Carrie put both Sissy Spacek and John Travolta into the universe of movies, no doubt about it.
Based on the first novel published by one of my many writing masters, Mr. Stephen King and directed by Bryan de Palma this movie couldn't go wrong in 1976, and still it can't go wrong in 2011.
Before we jump into the movie storyline and review, let's remember this film is "based" on the book, some of the argument lines are not on the film as well as some of the character original names, which were changed by God knows why reasons.
Carrie starts off at a gym locker room, where we find out how much the other kids hate Carrie visually stating the high amounts of bullying students must have gone through back in the day, and that's why Carrie's story remains so fresh until today, due to the unfortunate shocking reality leaded by thousands of stories of suicide & murder of students around the globe, students which didn't have Carrie's supernatural abilities. Soon after the opening credits we find out that Carrie has some powers. Like in other Stephen King book-movies, the supernatural aspect is only minor compared to the rest of the story, but it comes into play at the end. Carrie's mom (Piper Laurie) is an over-protective religious zealot who makes The Royal Tenenbaums seem normal. So Carrie tries to cope with her horrible life, but it's getting tougher and tougher.
Spacek is exceptional as Carrie, and I now know why she was nominated for Best Actress. Her emotions are real, not some fake tear drops that make us think she's sad. Either she has great motivation, or she's one of the best actresses of the century (or both!). Laurie was equally good as her mother who locks Carrie up in a closet everytime she thinks that Carrie has sinned. This movie wouldn't be half of what it was if the acting wasn't so great. When Carrie was sad, you were sad. When the other kids ridiculed her, you felt like you wanted to kill the kids. When she smiled, you smiled. Emotions that raw couldn't come from just any movie.
If you know me, I'm a stickler for character developement. Carrie didn't take much time, but from the opening scene you knew about Carrie and her weakness. So are the secondary characters; they're nicely developed even if their role isn't that major. Travolta had a miniscule role, but he was fine in it; it led to Grease and Saturday Night Fever.
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Catholic punishment was a thing in the film. |
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William Katt failed to be Luke Skywalker but he made it to Carrie. |
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Piper Laurie as the religiously insane mother. |
The prom scene has got to be one of the most memorable scenes from a horror movie. That red tint is awesome; it's like a premonition. In fact, the movie is full of premonition: the red tint, the freaky looking voodoo doll, "They're all going to laugh at you." I'm assuming that director Brian De Palma meant to put that in, so it just isn't about some supernatural powers, it's also about foreshadowing. Also, I dig that camera movement during the dancing.
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Sissy Spacek in the prom with the Greatest American Hero, yikes! |
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Die as a Christian! |
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Blood on thy hands. |
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Deadly blue eyes. |
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Crucifixion time! |
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Swine Blood bucket bath. |
The blood and gore wasn't held back, but they just put in what was necessary. De Palma obviously used some horror tricks from Hitchcock's masterpiece Psycho, mainly the music cue whenever Carrie is using her telepathy. Also, her school, Bates High, is another Psycho reference.
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Exploitation was still a thing to consider in the 70's. |
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The exploitation opening titles. |
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Opening titles, nude school girls exploitation. |
Carrie was also very creepy. It wasn't a thrill-a-minute, but at the ending, that was Scary with a capital S. The last ten or twenty minutes were scare-inducing for sure. That last jump scene in the dream...wow! It's still jumping at me. If there was one complaint I had to do about the movie, it's that it took too much time to get to main scene and the prom went on a little too long, but other than that it's a first class horrror/thriller that any horror buff needs to see.
This movie is definitely a classic meant for every movie freak out there, and even for us Stephen King's reader the movie is quite a deal. Add to that a wonderful soundtrack composed in its entirety by Pino Donnagio plus a couple of sung tracks by the wonderful voice of Katie Irving and you got one of the greatest horror films ever made, although it's a big budget movie it feels as it was an exploitation with the elements that made a movie a cult movie, you know some nudity, blood, action, good lines and a 70's style music score.
I happen to own the DVD released by MGM some years ago and both image and sound are pristine, besides it features interviews with the cast and a booklet describing the film production.
Definitely a must have for any Stephen King fan, or for any 70's horror movies fan and exploitation lovers.
Here's the movie trailer:
Stephen king, the man himself talking about his first book, the break through, Carrie!
1 comment:
Dejare mi comentario en español.
En los estados unidos principalmente no se tocaba algunos temas o simplemente se censuraba, es por eso que desde los años 30 y primeros años de los 80 realizadores como Roger Corman realizaron películas que cautivaron al público adolescente, ignorado por Hollywood que les englobaba en un cine infantil y familiar.
nachaldo
Pd. muy buen tema
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