Entertainment Weekly

A Carrie Nation

Entertainment Weekly

November 13, 1998

by James A. Martin

The patron saint of persecuted teens made her screen debut 22 years ago....

Think your high school days were hell? Consider Sissy Spacek in Carrie. As painfully shy teenager Carrie White, she's ridiculed in the locker room and jeered in class. She moves things when she thinks, and she has a religious-fanatic mother (Piper Laurie) who swoops about in a dark cape. Even when she's crowned the prom queen, it's just a ploy to drop a bucket of pig's blood on her. Based on Stephen King's first novel, Carrie was immediately recognized as a different kind of horror movie when it opened on November 16, 1976. Unlike most movie shockers, Carrie featured a tortured protagonist with whom audiences and critics could identify. "This girl... isn't another stereotyped product of the horror production line," wrote critic Roger Ebert. "She's a shy, pretty and complicated high school senior who's a lot like the kids we once knew." But after the sympathy came the shocks: In the rousing finale, a very cranky Carrie telekinetically kicks butt at the prom. The result: Carrie scared up $30 million at the box office and became an often imitated cult-favorite.Carrie was a breakthrough for Spacek, who got her first best actress nod (she would be nominated four more times, winning for Coal Miner's Daughter), and for director Brian DePalma, who would make 1983's Scarface and 1996's Mission Impossible. Laurie, in her first movie since 1961, earned a best supporting actress nomination. Amy Irving and Betty Buckley made their film debuts. And John Travolta, then in TV's Welcome Back, Kotter, caught Hollywood's eye in a small role as one of Carrie's tormentors. His next move: a white disco suit and screen immortality. In 1988, Carrie emerged as an $8 million Broadway musical with tunes by Fame's Michael Gore and Footloose's Dean Pitchford; it closed after five performances. MGM/UA hopes there's still some life in the troubled teen -- Carrie 2 is due in theatres next July. But Carrie's greatest legacy may be its Deliverance-inspired final sequence, which has inspired countless other scary movies, including Halloween (1978), Friday the 13th (1980), and Fatal Attraction (1987). What's so special about it? Let's just say that the scene is gripping.