Reacting to *Carrie (1976)*

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Hayley & Stella

Hayley & Stella

Күн бұрын

We react to Carrie (1976) on Max. I don't know if we're ready for Prom...
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Edited by: Hayley
#firsttimewatching #moviereaction #carrie #stephenking #sissyspacek #piperlaurie #amyirving #nancyallen #williamkatt #johntravolta

Пікірлер: 431
@kevinburton3948
@kevinburton3948 Ай бұрын
29:16 Because it isn't a statue of Jesus; it is St. Sebastian. A Christian Saint and martyr killed when he refused to renounce his Faith during the persecution of Christians- tied to a tree and shot with arrows. This is why when Carrie kills her Mother- Mrs White dies with a smile on her face- because she has now become a martyr like her religious Icon St. Sebastian.
@fuzzballzz36
@fuzzballzz36 Ай бұрын
You're right, it has to be Sebastian with all the arrows. It's Jesus in the book and in 40 years of watching this film I've never noticed the difference.
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
And she has a St Orgasm first.
@Serai3
@Serai3 Ай бұрын
LOL, not according to Piper Laurie. The actress says the mother died the way with that smile for exactly the reason all those noises she was making would make you think. 😆
@robertyeah2259
@robertyeah2259 Ай бұрын
@@Serai3But it is true that the statue is Sebastian and not Christ. But yeah Marge was busting a nut at the thought of meeting God.
@Serai3
@Serai3 Ай бұрын
@@robertyeah2259 Oh yeah, I knew it wasn't Jesus the first time I saw it. Catholic here, so Sebastian was quite familiar to me. It's funny how she chose a statue of a Catholic saint when she's clearly one of those weird holy roller types.
@BouillaBased
@BouillaBased Ай бұрын
The book confirms that Tommy was the first fatality; he died when the bucket hit him in the head.
@adgato75
@adgato75 Ай бұрын
Poor guy. He was a good kid.
@3DJapan
@3DJapan Ай бұрын
Then later he became The Greatest American Hero.
@borntogazeintonightskies
@borntogazeintonightskies Ай бұрын
I always assumed he was knocked unconscious then died in the fire.
@Blazingstoke
@Blazingstoke Ай бұрын
@@borntogazeintonightskies For the movie, you're probably right. It's just that in the book, there were _two_ buckets of pig's blood, one for each of them. The one intended for Tommy never flipped over, it just dropped - the weight of all that blood plus the bucket was enough to kill him.
@Warlocke000
@Warlocke000 Ай бұрын
@@3DJapan Believe it or not.
@PlonkBloop
@PlonkBloop Ай бұрын
In the 70's directors actually gave the actors room and time to act. I think we're so used to movies jump scaring us and cutting away every 5 seconds to keep us stimulated that to you guys it seems like scenes "linger on". For that reason an amazing performance like piper laurie's is almost entirely lost on the both of you. I also feel like it's okay to not have a hero in every movie you watch. You don't have to agree with the choices of the characters or spend so much time trying to find the "good people".
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 Ай бұрын
The idea that she criticized De Palma, a world class director, and his "shot composition" shows such ignorance it's depressing.
@mahmudmurad4655
@mahmudmurad4655 Ай бұрын
@@yournamehere6002 Yesss, that was really shocking since this is one De Palmas best. and being him one of the best. And when she said cinema has evolved...like wtf, most of the pictures and cinematography now are trash except fex exceptions.
@JCWiley2300
@JCWiley2300 11 күн бұрын
PREACH
@AndyBestHP
@AndyBestHP Ай бұрын
Gen X Brit here, fun fact, physical punishment of students was only made illegal, or at least was only enforced, right as I entered secondary school in 84/85. We had two teachers fired for it as it just hadn't sunk in yet that they really could not put hands on us.
@TheNightBadger
@TheNightBadger Ай бұрын
I remember that too. I think it was phased out but only made illegal in 1987. Different times.
@adgato75
@adgato75 Ай бұрын
Depends on the state. I was paddled at school twice in 1986. I graduated in 1993 and my state still had corporal punishment.
@robertombricen7966
@robertombricen7966 Ай бұрын
Yes, in my country also around 87, 88 it was normal.
@neilmcdonald9164
@neilmcdonald9164 Ай бұрын
​@@adgato75the others before you are talking sbout uk schools.BTW allowed in fee-charging schools for about a decade longer🎩
@shampoovta
@shampoovta Ай бұрын
Had my PE teacher in like 84 brag to us how in his younger days he put a kid in the hospital for saying "Did you ring daddy-O?" When he called his name. He was a dick. 😄
@Uncle_T
@Uncle_T Ай бұрын
Oooooooh yes the shorts were definitely that short in the 70's, for men and women alike. :)
@kinokind293
@kinokind293 Ай бұрын
I can vouch for that!
@paul1979uk2000
@paul1979uk2000 Ай бұрын
Same in the UK when I was a kid at school in the 80's lol.
@Mildredpotka
@Mildredpotka Ай бұрын
STOP COMMENTING THAT EVERWHERE. IT'S CREEPY AF.
@jesses5463
@jesses5463 23 күн бұрын
@@Mildredpotka Also, it should be noted that you are a privileged wh1te, which is beyond creepy.
@AshLee92490
@AshLee92490 Ай бұрын
The teacher thought Sue was trying to ruin Carrie's moment because she saw her boyfriend kissing Carrie when they were on stage and she started running towards it, except Sue didn't even seem to care about the kiss and was only trying to save Carrie...
@jhornacek
@jhornacek Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek (Carrie) and Piper Laurie (Carrie's mother) both got Oscar nominations for this film. At the time it was unheard of for a horror film to get Oscar nominations, let alone for acting. This was also directed by Brian dePalma and his first financial success.
@BouillaBased
@BouillaBased Ай бұрын
It's fantastically ironic that Piper Laurie played the role so over-the-top because she thought the film wouldn't amount to anything. Not only did it get her an Oscar nomination, but it revived her career, which had been non-existent for more than a decade.
@jhornacek
@jhornacek Ай бұрын
@@BouillaBased At the time, horror movies were not seen as prestige films, or something to do to pad your resume. They could be successful but most people were not seeing them to look for great acting performances.
@TwilightLink77
@TwilightLink77 Ай бұрын
Unless you count The Exorcist as the first horror film to win a Oscar
@jhornacek
@jhornacek Ай бұрын
@@TwilightLink77 Yeah, that's true, although The Exorcist only won for Best Screenplay and Sound, but it was nominated for a bunch of awards, including some actors. The Exorcist is a strange "horror" film as for a lot of it, it presents as a normal family drama.
@hotflesh66
@hotflesh66 Ай бұрын
I believe DePalma's first financial success was the film Sisters with Margot Kidder which is how he got the film Carrie.
@LiirThropp2687
@LiirThropp2687 Ай бұрын
That music as Carrie is walking up on stage is heartbreaking. That's the only time in her life she ever got to be happy or enjoy anything. And even that got ruined. One of the few horror movies that made me cry.
@guitarman8462
@guitarman8462 Ай бұрын
And to think " Carrie " was Stephen Kings first book . He almost threw it away , but his wife convinced him to get it published .
@njt2347
@njt2347 Ай бұрын
"Were everyone's shorts really that short back in the 70s." Yes. And not just the girls. Go check out any 70s NBA game.
@mztweety1374
@mztweety1374 Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@theshadowfax239
@theshadowfax239 Ай бұрын
Hot pants baby!
@dread_kaathulhu4903
@dread_kaathulhu4903 Ай бұрын
In the book Carrie didn't take it easy. After she burnt down the gym with everyone in it, she started walking home. As she was walking through the town, she destroyed probably about half of it, killing hundreds of people.
@mztweety1374
@mztweety1374 Ай бұрын
Steven King taught me very early on never pick on the quiet kids😳
@vivalapsych
@vivalapsych Ай бұрын
I think some here might attest that bullying of the 70s knows no peers.
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Ай бұрын
Back in the 70s, principals, teachers, coaches etc. could get physical with students… that was like a normal thing at that time
@paullandis5524
@paullandis5524 Ай бұрын
You guys are I think are the only reaction video of this movie that I’ve watched that actually knew that Tommy and Sue were trying to help her you would be surprised on how many people think they are in on it
@thetranquilitycafe
@thetranquilitycafe Ай бұрын
I was going to post the same thing. I saw the film when it first came out, and I never thought they were involved.
@paullandis5524
@paullandis5524 Ай бұрын
Yeah I probably watched 20 reactions to this movie over the years and I can’t remember one who actually knew that they were trying to help her
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
I wonder what I would think as a first time viewer. If so many people think this it's possible there were mixed messages that people who kind of grew up watching this wouldn't catch.
@AshLee92490
@AshLee92490 Ай бұрын
I think it's a mix of because she IS friends with Chris and participated it makes it harder to trust her, but also, in modern filmmaking, a lot of movies WOULD have had the twist of Sue being in on it all along, so watching this film today, a lot of audiences would be on a defensive mindset in protectiveness of Carrie...
@charlize1253
@charlize1253 Ай бұрын
I always thought it was obvious, but so many reactors miss it. The scene that they all miss is when Carrie compliments Tommy's poem and the teacher mocks her, and Tommy curses at him under his breath. He doesn't quite defend her out loud, but he doesn't like it.
@alanhembra2565
@alanhembra2565 Ай бұрын
I was spanked in school by a principal. Also had a teacher threaten to split a chalk board with my skull. Physical discipline was big in the 80’s.
@paul1979uk2000
@paul1979uk2000 Ай бұрын
Yep, same in the UK in the 80's, but it started to change in the mid to late 80's I think, because a lot of parents were complaining about the abuse teachers were giving to kids, basically, some were having a bad day and took it out on the kids lol. Anyway, I think the law changed in what teachers can and can't do, where today, things have swung in the other direction that teachers have little to no powers over kids and the kids take advantage of that. Oh and yes, I've had the spanking treatment as well lol, as well as other things like the cane, the chalk duster thrown at me and even shows lol, it was a different time in what teachers could get away with.
@charlize1253
@charlize1253 Ай бұрын
I was in elementary school in the 70s, and saw multiple fistfights. I saw boys throw rocks (hard) at an unpopular boy. Boys weren't disciplined for openly groping girls. Bullying and harassment were looked at very differently back then. And teachers then could legally spank, slap, and paddle students.
@lanolinlight
@lanolinlight Ай бұрын
Y'all didn't get it. Measuring such a film as CARRIE so prosaically and "logically" goes against its operatic, emotional design. Whatever genre one might assign to it, it is fundamentally a movie about the turmoil and rage of a lonely teenage misfit. The "suspense" draws from her emotional fragility and what hostile forces will assail it. How will she respond? If you're watching the film to judge its efficiency in delivering shocks, you are asking it to be something far less interesting or enduring. That said, movies like CARRIE were designed for the big screen in a darkened theater, eons before social media distraction/fragmentation.
@manjiimortal
@manjiimortal Ай бұрын
One thing to note is that in Stephen King's writing, bullies tend to be portrayed as absolute psychopaths. One of the kid bullies in It was presented as being one in the novel, taking pleasure in slowly killing insects and small animals, for example.
@joehoy9242
@joehoy9242 Ай бұрын
Taking pleasure in the suffering of another is pretty much the definition of both.
@vytallicaq.6881
@vytallicaq.6881 Ай бұрын
I went to high school back then, and yeah, even the guys had to wear gym shorts that short. It seemed normal back then though. We associated the longer ones with being old-fashioned.
@cayanne3420
@cayanne3420 Ай бұрын
Yeah, only some people were laughing. A lot of it is up to interpretation, but it is confirmed that the teacher wasn't laughing, that was in Carrie's mind. And personally, I believe the couple from another school that Tommy and her were hanging out with weren't laughing. They had no reason to.
@AshLee92490
@AshLee92490 Ай бұрын
You also have to understand that times were different then. You can't go in with a modern mindset on something from a different like the 70s...
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 Ай бұрын
You can say that 'til you're blue in the face, but this is the way they do it---never understanding context, time period, intention. They have no ability to see things without imposing their moralistic sensibilities and hyper-sensitivities on things.
@arsiejackson2958
@arsiejackson2958 Ай бұрын
Right. Reactor on the left os unbearable
@fernandomendez2709
@fernandomendez2709 Ай бұрын
Piper Laurie who plays Carries mother was nominated as best supporting actress for the oscars and she said at some point that she accepted the movie because she tought it was a comedy and not a horror movie.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko Ай бұрын
That is one of my favorite anecdotes about this film. And supposedly even when she learned that it was a horror movie, she still mentally played her role as if it were a comedy. Years later, Piper Laurie & Sissy Spacek would reunite to play sisters in _The Grass Harp,_ and in that one it was Piper who was the flighty one, and Sissy who was stern (though at least not psychotic).
@Warlocke000
@Warlocke000 Ай бұрын
"These are fully grown adults." While that is true, you should take a look at yearbook pictures from back in the day, up to the early 80s. A lot of those seniors look at least that old, while the football players look like they're pushing 40! And, yes, the shorts were that short... on a lot of the guys, too... to say nothing of the mesh shirts.
@edgarcia4794
@edgarcia4794 Ай бұрын
I was in high school when Carrie came out. I took my girlfriend and three of her friends to go see it. They all left the movie super pissed off as they'd all thought Carrie was a homely looking wierdo that should have expected AND accepted the hard time she got. They hated that because they would have joined in the "teasing" they would be considered the bad guys and probably would have been killed for it. ME?? I'd thought Carrie was cute and hot and having ESP made her through the roof even cooler.
@BouillaBased
@BouillaBased Ай бұрын
Oof, hope you spotted those red flags from your girlfriend: her attitudes and her friends!
@edgarcia4794
@edgarcia4794 Ай бұрын
@@BouillaBased Yeah. big time.
@alexandervelez9507
@alexandervelez9507 Ай бұрын
i hope they became better people.
@donaldjz
@donaldjz Ай бұрын
I liked the girl from MEAN GIRLS because she had ESPN
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 Ай бұрын
It's kind of amazing, because Sissy Spacek was beautiful
@DanGamingFan2406
@DanGamingFan2406 Ай бұрын
The first Stephen King novel, the first to be adapted, and still one of his best works yet. That prom scene is rightfully one of the most infamous and imitating scenes of all time, it still gives me chills.
@arthurgoonie4596
@arthurgoonie4596 Ай бұрын
Also one that he didn't like and threw in the trash
@TwilightLink77
@TwilightLink77 Ай бұрын
@@arthurgoonie4596and also the one his wife encouraged him to continue.
@rnw2739
@rnw2739 Ай бұрын
​@@arthurgoonie4596and also the sole reason he became the success he is now. Without 'Carrie', King wouldn't be known today.
@auerstadt06
@auerstadt06 Ай бұрын
Carrie has a psychotic break after the bucket incident, and only imagines everyone laughing.
@jmag579
@jmag579 Ай бұрын
Nancy Allen who played the bully Chris was also Robocops partner. 💫
@dq405
@dq405 Ай бұрын
"Film evolving as an art-form has killed a lot of those [funky] things you notice." No, I'm sorry, but that's beyond untrue. Composition and camera-work in films achieved levels of brilliance right from the start of the medium -- look at Murnau, von Sternberg, Dreyer. A director like de Palma, influenced by Hitchcock, knows what he's doing, and his choices are aesthetic decisions. You can quarrel with his decisions (many of us do!), but they are the product of craft and deliberation; they are not "funky" mistakes.
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 Ай бұрын
Yeah, she's incredibly stupid. She acts as if the 70's were the stone age, and people were just learning how to walk upright.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko Ай бұрын
DePalma is probably my #1 favorite visual director of all time (although this may be my least favorite film of his). Every shot in every one of his films was meticulously planned, and I just love the extreme dedication to craft.
@ms.j3029
@ms.j3029 Ай бұрын
Carrie is terrifying because of the cruelty and isolation. Modern movies often make cruelty feel outlandish or over the top in some way. But here the students are openly, unapologetically cruel. Yes, they get outlandish too. But there is a simplicity to their cruelty which is all to relatable. We've all had that moment where, even for a moment, somebody just wanted to be be cruel and didn't care. And we all know the feeling of isolation Carrie goes through. Be it at home or school. That sense of private despair, desperate for resolution, but terrified to admit itself. We relate to those twin pains so much that, even though Carrie objectively murders people and without mercy even to those who were kind, we are reluctant to condemn her -- because it would mean condemning a part of ourselves that has already been judged, if only in our past. Stephen King uses Carrie to amplify the feelings of isolation, despair, and cruelty we all know in a kind of evil form of magical realism.
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
The fact that you find subtlety in how King presents bullying is highly amusing.
@15blackshirt
@15blackshirt Ай бұрын
The actress playing the lead bully, Nancy Allen, also starred in the first three RoboCop films. John Travolta followed this up with a starring role in Saturday Night Fever. Director Brian de Palma also directed the remake of Scarface. He and George Lucas shared an open casting call for this and the first Star Wars film
@kinokind293
@kinokind293 Ай бұрын
The great Brian De Palma directed this, and he knew how to take his time and get exactly what he wanted. Those odd little touches were exactly what he wanted. They were no mistake. Film theory has changed very little since the 70's. It wasn't the stone age, after all. And the great directors always know what tools to use to get the result they want. Dutch angles, asymmetrical framing, shadowy vs. flat lighting, depth of field, soft focus, slow motion, split screen (all of which De Palma employed here). . . Check out the work of other great directors. De Palma is a big Hitchcock fan, and borrowed some of his techniques. Mood was the goal. The prom scene takes all the time it needs to build suspense. And when you're not in a hurry you can take your time establishing mood. It's not the destination, it's the journey. One of the problems with modern audiences is their often short attention spans and expectation of fast pacing and formulaic jump scares. That's how we got Michael Bay. Heaven help a Gen-Z who tries to read a 150 year old novel where hundreds of pages are spent describing whaling practices or an internal monologue. . . Sorry about the ranting. Oh, FYI: Sissy Spacek did her own stunts. She really was walking slowly in front of that wall of flame in the prom scene. I think that slo-mo shot of her coming out the gymnasium doors is one of the creepiest in all of film history.
@gswithen
@gswithen Ай бұрын
Brian DePalma is a very accomplished filmmaker and all his shot choices are very intentional. He is a known fan of Alfred Hitchcock and the slow motion sequences are a staple of his filmography. Watch Dressed to Kill, Blow Out, The Untouchables, Body Double. Modern horror films aren't even in the same ball park as the classics.
@AnnaB22
@AnnaB22 Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek is amazing in "Coal Miner's Daughter" based on the life of Country Western Singer Loretta Lynn. Sissy sang all those songs herself. I wish you guys would react to that movie.
@robertbunting3117
@robertbunting3117 Ай бұрын
The book/movie that almost wasn't. King had gotten through most of the writing of this and threw it in the trash. His wife Tabitha came home ,saw it, and pulled it out and read it. and then convinced him to keep going with and she helped him write what teenage girls were more like, that was mostly what King hated about it, he wasn't getting them down realistically enough. So...Thank you Tabitha.
@pollyparrot9447
@pollyparrot9447 Ай бұрын
The wife's advice was rubbish.
@aguycalledkwest
@aguycalledkwest Ай бұрын
The artist who made the "hideous" Jesus statue was Sissy Spacek's husband Jack Fisk .....
@dq405
@dq405 Ай бұрын
Jesus? Do you mean the Saint Sebastian statue?
@jesses5463
@jesses5463 23 күн бұрын
I don't know why people keep calling this Jesus when it's obviously not Jesus.
@smavtmb2196
@smavtmb2196 Ай бұрын
Carrie's mom was the real villan/ monster. I find this movie extremely sad/tragic. Carrie could have had a fantastic life had she been raised differently. Her abilities were incredible. In a different reality she could have been an X-men or Marvel superhero. Everything would have been very different if Carrie's mother wasn't a cruel twist religious lunatic, Its no suprise Carrie finally snapped. She had been bullied/traumatized by her mother her whole life and had little self worth. The school bullies only made her trauma PTSD worse pushing her over the edge.
@imnotabotrlyimnot
@imnotabotrlyimnot Ай бұрын
No, much the opposite, her mom is the only one who knows what's going on with Carrie and is trying to prevent tragedy from happening. I get most people don't like how she's going about it, but she's just doing the best she knows how. The mom always seems to get the bad rap in this, but the villains in this movie are the other kids.
@jesses5463
@jesses5463 23 күн бұрын
Carrie was the spawn of Satan. She didn't just "snap". This was inevitable after she started sinning..
@warrenbfeagins
@warrenbfeagins Ай бұрын
Sissey Spacek is beyond good. She is awesome in everything she's ever done.
@guitarman8462
@guitarman8462 Ай бұрын
Also Sue follows Carrie to the house where she was born & Carrie looks up at Sue and says " You Should Have Left Me Alone ". And then she dies.
@rexwilliams7643
@rexwilliams7643 Ай бұрын
I know it's lame now but the hand coming out at the end was one of the first 'shock' endings. When I saw this at the cinema in '76 the entire audience jumped out their seats when it happened, me included. Oh such an innocent time we lived in back then LOL
@Mike-rk8px
@Mike-rk8px Ай бұрын
I saw “Carrie” the weekend that it opened in 1976. I lived in Manhattan and the lines to get into to see it were incredibly long. If you’ve ever been to a movie in NYC you know it’s not unusual for people in the audience to yell things at the screen (like if you went to see The Rocky Horror Picture Show). There were 4 big macho black men sitting in front of me and my parents, and they were totally into the movie and making comments, usually insulting the people who were mean to Carrie. At the end of the movie when the hand comes flying out of the grave, I saw pretty much everyone jump. But one of the big macho guys in front of me yelled really loud in a terrified voice: “OH SHIT!!! That bitch ain’t never gonna be right again!!!!”, and the audience burst into laughter.
@michaelg2529
@michaelg2529 Ай бұрын
Were teenagers really this bad? In the seventies, when there were no anti-bulling laws, yeah they were. I was there. Bullies were forgiven and dismissed, "boys will be boys". However, I didn't know that it was even worse for some girls. This is, sadly, not an exaggeration.
@charlize1253
@charlize1253 Ай бұрын
I was in elementary school in the 70s, and saw multiple fistfights. I saw boys throw rocks at an unpopular boy. Bullying was looked at very differently back then.
@yournamehere6002
@yournamehere6002 Ай бұрын
People are bullies online now, and guess what? All these sanctimonious people who are anti-bullying are the most bullying people out there, who want to isolate, cancel and ruin reputations if they don't conform to group think. But to them, that's not bullying.
@jesses5463
@jesses5463 23 күн бұрын
@@charlize1253 I've taught my kids to bully the hell out of other students. Better be the bully than the bullied. Nobody messes with my kids.
@sca88
@sca88 Ай бұрын
Saw this as a kid in the theater and it actually affected me as much as seeing the Exorcist and Texas Chainsaw Massacre a few years earlier when i was real little kid. Btw I met Linda Blair in 2018 and got to talk to her a while about how she traumatized my childhood.
@kingdavid_tech
@kingdavid_tech Ай бұрын
One of the best horror classics!!!!
@michaelg2529
@michaelg2529 Ай бұрын
LOL. One last post. Here is a test to see which grandparents lie and which grandparents you can trust. Ask them if this is how kids really behaved in the 70's. The grandparents who say "Yeah, we were stupid and did stuff like that" those are the ones you can trust. AND if they also say "But don't ever let me catch you doing anything that dumb!", hug them and love them forever.
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
You'll definitely prove that people's personal experiences will obviously vary, but that's hardly a groundbreaking revelation.
@ericb9252
@ericb9252 Ай бұрын
Hayley: "I haven't seen Ferris Bueller" Definitely add it to the reaction list.
@smcthatisme
@smcthatisme Ай бұрын
Yes, the short shorts were accurate for the time. Google 70's NBA players images and see how the men wore them! 😅
@izzonj
@izzonj 13 күн бұрын
I met Sissy Spacek once and she is the sweetest person ever and so petite. Such makes it such brilliant casting to put her in this movie
@noirgatherer
@noirgatherer Ай бұрын
Also the house at the end was destroyed by a meteor shower Carrie pulled down from space. They actually filmed the meteor shower but it looked terrible so you just see hints of them coming through the ceiling. Carrie did it once before when she was a child but that scene was also cut.
@ennuieffect
@ennuieffect Ай бұрын
The Stephen King miniseries Rose Red did give us a “Carrie” type character who does actually destroy things using meteors/rocks/crystals, all conjured by her mind.
@jimhaggard7436
@jimhaggard7436 Ай бұрын
I graduated in 1990 from high school. Back then, you had to have an opposite sex date to attend prom. Same sex couples (heterosexual best friends or gay partners) were banned as well as solo or stag people.
@Johnny_Socko
@Johnny_Socko Ай бұрын
My friend was Hollywood (CA) High School class of '88, and she took a girl *and* a guy to the prom as a "throuple". The official prom photo was of the three of them. And yet that probably didn't even register as odd at Hollywood High.
@JulioLeonFandinho
@JulioLeonFandinho Ай бұрын
Not a lot of horror? It's ALL horror, moral horror... It's completely horrific, there's no redemption for anybody and It's pure evil displayed in front of us. What horror do you need to be more horrific, ladies? A bullied kid, adults that ignore her because they're too selfish and self-centered, vacuous, frivolous teenagers, a mother that wishes her own daughter never to be born and tries to kill her, a whole high school slaughtered... 🤷‍♂
@fuzzballzz36
@fuzzballzz36 Ай бұрын
Tommy is definitely dead. In the book it's specified that they were galvanized steel buckets. Dropped from that height, it could definitely kill you.
@jesses5463
@jesses5463 23 күн бұрын
Especially where it hit him in the back of the head. That being said, one can die from simply falling down and hitting their head on the ground. Seen many street fight homicides like that as well as boxing deaths from the boxer hitting his head on the canvas.
@roboct6
@roboct6 Ай бұрын
I was a teenager when Carrie was released and saw it in the theater. What I remember most about that pivotal moment at the end of the movie is how everyone in the theater, in addition to screaming, was turned in their seats and ready to run. After a moment or two the terror then collapsed into laughter at what had just happened.
@neilaslayer
@neilaslayer Ай бұрын
"Helen" was really 31 in 1976. And yes, she is Grace from Ferris Bueller. Haley was correct, all of these students were full blown adults. Travolta was 22. Amy Irving (Sue) was 23. Sissy Spacek was 27.
@lynetteoliva1256
@lynetteoliva1256 Ай бұрын
That's just the way they did it back in the day. Hell, they still have 20 something year olds portraying teenagers in some movies & TV shows.
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
​​@@dudermcdudeface3674there's a difference between acting in a film and seeing the finished product, and they literally remade this with a teenager in the lead already. Not to mention the countless other kids and teens that have acted on horror films. No need for such melodrama.
@alexraven8531
@alexraven8531 16 күн бұрын
The one that played Helen was way too old to play a teenager.
@Jasonian69
@Jasonian69 Ай бұрын
Sue tried to do something nice and ended up dooming everyone.
@adamgarrick3778
@adamgarrick3778 Ай бұрын
I went to an all boys private school in the 90s, and by then DC had outlawed corporal punishment. The way they got around that was to have the parents come in and discipline the child in the office in front of one of the staff. I don't know anyone that happened to directly, so who knows how widespread that actually was.
@melissabowers6268
@melissabowers6268 Ай бұрын
Lots of relatives and spouse and the like in this movie. Sissie Spacek's husband at the time was an art assistant on the film. Priscilla Pointer who played Sue's mother in the movie is Amy Irving's mother in real life. And the song "I Never Dreamed Someone Like You Could Love Someone Like Me" is sung by Katie Irving - who is Amy's sister and Priscilla's other daughter. The girls were also afraid to do nudity. They filmed Sissie first, and then they saw the dailies and said, if Sissie can do nudity and such, we can too. Piper Laurie said when she died, Brian DePalma told her to almost act like it was orgasmic - hence all the grunting and moaning.
@joanward1578
@joanward1578 Ай бұрын
Very short shorts were in style, drinking and driving was common, and you had to have a date to go to the prom.
@biguy617
@biguy617 Ай бұрын
This movie is based on Stephen King’s first book. When he wrote it he threw away the manuscript because he didn’t think it was good. His wife Tabitha read it and convinced him to finish the book.
@KrystalAnn0688
@KrystalAnn0688 Ай бұрын
Any & all horror films made in the 70s are absolutely terrifying & way scarier than pretty much anything in modern times
@bengazeley9730
@bengazeley9730 Ай бұрын
Misery would be a good one to do.
@arsiejackson2958
@arsiejackson2958 Ай бұрын
Lmao. The reactor on thr left would ruin that one like she ruined this one
@mix6809
@mix6809 Ай бұрын
Loved it, pretty much my fav reaction team. Love that you give valid criticism and not just fawning, makes your reactions very credible. Keep it up, i'll be there...
@dklounge7082
@dklounge7082 Ай бұрын
Keep in mind that this is the first Stephen King adapted film from what is King's first novel
@JulioLeonFandinho
@JulioLeonFandinho Ай бұрын
So?
@DavidAntrobus
@DavidAntrobus Ай бұрын
@@JulioLeonFandinho I think they mean there was no template. King himself was ready to literally trash his own novel until his wife retrieved it and told him he could write it better from a female perspective. Then it was adapted by De Palma (a total Hitchcock stan) from this relatively unknown author's first novel. In other words, this had no real rules. So when we view it from our present moment, we need to take all that into account.
@jdogjohnson382
@jdogjohnson382 Ай бұрын
Miss collins was actually never laughing it was all in carrie's head at that point because her mom said they'd all laugh at her.
@ii-th8bm
@ii-th8bm Ай бұрын
When this movie was released, I was an elementary school student living in the countryside of Japan, far from America, and it came as a huge shock to me. Now, it is an early work by a director who directs Al Pacino.
@shahzadashrafvlogs
@shahzadashrafvlogs Ай бұрын
I really love you guys, whenever I feel low I watch you too and really my day gets better! especially hayley with that weird faces really makes me laugh sometimes 😂
@robertyeah2259
@robertyeah2259 Ай бұрын
Physical discipline in schools was something that was technically “against the rules” for a while before it was enforced. In the 70s, it would likely depend on the district what was and was not acceptable. In the book, the gym teacher is reprimanded but since she has a good relationship with the principal, and Chris has a terrible track record, she gets let off easy.
@user-xb7ef9eu9u
@user-xb7ef9eu9u Ай бұрын
Fun Fact the woman with the hat really got knocked out when she was sprayed by the hose
@DSR299
@DSR299 25 күн бұрын
According to the documentary she experienced the hose-water breaking her ear drum when she was on the floor. She said it was extremely painful, but she stayed where she was and was later taken to the hospital to have her ear drum repaired. And the first slap that 'Chris' received was a Real hard slap. The director demanded it, and the sound was not fake. They said they had to do several 'takes' of that slap to get it 'just right.' The sound of the hit-slap was Real as well. What a 'trooper' - even though her character was bad. I go back to the late 1960's and in secondary school (junior high school), it was unheard of students harassing any teacher - it was just 'not done.' Unthinkable. However, what Was a danger (which I experienced) was being subjected to a real bully who wanted to fist fight me after school. He never showed up. A friend of mine tried to teach me real fast how to fist fight. I also witnessed a real fist fight in PE, and the one guy who was hit directly in the head fell down and went into convulsions. I hope the parents sued the school - although he was part of the fight as well.
@RaptorNX01
@RaptorNX01 Ай бұрын
"They're gonna laugh at you" is a phrase, and specifically being said with that voice, is burned into my brain. and its worse since I saw the film for the first time as a kid, and an odd trait with kids is that the sound of lines of dialogue in movies, the sound of the voice, the way the words are said, the inflections used, etc can be held onto just as forcefully as the lines themselves. I always felt bad for tommy. he was clearly enjoying his time with Carrie, and even after the bucket falls you can see him pissed off and yelling "what the hell is this". esp since as a kid, i didn't get that most of the laughing was in her mind, so i just assumed they all WERE laughing at her, even the teacher, so he really was the only one there that cared.
@putinscat1208
@putinscat1208 Ай бұрын
To your shorts question, the 70s was early for me, but my HS had some short shorts that we all had to wear in PE.
@RandomDude19868
@RandomDude19868 Ай бұрын
Piper Laurie did a great job playing the creepy mom.
@user-wb8eh6lf5n
@user-wb8eh6lf5n Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek is a really good actress, I only know her in two other movies Coal Miners Daughter, and Blast From The Past.
@KrystalAnn0688
@KrystalAnn0688 Ай бұрын
Tuck Everlasting ❤
@audioRKO
@audioRKO Ай бұрын
fun fact, amy irving (sue snell) does the singing for jessica rabbit in who framed rodger rabbit
@johnmcclure40
@johnmcclure40 Ай бұрын
"Who would buy the property?" In the book, this is actually a point which comes up. The town is basically dying after the prom. Nobody really wants to bother rebuilding, since all the kids are dead. A lot of people sell for a pittance or abandon their property and leave. Even the ones who stay are basically suffering from PTSD and don't know what to do.
@ParsonNathaniel
@ParsonNathaniel Ай бұрын
Having grown up in the 70s and 80s, I can assure you teachers were allowed and did hit their students.
@ParsonNathaniel
@ParsonNathaniel Ай бұрын
Oh, and my prom was in the 80s and at my school you couldn't go to prom without a date... and it was enforced.
@guitarman8462
@guitarman8462 Ай бұрын
In the book it was 2 buckets of blood & tommy dies. Then she blows up the gas tank from the school that blows the school up. She ends up walking towards her house taking out every fire highdrent in the neighborhood. Blowing up every house & gas station. Finally when she gets home , she kills her mom by stopping her heart & walks to the house where she was born.
@ScottTrolls
@ScottTrolls Ай бұрын
Ah, the classics. can't wait for more of this
@rextrek
@rextrek Ай бұрын
346st ....I saw this when It came out - Class of 79 ..... it was a Huge SMASH .....1st time a horror was nominated for Best Picture - Launched Sissy Spacek's career - and John Travolta - to Saturday NIght Fever
@johnthehumanist2333
@johnthehumanist2333 Ай бұрын
Carrie was based on two girls from King's childhood And so, these two real people were combined into a single Carrie White, a girl who was both picked on in school and was stuck with a mother who maybe took her religious beliefs a little too far.
@nicolesaunders2964
@nicolesaunders2964 Ай бұрын
Fun fact: Norma ( the girl in the red cap aka PJ Soles) was also in the 1978 version of Halloween
@huskerchickmissy
@huskerchickmissy Ай бұрын
So as someone who was bullied in the 80s this is 100% accurate! Your period pimples cold sores being fat shopping at certain places and anything else they could target was a way to bully you! I'm so glad you all didn't have to ho through this but a lot of us did and we suffered everyday try eating your lunch in a bathroom then having your bullies find you and cornor you in a bathroom and you will see how we felt I was even pushed down a hill and had 50% percent of my face and body scraped off all cause I was black but go off! They would write things on your locker and walls, they would torment people and the adults would say that's how you got character teachers ignored it and would also bully you.
@adgato75
@adgato75 9 күн бұрын
Carrie WAS destroying the house at the end. It was a "self-deletion" as youtube calls it
@carlwkemp3
@carlwkemp3 Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek is an incredible actress. For a completely different side of her, see Coal Miner's Daughter. It's a biopic about Loretta Lynn. For Stephen King movies, watch Christine and Cujo. They will scare you.
@jhornacek
@jhornacek Ай бұрын
King's book (which others have already mentioned was his first published novel) is written as your typical story. It's an official investigation into these events, so there are lots of interviews, documents, etc.
@alexraven8531
@alexraven8531 16 күн бұрын
I like that almost everyone who does the First Time Reaction of Carrie, they say John Travolta is in this? Usually if they see his first scene if they miss his name in the opening credits.
@bodine57
@bodine57 Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek is very good in 1982's "Missing", also starring Jack Lemmon.
@zydration3538
@zydration3538 Ай бұрын
That "ohh" at 16:56 was so all knowing lol This was a great reaction vid, one more expressive and one more like silent shock and disgust comes together really well. As far as everyone caring, I'd say that's one of the more realistic representations of HS. And both of your reactions to Carrie's "I know I don't not really" are absolutely adorable! And I'm so glad somebody pointed out the"hand thunk" sound. I've always found that amusing.
@jasonball855
@jasonball855 Ай бұрын
Piper Laurie (carries mom) was such a superb actress.
@shanedoe3462
@shanedoe3462 Ай бұрын
In the novel, Carrie was also able to make it rain small stones. The holes in the ceiling of the house at the end are supposed to have been made from falling rocks as Carrie dies, but they cut out the scene explaining it. On another note, the remake is pretty tone deaf. Who's going to believe that Cloe Moritz is the unpopular girl in school? You may as well cast Brad Pitt as the Elephant Man.
@TheCmducks
@TheCmducks Ай бұрын
Glad you went with the original
@biguy617
@biguy617 Ай бұрын
I met the actor that plays Tommy at comic con. He was in the 80s TV series Greatest American Hero.
@jonmercano1138
@jonmercano1138 Ай бұрын
Please consider the original Planet of the Apes 1968 🙏
@tonysaourn9220
@tonysaourn9220 Ай бұрын
Can't believe this movie is almost 50 yrs old.
@ashadowfromthetomb
@ashadowfromthetomb Ай бұрын
Sissy Spacek is a great actress, you should check out a film of hers called, Night Mother. It's pretty intense and emotional.
@Lledra
@Lledra Ай бұрын
Loooved your reaction~! and yeah, Carrie is an interesting movie with look and scene pacing~ To answer a few things, Yes, shorts in the 70's were indeed that short, and back then teachers could hit students. Loved hearing your after movie thoughts too! Keep on Keeping On, and thank you both so much for doing what you do~!!
@macgonzo
@macgonzo Ай бұрын
I would love it if you would react to The Elephant Man (1980) directed by David Lynch. It's based on a true story, and not as "Lynchian" as you would expect from his other movies. The cast, acting, etc, are all magnificent. I think you'd both love that movie. Please don't look into anything about the movie before watching, if you do choose to react to it, go into it completely blind. It benefits from avoiding all spoilers. Wishing you all the best 😊
@nicolesaunders2964
@nicolesaunders2964 Ай бұрын
Just the people who were in on the prank were laughing, but Carrie's mind made her think everyone was laughing
@biguy617
@biguy617 Ай бұрын
I like that this movie and Robocop show that Nancy Allen has range. She plays the lead bully girl in this movie and Louis in Robocop.
@sharonellis8776
@sharonellis8776 Ай бұрын
This is a great, classic movie. Can relate to how awful being bullied at school was.
@cheekylix
@cheekylix 29 күн бұрын
Sissy Spacek was in one of my favorite movies 3 Women (1977) by Robert Altman, with Shelley Duvall.
@WayneQuashie-qe7xd
@WayneQuashie-qe7xd Ай бұрын
"They're all gonna laugh at you!!!!" - Margaret White
@lauriebarrett6789
@lauriebarrett6789 Ай бұрын
Linda Blair who played Regan in "The Exorcist" auditioned for the role of Carrie White.
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