An Unfinished Affair

An Unfinished Affair

DVD cover
Directed by Rod Hardy
Produced by Dan Witt
Ronnie D. Clemmer
Richard P. Kughn
Bill Pace
William Shippey
Written by Rama Laurie Stagner
Dan Witt
Starring Jennie Garth
Tim Matheson
Leigh Taylor-Young
Music by Lee Holdridge
Cinematography David Connell
Edited by Richard Bracken
Distributed by ABC
Release dates
April 29, 1996
Running time
91 minutes[1]
Country  United States
Language English

An Unfinished Affair is a 1996 American television film directed by Rod Hardy. The film originally premiered on ABC and is now frequently aired on Lifetime.[2]

Plot

In Tucson, Arizona, Alex Connor is a college teacher whose wife Cynthia is diagnosed with cancer. As her health detoriates, he starts a short-lived affair with Canadian Sheila Hart, one of his art students. He soon regrets his actions and ends the affair immediately, but Sheila is not willing to accept that she is no longer his mistress. Alex's home life soon starts to look better, as Cynthia has gone into remission. Now, his only problem is Sheila, who has started her own revenge plan. Determined to win him back, she starts to terrorize him, even going as far as dating his son Rick to make him jealous.

Cast

Production

Garth has expressed her experiences on the film during a 1996 interview: "I had a good time with it. It's a good story with no hidden messages. It's a thriller, a suspenser. Pure entertainment. [..] It's always fun to play the bad girl. It gets kind of boring to be nice, you know?"[3]

Garth co-produced the film, which included that she took part in hiring the writers, directors and actors, "as well as the overall feel of the film. I like to be sure that they're going to be made into things that I want to be a part of. Because things can go easily awry, and you can easily end up with a typical movie-of-the-week formula."[3]

References

  1. Running Time The New York Times
  2. Lifetime
  3. 3.0 3.1 "'Unfinished Affair takes '90210' star Garth from 'Beverly Hills' to thrills" by Christy Slewinski. New York Daily News, May 5, 1996.

External links