“Scarface” director Brian De Palma had made about ten
feature-length films and several shorts when he made his first classic horror
chiller “Carrie” with Sissy Spacek, Piper Laurie, John Travolta, William Katt,
Amy Irving, Nancy Allen, and P.J. Soles.
If you look closely, you’ll spot “Miami Vice” regular Michael Talbot,
who played Detective Stan Switek, cast as Travolta’s accomplice. This was author Stephen King’s first novel
that Hollywood adapted, and he approved of De Palma and “Ghost Story” scenarist
Lawrence D. Cohen’s adaptation.
Performances are uniformly top-notch, with Spacek garnering an Oscar
nomination for Best Actress while Laurie received a nomination for Best
Supporting Actress. These two make a
convincing daughter and mother combination. Spacek is a revelation when she goes full-tilt
telekinetic in the final quarter hour, devastating friends and foe alike. She
walked off with the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best
Actress. Amy Irving and Betty Buckley
are sympathetic as Carrie’s friend and mentor.
Nancy Allen and John Travolta play a villainous who orchestrated an
evening of mayhem with pig’s blood galore. “Carrie” is all about the terrible
effects of bullying.
Our poor, disadvantaged heroine grows up with a tyrannical
mother whose husband abandoned her and turns into a radical Christian who sees
sin in her innocent daughter.
Furthermore, Carrie is an outsider at Bates High School, and her only
friend is her gym teacher, Miss Collins (Betty Buckley of “Wyatt Earp”), who
struggles to help. Things get off to
quick start after gym class one day when Carrie has her first period in the
locker room shower. Virtually everybody
ridicules Carrie’s ignorance and they sling a storm of tampons and feminine
napkins at her. Honestly, Carrie has no
idea what is happening because her prudish, repressed mother has told her
anything about growing up and the changes that occur with puberty. Miss Collins reprimands the girls and
threatens to revoke their prom privileges if they don’t spend time after
classes with her performing calisthenics.
Sue Snell (Amy Irving) regrets her behavior and arranges a prom date
between her handsome football hero boyfriend, Tommy Ross (William Katt of “Butch
& Sundance: The Early Years”), who reluctantly goes along with her best
intentions scheme. Meanwhile, Sue’s
class mate Chris Hargensen (Nancy Allen of “RoboCop”) smolders with rage from
the treatment that Miss Collins accords her.
Only in the 1970s could a high school teacher assault a student by
slapping her face in front of her peers and getting away with no
repressions. Secretly, Chris plots
revenge with her class mate Norma (P.J. Soles of “Halloween”) and boyfriend
Billy Nolan (John Travolta of “The Devil’s Rain”) and Billy’s buddy Freddy
(Michael Talbot) to fix the prom vote so Carrie and Tommy will win. At the moment that Carrie receives her
flower, Chris plans to tip a bucket of swine blood so that Carrie is drenched
from head to toe in the gore.
What nobody knocks is that with the onset of her period,
Carrie has developed telekinetic powers.
We see some foreshadowing of this awesome power early in the shower
scene and later in the principal’s office when Mr. Morton (Stefan Gierasch of
“High Plains Drifter”) mispronounces Carrie’s name as Cassie and the cigarette
ashtray fragments. Later, at home with
her warped mother, Carrie shatters a mirror with an etching of Jesus in the
background. Tommy has to harass Carrie
before she accepts his invitation to go to the prom with him. Predictably, Carrie’s mother is dead set
against her daughter donning a dress that will prominently display her ‘dirty
pillows’ and plans some retribution of her own.
Meanwhile, Miss Collins suspects initially that Sue and Tommy are up no
good with Sue’s decision to skip prom and her insistence that Tommy take
Carrie. The night before all Hell breaks
loose, Chris, Billy, and Freddy place the bucket of pig’s blood directly over
the stage. Freddy and Norma decide to
fix the prom couple vote without anybody knowing any better.
Naturally, things go smoothly for the evil villains, but
they are in no way prepared for the electrifying outcome. After she is covered in the hog’s blood,
Carrie unleashes all her telekinetic powers and all but burns down the
auditorium where the prom occurred. She
walks out of these fireworks. When Chris
and Billy try to run her down with his car, she turns her powers on them, their
car rolls several times, ignites in a fireball explosion and incinerates
them. Talk about a spectacular way to
die! At home, Carrie washes off all the
swine blood and seeks her mother’s loving arms for comfortable only to scream
when mom buries a knife in her back.
Carrie has another telekinetic bout and skewers her mom with seven
kitchen utensils. Suddenly, Carrie’s small
white house collapses around him, and the sole survivor of this nightmare is
Sue. Sue goes to the flat, level site of
Carrie’s house to put flowers on the for sale sign and an arm from Hell soars
up from the rocks to seize her, and she awakens to find her own mother
consoling her after experiencing a nightmare.
The ending will startle you because this is the last thing that you
expect. Four years later, Sean S.
Cunningham appropriated the shocker of a finale in his gruesome but seminal
slasher “Friday the 13th” with a small boy exploding from the calm
surface of a lake to stab at a girl after the heroine had taken refuge in a
boat to escape the villainess at Camp Crystal Lake.
Director Brian De Palma never wears out his welcome with
this 98-minute melodrama about a young girl and her supernatural powers and
went on to exploit it in his next film “The Fury.” “The Fury,” however, was not the memorable
experience that “Carrie.” A belated, a
non-related sequel, “The Rage: Carrie 2” (1999), followed along with a 2002
television remake in 2002 that never became
a weekly series, and more recently Kimberly Peirce’s remake based on
Cohen’s screenplay hit theaters with Chloë Grace Moretz as the eponymous and
Julianne Moore as her disturbed mother.
Incredibly, the “Carrie” remake surpass De Palma’s classic while it updates
the action. For example, during the
shower scene, Chris shoots a video of Carrie groveling in the shower while the
girl rain down tampons on her as they chant “Plug it up!”
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