Sarah Plain And Tall

VHS : Sarah Plain And Tall

Sarah Plain And Tall

starring: Glenn Close, Christopher Walken, Lexi Randall, Malgorzata Zajaczkowska, Jon DeVries
directed by: Glenn Jordan



 : Sarah Plain And Tall
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Audience Rating: G (General Audience)
Binding: VHS Tape
EAN: 9786302290677
Format: Color, NTSC
ISBN: 6302290678
Label: Republic Pictures
Manufacturer: Republic Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Republic Pictures
Release Date: 1995-03-21
Studio: Republic Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: 1991-02-03



Editorial Review:

Amazon.comThe most-watched made-for-television movie of the 1990s (50 million viewers upon first broadcast in 1991), this fine adaptation of Patricia MacLachlan's novel stars Glenn Close as Sarah, a Maine schoolteacher who responds to a Kansas farmer's newspaper ad seeking a bride. Set in 1910, the story follows Sarah's trial run as stepmother to the children of the widowed Jacob Witting (Christopher Walken). The tough part of the experiment is the conflicting expectations the would-be couple have over Sarah's role in the household. The kids, too, have their doubts about a substitute for their mother, and Jacob isn't ready, emotionally, for a new beginning. But in short order the strong-willed Sarah brings happiness and vitality into the house, and love and understanding eventually blossom between the two lonely adults. Everything is right about this Hallmark production, from a bright script cowritten by MacLachlan to Glenn Jordan's sensitive direction and a pair of first-rate leads making every moment worth watching. A wholesome tale from the heartland, this is a good movie for any viewing situation, from an audience of one to an entire family. --Tom Keogh

















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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - freedom writers
sarah,plain&tall
this book is about a woman named sarah who lives by the sea but planing to gets married to a farmer .But befor she can do that she haves to move all her stuff out of the house that she's living in on the beach then hop on a train & head to the country
with her cat seal & as she arrives at the train station
she is greeted by a wagon watch tacks her the rest of the way & when she arrives at the farm house she meets the kids & her new husbean for the first time
but she allready missed the sea & sand dun's then papa had & idea so he went to the barn & mad e a hay dun & her & the kides had a fun time & thay lived happly ever after I recomed this book because it's easy & a great mstory for younger kids



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Sarah,plain and tall
this book is about a woman who live on a beach & gets a offer from a man who is asking her to marry him but she lives by the sea & he lives in the country &she has a cat & he has a dog but she packs up all her stuff & heads for the country by train with her cat seal & when she arrives at the train station she is mett up by a wagion witch tacks her the rest of the way& when she gets there she allready misses the sea & the sand dunes so papa has anideal & he go to the barne &mack an hay dune & she slides down it withnthe kids & thay are all happy & she macks a bounch of pitchers of the country & colors of the sea & that macks her happy & she stays & thay live happly ever after I recomen this book becauseb it's easy & a great story for kides from 5th-7th grades



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - KCS SARAH THE PLAIN AND TALL
This is a very good book. It talks about a woman named Sarah go and live with a man named Jacob the kind hearted father of Anna and Caleb. After Caleb was born his mother died. They learned to live without her but still missed her a bit. This was a very good book that only took me 1hr. to read, but it was a fascinating book.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Kcs Sarah plain and tall
How would you feel if your mom past away when you were little and your father posted an ad for a new wife? The setting takes on a prarie by a farm. The main characters are Anna who is kind,good, and helpful, Caleb who is young, kind,and a good little brother,and Sarah who is plain, tall,helpul,and liked cats.
Anna,Caleb, and their farther are struggling without a mother to help out around the house and their father is very lonely and he doesn't sing anymore. so he puts an ad to make himself happier. the theme is you shouldn't blame your- self if something goes wrong. the meaning of the title is about Sarah being plain and tall, well basically describing what sarah is like.
the pacing of the book is kind of slow throughout the book so kind of boring. it's not really wrtten in a christian perpective. I think the author is trying to show us what life would be like without a mother or if you are trying to find a new mom. I woul recommed this book more to girls because I think they would understand this book to people who have had this experience.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - a review by Ralphy
I personally did not like this book because it did not catch my attention, but some people might disagree. Sarah Plain and Tall by Patricia Maclachlan tells about a family that lost their mom; so they find a new another mom. She will decide whether or not to live with them. First of all, their mother died when the youngest child, Caleb, was born. Equally important, the dad, Jacob, puts an ad in the paper for a new mom. The ad says how they need a wife and a mom. After that, a girl named Sarah responds to the ad in the paper. She writes letters to each of the kids and she writes Jacob telling him she will come by train wearing a yellow bonnet. Lastly, Sarah learns to love the family. Sarah decides to stay forever even though she misses Maine. Even though I did not like this book, some people may have other opinions.



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Joe Walker

If you want to protect yourself from a XSS attack, what characters should you escape? I've seen 2 recommendations:

  • ', ", <, > and & should be converted to ', ", <, >, &
  • Convert anything that isn't ASCII alphanumeric to &#xx;

I've seen the second recommended more and more recently. Which is best?

The argument for escaping all non-ASCII alphanumeric

It's a known security tenet that whitelisting is safer than blacklisting. If you're just escaping ', ", <, > and & then you're blacklisting, which isn't as safe as whitelisting.

There are some practical examples of how this can play out -

(I'm using $ to represent the injection point. This would probably crop up in a template something like this: )

If all the escape() function does is to escape ', ", <, > and &, then what if the user entered a data: URL? You could end up with the following output:

test

Which in case you can't do base64 in your head is equivalent to this:

test

Clearly this is bad - we've let a user XSS us even though we are filtering for XSS. There are many more examples that are similar.

The argument for escaping only ', ", <, > and &

The bad news is that more filtering does not help. If we enhance our escape function to encode every non-alpha, then we would get the following output:

test

Here's the bad news - the above works. (Look: test (if this script gets into your RSS aggregator, then you need a new RSS aggregator.))

Adding the extra filtering has had the following effect:

  • It's hidden the hole, so now we're less likely to notice it, and fall in.
  • It's wasted bandwidth

So how do we keep ourselves clear of XSS attacks?

The solution is to understand about insertion points.

The following insertion points, are ones that I believe are safe if ', ", <, > and & are escaped:

  • $
    (Where div could be p, h*, li, etc - things expecting textual content)
  • (i.e. somewhere else that expects textual content)
  • (needs different escaping rules)

I think it's likely that virtually any other insertion point is likely to be dangerous. Some examples:

  • (no amount of escaping will protect you, prepare to die)
  • $> (there are countless events we could latch into, including several non-standard, hard to find ones)
  • ... (JavaScript pops up in CSS in many places like width:expression(script_here))
  • ... (The example we used above)
  • (For similar reasons)
  • etc.

The key it to understand the environment into which we are allowing injection. The trend for separating content, style and action into separate files is good because it more clearly defines the environment, but that doesn't stop HTML from being able to embed CSS.

I once saw some code that was JSP containing Java containing HTML containing CSS and JavaScript containing SQL all on one line. An environment so confused that it contained it's very own security hole built right in.

Filtering in DWR

DWR version 3 is nearly cooked, and our escaping functions use the simpler escaping system of just escaping ', ", <, > and &. If anyone knows of any attack that a broader filtering system would protect people from, then please comment.

If you want to protect yourself from a XSS attack, what characters should you escape? I've seen 2 recommendations:

  • ', ", <, > and & should be converted to ', ", <, >, &
  • Convert anything that isn't ASCII alphanumeric to &#xx;

I've seen the second recommended more and more recently. Which is best?

The argument for escaping all non-ASCII alphanumeric

It's a known security tenet that whitelisting is safer than blacklisting. If you're just escaping ', ", <, > and & then you're blacklisting, which isn't as safe as whitelisting.

There are some practical examples of how this can play out -

(I'm using $ to represent the injection point. This would probably crop up in a template something like this: )

If all the escape() function does is to escape ', ", <, > and &, then what if the user entered a data: URL? You could end up with the following output:

test

Which in case you can't do base64 in your head is equivalent to this:

test

Clearly this is bad - we've let a user XSS us even though we are filtering for XSS. There are many more examples that are similar.

The argument for escaping only ', ", <, > and &

The bad news is that more filtering does not help. If we enhance our escape function to encode every non-alpha, then we would get the following output:

test

Here's the bad news - the above works. (Look: test (if this script gets into your RSS aggregator, then you need a new RSS aggregator.))

Adding the extra filtering has had the following effect:

  • It's hidden the hole, so now we're less likely to notice it, and fall in.
  • It's wasted bandwidth

So how do we keep ourselves clear of XSS attacks?

The solution is to understand about insertion points.

The following insertion points, are ones that I believe are safe if ', ", <, > and & are escaped:

  • $
    (Where div could be p, h*, li, etc - things expecting textual content)
  • (i.e. somewhere else that expects textual content)
  • (needs different escaping rules)

I think it's likely that virtually any other insertion point is likely to be dangerous. Some examples:

  • (no amount of escaping will protect you, prepare to die)
  • $> (there are countless events we could latch into, including several non-standard, hard to find ones)
  • ... (JavaScript pops up in CSS in many places like width:expression(script_here))
  • ... (The example we used above)
  • (For similar reasons)
  • etc.

The key it to understand the environment into which we are allowing injection. The trend for separating content, style and action into separate files is good because it more clearly defines the environment, but that doesn't stop HTML from being able to embed CSS.

I once saw some code that was JSP containing Java containing HTML containing CSS and JavaScript containing SQL all on one line. An environment so confused that it contained it's very own security hole built right in.

Filtering in DWR

DWR version 3 is nearly cooked, and our escaping functions use the simpler escaping system of just escaping ', ", <, > and &. If anyone knows of any attack that a broader filtering system would protect people from, then please comment.






Sarah Plain And Tall

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