Lifetime is already the home of the most wonderful guilty pleasure movies, so an adaptation of V.C. Andrews' “Flowers in the Attic” was a perfect fit. But the translation from gothic teen novel to campy TV movie lost a little of its
The bookish girls I knew in seventh grade, circa 1980, dropped Laura Ingalls Wilder like a rock in Plum Creek for “Flowers in the Attic,” a creepy novel by V.C. Andrews that has sold some 40 million copies worldwide, spawning a 1987 movie version that
Lifetime finally gifted the world with their highly anticipated remake of V.C. Andrews' Flowers in the Attic on Saturday night, making up for the extremely lackluster '87 film adaptation that left us unsatisfied. Telling the story of four children
Michele Weiss tells TheWrap about adapting the V.C. Andrews novels for Lifetime.
The bookish girls I knew in seventh grade, circa 1980, dropped Laura Ingalls Wilder like a rock in Plum Creek for “Flowers in the Attic,” a creepy novel by V.C. Andrews that has sold some 40 million copies worldwide, spawning a 1987 movie version that