offensive and they probably aren't looking at this comment anyway. It's also not a particularly outstanding film and the main attraction, I think is the chance to see Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd pre-Charlie's Angels. I doubt I'll remember anything about this movie a year from now.
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9/10
A Little Disappointed With Ending
riverheadestelle25 November 2005
Another of those flicks inspired by the success of 'Rosemary's Baby'. When that movie came out, the nation developed an obsession or preoccupation with the devil or the whole concept of evil in general. I even remember seeing a '60 Minutes' segment at that tender age which reported that while many people were less religious or didn't believe in God, many others believed in the Devil. At least, that was the synopsis given by Mike Wallace's opening segment voice-over.

'Satan's School For Girls' is one of those ABC titles that can be easily found today compared to, say, 'The Screaming Woman'. Sometimes you pick up a bit of trivia by watching these old television movies. When I watched it a few years ago, I didn't realize that Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd, who was using her old surname of Stoppelmoor, had acted together before 'Charlie's Angels'.

Kate Jackson is superb in her role as the level-headed, innocent Roberta, who appears to be the only person Elizabeth can trust. I have a problem with the ending, though, which gives the viewer the impression that Roy Thinnes, as the cult leader, not only has special powers but isn't of this world at all. But hey, it's a movie about the devil, black magic, satanism and the disturbing reality that good doesn't always win - at least, not totally. That was another thing which became common in entertainment: allowing evil to win. I guess this was a product of the nation's loss of innocence and disillusionment with events like the Kennedy and King assassinations, Vietnam, and the Watergate scandal. We all sort of 'grew up fast' after those events.
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7/10
A Guilty Pleasure
bensonmum225 January 2005
Warning: Spoilers
  • A young girl seemingly commits suicide for no reason. Her sister Elizabeth (Pamela Franklin), feeling that something was terribly wrong, takes an assumed name and enrolls at the all-girls' school her sister attended. In short order, two more girls commit suicide. With the help of her friend Roberta (Kate Jackson) she is determined to get at the bottom of what's going on.


  • Most people I know do not care for this movie as much as I do. Oh, I certainly can see the problems with the movie, but I tend to overlook them. There are a few creepy scenes and I always get hooked by the story (what little story there is). It's kind of like a poor man's Suspiria. Most of the real plot points, however, can be seen a mile away. For example, do you really have to stretch your imagination to guess what might be going on at a 300 year old school in Salem, MA where eight of the former students were accused of being witches? I know it's a toughy, but just try to guess. Still, this doesn't take away from the fun I always have with Satan's School for Girls. Also, it's a real blast to see future Charlie's Angels Kate Jackson and Cheryl Ladd before they became famous.


  • For me, though, it may be more of a nostalgia thing than actually enjoying a good movie. I can remember seeing this when it originally aired in 1973. I was 9 years old when it aired that September. Satan's School for Girls scared me so bad I couldn't sleep. I really wish they still made TV movies like they did in the 70s.
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5/10
average horror movie
myriamlenys31 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"Satan's School" isn't very good ; neither is it very bad. In order to succeed as horror, it would have needed a sharper screenplay, a tauter plot and a more satisfying ending. The movie also needed a better insight both in the dynamic of (mostly) female groups and in female psychology. Girls and young women have their own ways of talking, quarrelling, questioning, dissembling, gathering information, making friends and so on ; here, "Satan's School" does not strike the right tone.

The ending too was unimpressive. One would expect the Devil to have some bad qualities - well, duh - but here he seems ready to relinquish his plans and retreat at the first sign of trouble. All in all he seems more like a shrinking violet (albeit a shrinking violet capable of withstanding flamethrower heat) than like the Prince of Darkness. Boo ! That's not the American way ! Winners never quit ! And quitters never win !

On the other hand the movie is not entirely without interest. I thought it worked best whenever it became some kind of metaphor or allegory for the workings of a cult. In the movie, lonely and socially inept girls become attracted to a charismatic male leader, who twists and manipulates them like wax. The result is an army of besotted slaves ready to kill and die for the Great Guide.

These would-be witches may look well-washed, well-dressed and well-heeled, but they're sisters to the female followers of Charles Manson.
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