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Carrie
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Directed by Brian De Palma.
This classic horror movie based on Stephen King's first novel stars Sissy Spacek as Carrie White, a shy, diffident teenager who is the butt of practical jokes at her small-town high school. Her blind panic at her first menstruation, a result of ignorance and religious guilt drummed into her by her fanatical mother, Margaret (Piper Laurie), only causes her classmates' vicious cruelty to escalate, despite the attentions of her overly solicitous gym teacher (Betty Buckley). Finally, when the venomous Chris Hargenson (Nancy Allen) engineers a reprehensible prank at the school prom, Carrie lashes out in a horrifying display of her heretofore minor telekinetic powers. Many films had featured school bullies, but Carrie was one of the first to focus on the special brand of cruelty unique to teenage girls. Carrie's world is presented as a snake pit, where the well-to-do female students all have fangs -- even the reticent Sue Snell (Amy Irving) -- and all the males are blind pawns, sexually twisted around the fingers of Chris and her evil cronies. The talented supporting cast includes John Travolta, P.J. Soles, and William Katt. One of the genre's true classics, the film was followed by a sequel in 1999, as well as by a famously unsuccessful Broadway musical adaptation that starred Betty Buckley, the movie's gym teacher, as Margaret White. ~ Robert Firsching, All Movie Guide
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lopezdashlopezdash The Ten Most Anti-Christian Mov ...
by lopezdash in Intersection
is neutral about it.
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"From the Entertainment and Culture blog over at New York Magazine comes a list of THE TEN MOST ANTI-CHRISTIAN MOVIES OF ALL TIME. What a title, eh? 10. Carrie (1976) After the titular protagonist gets her first period at school, her crazy, devoutly Christian mother locks her in a closet and tells her to pray, explaining that only sinners menstruate (Wikipedia says this is false). Luckily, Carrie has telekinetic powers, which she uses to toss her mom across a room, electrocute her principal, and burn down her high school's gymnasium, killing hundreds of students. Parents, take note.Video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =yJe0iVo8y3A 9. Priest (1995) Antonia Bird's film — which caused a flash of protest when Miramax released it — follows Linus Roache's gay priest as he struggles agains ... " [More]
erico_77375erico_77375 The Great Movies: Carrie
by erico_77375 in erico_77375 Blog
loved it.
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"There will never be an ultimate scary movie since fear is a subjective idea. Fears come from experiences that have caused great tension and anxiety. The films that scare us can only grab the ones that can relate to the emotions on screen. Perhaps what I see as being a great horror story is horror of the monster of the film, but the forces around it that creates the monster. Film purists would probably suggest James Whale's Frankenstein. I suggest Brian DePalma's Carrie.In the film's first scene, we are inside a high school shower stall in which we close into a rather plain girl taking a shower. The music is somber and almost Stepfordish. Then, as we close in to Carrie's face, her hands run down her body as she bathes then comes up bloody. Even to those who knows that she's having her period are automatically jolted by the sight of blood due to the suddenness of it. But the ghoulishness of the following scene isn't the blood. In fact, the blood is not even th ... " [More]
jlgdrdjlgdrd Spiv's Journal: AKA
by jlgdrd in Wicked Fun
hasn't rated it.
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""Spiv " is a word the British use for someone who gets by on their wits (Americans might say "hustler" or "con") and could describe Dean Page's struggles with upward mobility in Duncan Roy's AKA. From the true story of Page's intuitive rise to comfort and privilege Roy has spun an affecting fable on self-respect, wealth, aristocracy and true class. Think of merging Pygmalion, The Talented Mr. Ripley and Catch Me If You Can, but resulting in a film successful on its' own terms. AKA is foremost about the caste system that makes self-esteem difficult if you must earn your own livelihood. Compared to the didacticism of Brecht and Shaw it is subtle and surprisingly revelatory, without the usual depiction of the moneyed class as depraved and menacing. On the contrary, in AKA we find unlikely heroes, numerous villains, plenty of blame to go around and spivs at every plateau.Early in the film, Dean's father kicks him out, ostensibly because he is gay, or perhaps because ... " [More]
JymkataJymkata Re: Most suprising endings?
by Jymkata in What An Ending
liked it.
"Luckily, I saw The Sixth Sense on opening weekend before I had even heard that it had a surprise ending - that movie blew me away. The two movies that had surprise endings that still hold value for me are Carrie and the remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. They both freaked me out and I still have a fondness for the way they ended. " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: Horror Nudity
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
"In "Zombie", besides 'Ms Perfect Body' on the boat, there is also the Doctor's wife in one of the better shower scenes i have seen... shortly before her untimely demise... Yes, June, you are entirely correct about the inequality of female vs. male nude scenes in MOST movies! Not just Horror! I think there is a very good reason for this! Charlton Heston is NEARLY naked throughout MOST of "Planet Of The Apes" but, other than that, I cannot think of too many examples! I CAN, however, think of some more memorable female nude scenes in Horror films! (imagine that!)... I wanted to mention when 'Annie' flashes her boobs at 'Michael' in "Halloween" as well as the extensive 'shower/lockeroom' opening scene in "Carrie"... THIS one probably HAS to be the BEST! Although it is not really 'gratuitous'... as this scene is quite important to the overall story! And it is depicted pretty much as described in the novel... But STILL... Na ... " [More]
Dr_GorDr_Gor Re: Stephen King Movies: Favor ...
by Dr_Gor in HORROR MOVIES 101
loved it.
""Carrie" is one of my favorite movies of ALL time! (Nancy Allen naked... mmmm!) Other than that, I thought "The Stand" fucking ROCKED! My FAVORITE book AND MOVIE! ... and, yes, June, I DID see "The Ghost Hunters" at the Stanley Hotel in Estes Park, CO! It is spooky as hell! (I have been there!)... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Stephen King's first novel was also his first work adapted for the screen and, with the arguable exception of The Shining, is still the best, thanks largely to a remarkable performance from Sissy Spacek as Carrie White and a surprisingly subtle, intelligent presentation by director Brian De Palma. De Palma wisely doesn't focus on Carrie's strange power to move objects with her mind in the first act. Instead, he emphasizes her miserable existence as a high-school outcast with a remarkably awful home life, and Spacek's performance brings Carrie to painfully vivid life. Carrie White personifies every high-school student who didn't fit in, and Spacek makes her sympathetic without making us wonder why people pick on her; when Carrie finally takes her revenge, Spacek transforms her into a monster with a strange dignity, at once terrifying and heroic. De Palma presents the story in clear, well-paced fashion, for the most part avoiding the all-too-obvious homages to other filmmakers that often mark his work and (with the exception of the split screen for Carrie's rampage at the prom) laying off distracting visual trickery, letting his cast and Larry Cohen's screenplay do the work. Often regarded as a watershed of '70s mainstream horror, Carrie is at the same time one of the truest and most painfully perceptive films about the high-school caste system; nothing would touch it in this regard until Todd Solondz's Welcome to the Dollhouse in 1996. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



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