MovieChat Forums > Carrie (2002) Discussion > Would Carrie have done well as a series?...

Would Carrie have done well as a series?


I know that this movie was supposed to lead to a series but I have always wondered how that would have gone.

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One can only speculate what the plot would have been (check the trivia section for some of the concepts Bettis was given). If you're asking if it would have done well ratings-wise, NBC's "must see TV" ratings were dwindling by 2003. There would have been an initial wtf-factor that brought in viewers but unless the show was gold (hard to imagine it would have been), viewership would have dropped after the first episode, leading to a quick cancellation.

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[deleted]

I wonder how that would have gone too. Because a telekinetic who if pushed too far could just snap while trying to build another life sounds interesting. Even down to questions like "Where would she get food/money?" "Where would she go?" just to name a couple.

You have your opinions I have mine.

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It would have been interesting if a series would have arosen from this pilot movie. Her inside mind could have been explored and the ever arising question: Where did these powers come from?
Another question could have been explored in the movie. How will society react at the appearance of telekinetics now that CarrieĀ“s actions have proven in an undoubtedly way that they exist?

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[deleted]

It would ruin the story of Carrie for me. Everyone who I have ever spoken to about this film agrees with me.

Also known as Derek.

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[deleted]

Wrong. Society has awakened to the irrefutable fact, that telekinesis exists, that the so called miracles are not miracles. How will society react? How will Carrie hide herself? How will Chamberlain react to what has happened? What about the other teleknetics? How did she achieve those powers? How will they evolve? Her being hunted by FBI and other governmental organizations and foreign organizations who want to abuse her powers, etc.....
There definitely is potential in every way.

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[deleted]

The most realistic scenario I can see--taking into account exactly what you said, that society would awaken to the irrefutable fact that telekinesis exists--would definitely involve her becoming a Ten Most Wanted Fugitive (accused of mass murder and matricide) and definitely being hunted by every halfway decent (meaning good at their tradecraft) intel department in the world. The Russian RVS, the French SDECE, Mossad, various Arab League agencies--and Al-Qa'ida--and let's not forget MI6 from England.

The series they wanted to set up would never have worked. The same-old, same-old plot, like The Incredible Hulk, would have gotten old fast. NBC would have had to cancel and replace it in mid-season.

But what I envisioned from the moment I read the original book, was this:

Carrie survives.

Word gets out.

Though the FBI would deny it, they would believe. As would the CIA. (I had not read Firestarter by then, so I didn't know about The Shop.)

And the KGB. (Remember, I first thought of this in the Eighties, when I actually read the book.)

And The Firm, as it was then known. (They call it "MI6" today.)

And so The Firm would send its best man to find this girl, if she survived; gain her trust; and find out about her powers, if they exist.

And whom do you think they would send?

Imagine:

X: Carrie White, I presume? May I buy you a drink?

C: Ohuh? I...I...

X: You don't need to be frightened of me. Then again, you don't have to be frightened of anyone, do you?

C: I don't...I don't know what you mean.

X: Oh, I rather think you do. [To the bartender] Two Vodka martinis. Shaken, not stirred.

B: Right away, sir.

X [back to Carrie]: Your reputation precedes you. I might quarrel with the generality of your revenge, but when everyone is laughing at you, it gets a little hard to sort the innocent from the guilty, does it not?

C: I...oh, I'm so confused. I wanted to fit in, really I did. But...

X: Well, that's the hard part. How does a girl with the power to kill another where he stands, ever fit in? People like us can never fit in, not the way you mean. [The drinks arrive. He hands one to Carrie.] Here. That at least will relax you.

C: Thank you, Mr....

X: Bond. James Bond.

C: You're...like me?

007: Not exactly. I might not have your special power to kill. But I do have a licence to kill.

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@lferrigon-1 I envision a The Incredible Hulk (1978)-vibe to the whole thing. Don't make her angry.

And it would've been cancelled before the end of season one.

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That's how they were pretty much setting it up

Carrie goes to a new town, loses control of her powers (in this version she goes into a trance when she loses control and doesn't remember anything) destroys the town, is followed by the Detective, leaves town, lather rinse repeat

Carrie was even believed to be dead, just like Bruce Banner in the tv series.

So exactly like the Incredible Hulk.

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I envision a series, where telekinetics exist, Carrie decides to intervene to prevent eventual catastrophes like in Chamberlain, a detective that hunts her, a world that deals with telekinetic people, evil telekinetics and a world that is hunting Carrie for their own purposes.
Finally I envision how Carrie continues to develop her powers and Sue helping her and how she deals with the trauma of what she has done in her catatonic state.

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@Explorerfrey10 Replace the detective with Colonel Stryker and it sounds like a pitch for X-Men: The Series.

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