Burned at the Stake

Burned at the Stake

1981 ""
Burned at the Stake
Burned at the Stake

Burned at the Stake

4.8 | 1h28m | R | en | Horror

In 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts, young Ann Putnam accuses several residents of being witches, and they are tried and put to death. In 1980, young Loreen Graham is on a school outing to the Salem Witch Museum when a wax figure of a man from 1692 comes to life and accosts her. It seems that she may be the reincarnation of Ann, who has accused the man's 5-year-old girl of witchcraft and the girl is scheduled to be burned at the stake. Loreen must fight being possessed by Ann Putnam and confront the evil minister from 1692 who is consorting with Ann to falsely accuse people of witchcraft.

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4.8 | 1h28m | R | en | Horror | More Info
Released: August. 21,1981 | Released Producted By: Alan Landsburg Productions , Country: Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

In 1692 in Salem, Massachusetts, young Ann Putnam accuses several residents of being witches, and they are tried and put to death. In 1980, young Loreen Graham is on a school outing to the Salem Witch Museum when a wax figure of a man from 1692 comes to life and accosts her. It seems that she may be the reincarnation of Ann, who has accused the man's 5-year-old girl of witchcraft and the girl is scheduled to be burned at the stake. Loreen must fight being possessed by Ann Putnam and confront the evil minister from 1692 who is consorting with Ann to falsely accuse people of witchcraft.

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Cast

Susan Swift , Albert Salmi , Guy Stockwell

Director

Charles Adair

Producted By

Alan Landsburg Productions ,

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Reviews

HumanoidOfFlesh In the Salem of 1692,a group of witches are burned at the stake.In present-day Salem,the spirit of young witch Ann possesses schoolgirl Loreen Graham during a class trip to the museum.Loreen then enters a cross-temporal battle to stop the evil Reverend Samuel Parris sending another innocent victim to the stake."Burned at the Stake" by Bert I.Gordon is a pretty tame witchcraft horror in the vein of "Crowhaven Farm".There are some huge lapses in logic,the characters appear and disappear with ease and there is really no resolution if witchcraft is being real or not.There is very little blood and absolutely no nudity,so fans of exploitation cinema will be disappointed.6 stakes out of 10.
Steve Nyland (Squonkamatic) Bert I. Gordon's BURNED AT THE STAKE, inexplicably titled THE COMING on the British made video I managed to see, is essentially a chick-flick horror movie tapping into both THE EXORCIST and the legendary Salem Witch Fiasco with an interesting angle on time travel. Others have described the plot in enough detail, my interest in how the film essentially boiled down into a clever little manipulation aimed at 17 to 25 year old females who still remember the angst of their adolescent years. It's quite watchable, has some decent shock sequences, but ultimately raises more questions than it answers when viewed in a contemporary light that sees through the film's contrivances.For instance, you have to wonder about any horror movie that casts a 17 year old girl as a 12 - 14 year old who's age is never really established. At one point lead actress Susan Swift -- who is superb, given the material -- is playing hopscotch when I realized she was perhaps a bit too old for that sort of thing. Or at least a bit too well developed as the film takes great pains time & again to provide her with costuming that seems to be more interested in showing us how she was maturing into an attractive young lady. They tap into the Linda Blair thing by having her spend the bulk of the film either dressed up as a Puritan serving girl, a schoolgirl, or running around present day Salem in her nightgown so much that you wonder why nobody seems to notice & ask if she needs a ride home.She also spends an awful lot of the film writhing around on the floor in a demonic frenzy, which is where I suspect a lot of the interest in the film lies. Then the movie goes out of it's way to be respectable, showing it's true colors of having it's cake and eating it too by lacking the traditional nudity and explicit gore that early 1980s horror movies are so well known for. Yet make no mistake, the film is an exploitation exercise, albeit one in surprisingly good enough taste to appeal to a female audience who will very quickly come to identify with the poor young thing as she realizes that she is a modern day reincarnation of one of the young hysterical liars at the focus of the Salem Witch Fiasco. Then there is the scene where she sits on the steps of her school bus unsupervised while the rest of her class is being given a tour of a colonial era haunted cemetery, the improbability of which is only underscored by having her teacher literally struck dead from above by a coincidence of the most extreme kind.Then again all of the adults in the film are ineffectual, stupid, or at best well-meaning but ultimately wrong. All that is except for one of the resident present day witches who walks around dressed like Elvira and is the only one with any hope of getting to the bottom of the mystery at hand. Which is, how can a 17th century Puritan farmer suddenly find himself transported to 1981 era Salem? The farmer is the only truly sympathetic character in the film (even the local investigative journalist carries a flask of whiskey with him for a quick nip to get him through some research work) and yet the filmmakers have the clod invade the young woman's bedroom where he is understandably shot at point blank range by her mother, who doesn't seem to understand that good Massachusetts liberals don't keep loaded handguns in their bed stands. The scene is creepy but for the wrong reasons, since after all this is supposed to be a 12 to 14 year old girl. Couldn't he have just invaded the kitchen while she was fixing a snack?Perhaps this is the key to understanding the film, which is more or less a young woman's fantasy vision of a horror film world, replete with cobblestone streets, Gothic churches, cloistered old cemeteries, fetching costumes, and authority figures who are too caught up in their adult function roles to understand her inner turmoil. Good old Albert Salmi has a thankless role as a police officer who is nice enough to re-unite our heroic witch with her "familiar" Rottweiler hound but intellectually ill-equipped to understand what is going on around him. He's like an ineffective father figure, concerned and empowered but ultimately unable to comprehend what he's found himself in the middle of. The finale also has enough fire & brimstone yet ultimately fails to answer the basic question at the heart of the film: Was there actually a supernatural force at work in Salem in 1692? Damned if I know.5/10
JHC3 In the seemingly endless quest to find well made, well acted horror films, it is all-too-rare to find one that even comes remotely close to hitting the mark. Needless to say, I was very pleasantly surprised when I stumbled across "Burned at the Stake" on a U.S. cable network while I was flipping channels. The premise is reasonably simple. In 1692, young Ann Putnam (Swift) is the most vocal witness against alleged witches, leveling baseless charges against anyone who earns her displeasure. Manipulating her for his own ends is Reverend Parris (Peters) who also serves as the court's guide on matters pertaining to witchcraft and Satanism. Things get complicated when Ann starts accusing members of the Goode family of witchcraft. Salem (of 1980 or so), Loreen Graham (also played by Swift) begins having unusual visions shortly before she visits the Salem Witch Museum. A strange man in seventeenth century garb tries to accost her there and the building. He continues to stalk her while strange phenomena begin to involve her more and more. Soon, it appears that she is becoming possessed by the spirit of Ann Putnam. Unfortunately, further description gets rather involved and would give too much away. Though the film is not action-oriented and would likely be of little interest to many viewers, the performances are good and the seventeenth century dialogue used in the film's many flashbacks sounds very convincing. The production values are solid with the possible exception of some of the special effects. In a side-note, the film's technical advisor was Laurie Cabot, Salem's official witch. Viewers who appreciate a well-made, atmospheric, but understated horror film may appreciate this. The writer/director, Bert I. Gordon, has had a long career in horror and science fiction filmmaking and is best known for his work on a number of "big bug" films and similar works years earlier.
Barnaby Marriott As a fan of Susan Swift's OTHER and much better known reincarnation movie - 1977's Audrey Rose - I was eager to see The Coming. It took me ages to find a copy of the video, and when I did locate one in a second-hand shop, I had to spend £10 to get it! But I was not disappointed. I thought it to be a highly intelligent and original horror movie, which dealt superbly with the fascinating 17th century Salem witch hunts. As Loreen Graham/Ann Putnam, Susan Swift was brilliant, and I am amazed that the film is barely heard of anywhere in the world. I strongly recommend that you try and see it.