Carrie (1976) Movie Review
Carrie (1976) Review
"Carrie (1976)" Overview

Rating: R
1976
Cast and Crew
Director : Brian De PalmaProducer : Brian De Palma,Paul Monash
Screenwiter : Lawrence D. Cohen
Starring : Sissy Spacek,Piper Laurie,Amy Irving,William Katt,John Travolta,Nancy Allen,Betty Buckley,P.J. Soles
I might be the only person in the world who thinks Brian DePalma’s 1976 classic
thriller Carrie (now out on DVD) is one of the most overrated, disappointing
horror films of all time, but I stand behind my review, and I swear I can knock
down just about any argument its defenders throw. This is my third viewing of
the film. Every time I watch it, I find major problems in the story for all
the same reasons.
Carrie is the tale of a high school senior named Carrie White, aptly played by
Sissy Spacek, who spends her days at school as the center of nearly every cruel
ridicule and her hours at home with a constricting, sadistic, fanatically
religious mother (Piper Laurie). Let’s just say the mother is like a female
version of Sergeant Hartman in Kubrick’s Full Metal Jacket, and Carrie is the
distressed Private Pyle.
The movie and the novel by Stephen King open similarly with a shower scene.
Director Brian De Palma takes some major risks in this opening, filled to the
rim with full frontal nudity of teenage girls. It takes nerve to begin a movie
with such graphic detail, and I admire his courage. Carrie realizes she has
great telepathic powers, which come in handy after her fellow students grab the
final straw during the film’s disappointing finale at the senior prom.
The middle of the story simply involves lots and lots of backstabbing. The
audience can only assume from the implications and plot revelations that Carrie
White has had a rather cloudy history as a person and student. The movie never
really explores Carrie White, though. Instead, we just see the same events
repeated as the movie slowly urges towards a blood soaked final act. In a
story where the main character murders her fellow students and teachers because
of a boiling rage and years of hatred, the audience should be able to
understand her. But of course, we never do.
I like the movie more than I liked the book because it is more visual and less
confusing. Unfortunately, screenwriter Lawrence D. Cohen does not perform any
miracles with his script. We never care about anyone in the story; when the
violent climax transpires, instead of terror and amazement, we feel bored and
perplexed.
Carrie is not a terrible movie. It has a good sense of style and vividly
builds momentum. But the movie is not scary; it's just violent, abhorrent. It
contains all the necessary ingredients to make for an appetizing, suspenseful
creep show, but it never delivers.
Reviewer: Blake French





