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IMDbPro

Carrie : La Vengeance

Original title: Carrie
  • 2013
  • 12
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
153K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,951
102
Chloë Grace Moretz in Carrie : La Vengeance (2013)
A sheltered high school girl unleashes her newly developed telekinetic powers after she is pushed too far by her peers.
Play trailer2:34
19 Videos
99+ Photos
Supernatural HorrorTeen HorrorTragedyDramaHorrorThriller

A shy girl, outcast by her peers and sheltered by her religious mother, unleashes telekinetic terror on her small town after being pushed too far at her senior prom.A shy girl, outcast by her peers and sheltered by her religious mother, unleashes telekinetic terror on her small town after being pushed too far at her senior prom.A shy girl, outcast by her peers and sheltered by her religious mother, unleashes telekinetic terror on her small town after being pushed too far at her senior prom.

  • Director
    • Kimberly Peirce
  • Writers
    • Lawrence D. Cohen
    • Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
    • Stephen King
  • Stars
    • Chloë Grace Moretz
    • Julianne Moore
    • Gabriella Wilde
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    153K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,951
    102
    • Director
      • Kimberly Peirce
    • Writers
      • Lawrence D. Cohen
      • Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
      • Stephen King
    • Stars
      • Chloë Grace Moretz
      • Julianne Moore
      • Gabriella Wilde
    • 533User reviews
    • 360Critic reviews
    • 53Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 wins & 7 nominations total

    Videos19

    Version 2
    Trailer 2:34
    Version 2
    Teaser
    Trailer 0:58
    Teaser
    Teaser
    Trailer 0:58
    Teaser
    Carrie
    Clip 1:01
    Carrie
    Carrie
    Clip 0:58
    Carrie
    Carrie: Go To Your Closet
    Clip 0:59
    Carrie: Go To Your Closet
    Carrie: There Will Be A Judgement
    Clip 1:03
    Carrie: There Will Be A Judgement

    Photos626

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    Top cast58

    Edit
    Chloë Grace Moretz
    Chloë Grace Moretz
    • Carrie White
    Julianne Moore
    Julianne Moore
    • Margaret White
    Gabriella Wilde
    Gabriella Wilde
    • Sue Snell
    Portia Doubleday
    Portia Doubleday
    • Chris Hargensen
    Zoë Belkin
    Zoë Belkin
    • Tina
    Samantha Weinstein
    Samantha Weinstein
    • Heather
    Karissa Strain
    Karissa Strain
    • Nicki
    Katie Strain
    Katie Strain
    • Lizzy
    Ansel Elgort
    Ansel Elgort
    • Tommy Ross
    Demetrius Joyette
    Demetrius Joyette
    • George
    Judy Greer
    Judy Greer
    • Ms. Desjardin
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    Barry Shabaka Henley
    • Principal Morton
    Arlene Mazerolle
    Arlene Mazerolle
    • Miss Helen Finch
    Evan Gilchrist
    • Greg Delois
    Eddie Max Huband
    • Harry Trenant
    • (as Eddie Huband)
    Alex Russell
    Alex Russell
    • Billy Nolan
    Tyler Rushton
    • Neighborhood Kid
    Connor Price
    Connor Price
    • Freddy 'Beak' Holt
    • Director
      • Kimberly Peirce
    • Writers
      • Lawrence D. Cohen
      • Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa
      • Stephen King
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews533

    5.8152.9K
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    Featured reviews

    7Tweekums

    A decent enough, if unnecessary, horror remake

    Carrie White is somewhat a loner; raised by a fanatical mother who believes just about everything is sinful and bullied at school. She hasn't been told about what it means to become a woman so when she has her first period, in the shower after gym class, she is terrified. The other girls mock her and one, Christine "Chris" Hargensen, even films her on a phone. This lead to Chris being suspended and being banned from attending the upcoming prom; she determines to have her revenge on Carrie. As well as becoming a woman Carrie starts to develop telekinetic powers. Another girl, feeling guilty, asks her boyfriend to take Carrie to the prom... when Chris puts her revenge into action Carrie's powers erupt in a deadly way.

    The original 1976 film is rightly considered a horror classic; even those who have never seen it, or read the book, are likely to know what happens at Carrie's prom... which slightly lessens the impact of the scene in this film. Trying to judge this film on its own is difficult but I'll try. It starts well with the characters being introduced and developed and no real violence before the infamous prom scene. Chloë Grace Moretz is the right age for the role and her acting is impressive; unfortunately she doesn't feel as vulnerable as Sissy Spacek did in the original. Julianne Moore is suitably disturbing as Carrie's overbearing mother and the rest of the cast are solid enough. The special effects are pretty good and there are some impressive shocks. Overall I don't think this remake was needed but it turned out better than I expected... certainly worth the 50p I paid for the DVD.
    7gavin6942

    A Fair Adaptation

    A reimagining of the classic horror tale about Carrie White (Chloe Grace Moretz), a shy girl outcast by her peers and sheltered by her deeply religious mother (Julianne Moore), who unleashes telekinetic terror on her small town after being pushed too far at her senior prom.

    This film is criticized pretty harshly by audiences, especially horror fans. And for the most part, these criticisms are unfair. One minor problem with the film is the use of CGI when it was not necessary. And the major problem was remaking a classic. As it is impossible to improve on a classic, any attempt will be met with strong resistance.

    But there are many strengths. First and foremost, Chloe Moretz, who is easily the best actress of her generation. Horror fans are lucky she has worked extensively in the genre, because her roles have brought much strength to otherwise average films. While perhaps not as awkward as Sissy Spacek, she handles the role well.

    There are some aspects that are closer to the novel, including the more violent and intense climax, and the pregnancy subplot. This version has a more sympathetic Sue and Tommy as well as a more self-confident Carrie. These are different takes on characters that make an important, nuanced difference and allows for different interpretations. The updating of technology adds a different angle, too. This is its own movie in many respects.

    Is the original better? Of course. It is a classic and directed by the legendary Brian DePalma. It probably should not have been tampered with (although it has been before). But if it had to be done, the people involved could have done much worse than this.
    7kosmasp

    Tweaking

    Some might remember this for it's viral marketing (putting a woman with powers into a café as a teaser to this was almost geniuses) or for the fact that it tried to recreate a classic horror movie. Whatever your point is or was coming into this, you will see a very solid horror movie that updated a classic and took it into the current time. There are themes explored here, that weren't touched upon in the original, which is a smooth move.

    Other than that Moretz delivers one strong lead performance. If you know the original or have read the description you will know where this is heading. It won't spoil too much or take too much away from it though, because it is well directed. It might be too neat in places, but overall this does have punches and it's not afraid to deliver them. Overall not as good as the classic, but way better than one could expect it to be
    The_Film_Cricket

    The fourth telling of this story adds nothing new.

    How well you respond to the new remake of "Carrie" may depend greatly on how your mind is associated with the material that inspired it. If this is your introduction to this enterprise, it may be kind to suggest that you check out Brian DePalma's original 1976 horror classic, or Stephen King's 1974 debut novel. That's where you get the true meat of the story. Kimberly Peirce's remake is glossy, pretty and professionally made, but it adds almost nothing new. It is violent and energetic, but it lacks the sustained melancholy creepiness that made the original so memorable. Peirce has the parts of the story in the right order but her film lacks a sense of tone and mood. She can play the notes, but not the music.

    DePalma's film remains a permanent fixture of our popular culture because he understood that the foundation of Stephen King's best work comes from his ability to pry supernatural events out of a foundation of realism – i.e. the more realistic his environment, the scarier the magical stuff plays out. Plus, it had the added bonus of a previously unknown actress named Sissy Spacek in a brilliant performance that made her a star. Knowing that, it may be possible that no filmmaker could have revised this material. By this point there may not be anything new to explore. After the book, the 1976 movie, a 1999 sequel and a 2002 TV movie, we know this story so well that the narrative of a remake is more or less perfunctory. It becomes less a story and more of a checklist keywords: prom, dirty pillows, pig blood, tampons, prayer closet, telekinesis. The pieces are here, but there are very few surprises.

    The story is one of alienation. We know that the world is populated with more young people like Carrie then than the prom queens who torment her, and with all the news stories lately about the horrors of bullying, this new film might have been a good chance to shed some light on the subject. Yet, there seems to have been no ambition to expand on the original idea. Pierce, who is openly gay, understands alienation first hand. She previously made "Boys Don't Cry," the story of Brandon Teena, a girl suffering a sexual identity crisis (for that film Hilary Swank got an Oscar for Best Actress). She also made "Stop-Loss" about a soldier who returns home from Iraq, but refuses to go back. Here, in her first big commercial film, she seems to have lost her creative edge. The movie is long on plot but very short on personality.

    One of the biggest problems lies in the casting of Chloë Grace Moretz in the title role. She's so conventionally pretty that we have trouble believing that she could ever be a wallflower. This is a story about a girl who is so spaced away from the world that she might as well be invisible. She's trapped in a body that offers a telekinetic ability that she can neither control nor adequately explain. Moretz is not a bad actress, but she has such a strong screen presence that we don't feel her defenselessness.

    The people around Carrie aren't people, so much as standard movie requirements. There's the snobbish queen bee (Portia Doubleday) who torments Carrie at school. There's her lunkhead boyfriend (Alex Russell) who acquires the pig blood. There's the nice guy (Ansel Elgort) who agrees to take Carrie to prom. There's the P.E. coach (Judy Greer) who defends Carrie against her tormentors. There's the principal (Barry Shabaka Henley) who is so petrified of a lawsuit that he can hardly speak. These characters aren't given personalities; they are just functions of the plot.

    The one performance in the film that does work is Julianne Moore as Carrie's hyper-religious mother, Margaret. Moore does a nice job of playing a woman so encased in her own God-fearing paranoia that she shuts out a world that she feels pleasures itself at the altar of a fallen creation – which includes pretty much everyone. The worst of this vantage point she pushes on Carrie herself, locking her in a closet and declaring that her special power makes her a tool of the devil. The set designer has done a good job of creating Margaret and Carrie's home as a sponge-cleaned den of claustrophobia and blandness.

    The scenes between Carrie and her mother are the best parts of this story because they reveal two broken personalities that eventually face off in a final conflict that seems to have been preordained from the moment that Carrie came into the world. The rest of the movie is pretty much a tired march through a story that's been told three times before. There are some nice touches. The prom scene is well made. Peirce allows Moretz to wave her arms during the final telekinetic fury as if she were conducting a symphony of terror and mayhem. Yet, it's a moment of originality so clever that you wish the rest of the movie had followed.

    Is "Carrie" entertaining? Not really. If you know this story already, there's no real reason to see this one. It only goes to further the mystery of why remakes are even necessary. Why remake this movie beyond the attempt to cash in on a brand name? Why not remake movies that were bad? Make them better. 37 years after the Brian DePalma's masterwork, horror fans are still talking about it. This film is so forgettable that 37 years after this remake, horror fans may have to be reminded that it was ever made in the first place.

    ** (of four)
    5parkergolding

    Technically well made, but unremarkable

    It seems something of an obligation to dismiss remakes out of hand these days. Many of us do so with such confidence that we'll condemn the film in advance of its screening. Kimberly Pierce's remake of Carrie isn't an insult to De Palma's original; it is, in fact, an adequately performed, well-filmed picture, but one cannot help escape the inevitable baggage that comes with this film. It doesn't hold a candle to De Palma's original, which wasn't - if we're being honest - really scary, but elevated by the director's flair, enthusiasm, and stylistic excess. Visually, this film is inoffensive, but that's it's problem: it's flat and uninspired.

    Chloe Grace Moretz is fine as the lead, but the script lets her down. In the original, Carrie (Sissy Spacek) reacts to her powers with bewilderment; hers is not one of awe and wonder, but a kind of fearful curiosity. Here, Carrie takes to her telekinetic powers with verve, gleefully levitating objects around her bedroom in moments that would be right at home in Matilda. The character of Sue Snell, who opts to redeem herself, is thinly written, as is her boyfriend, Tommy Ross. Chris Hargensen, who was played to perfection by Nancy Allen in the original, is more fleshed out than one would expect, but her interactions with her conspirators and Sue Snell seem, for want of a better expression, off. Astonishingly, it is Julianne Moore, a truly exceptional actress, who is miscast here. Piper Laurie was central to the original's success, playing on the absurdities of her character's dogmatic lunacy. Moore plays it straight, which, to her credit, is a departure from Laurie's performance, but it is wholly unconvincing.

    The third act is a technical and dramatic misfire; it's all pyrotechnics. The pig's blood that ignites Carrie's - if you will - baptism by fire is of major significance. It's that moment when the film's fascinating relationship with the absurd and the horrific boil over. De Palma knew this and executed with gusto; Pierce does not.

    Stephen King Movies Ranked by IMDb Rating

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    Production art
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Because Chloë Grace Moretz was a minor, she was limited to eight hours of work per day. When she was unavailable, director Kimberly Peirce substituted; she would be off-screen. This was only done with scenes that Julianne Moore would talk to Carrie.
    • Goofs
      When Tommy collapses on the stage, he is facing Carrie, but when Carrie tries to cradle Tommy, he is facing the backdrop.
    • Quotes

      Sue Snell: No! Carrie please don't hurt me.

      Carrie White: Why not? I've been hurt my whole life.

    • Alternate versions
      The theatrical version ends with a brief scene of Sue in court for the White Investigation (an integral part of the Stephen King novel otherwise omitted from the film) and then laying a flower on Carrie White's grave, which cracks as she walks away. The alternate Blu-ray cut omits the courtroom scene and features a different edit of Sue placing the flower on Carrie's grave. This scene is followed with Sue in the delivery room giving birth, but instead of a baby, Carrie's arm emerges from between her legs and grabs her. There is then a quick cut to Sue's mother, who is holding and trying to awaken her hysterical, pregnant daughter from this nightmare.
    • Connections
      Edited into Carrie: Alternate Ending with Introduction from Director Kimberly Peirce (2014)
    • Soundtracks
      End of the Earth
      Written by Ben Schneider

      Performed by Lord Huron

      Courtesy of IAMSOUND Records

      By arrangement with Sony Music Licensing

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    FAQ22

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    • What is "Carrie" about?
    • Is "Carrie" based on a book?
    • How does the movie end?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 4, 2013 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official sites
      • Official Facebook
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Carrie
    • Filming locations
      • Mississauga, Ontario, Canada(Carrie's House)
    • Production companies
      • Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM)
      • Screen Gems
      • Misher Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $30,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $35,266,619
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $16,101,552
      • Oct 20, 2013
    • Gross worldwide
      • $84,790,678
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Datasat
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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