
Mike Flanagan Explains His CARRIE Adaptation Isn't What You Think — GeekTyrant
Mike Flanagan has never been one to take the expected route with a Stephen King adaptation. Whether it's Gerald's Game or Doctor Sleep , he always finds a way to dig deeper underneath the horror, into the human aspect of the story.
So, when it was announced that he was tackling Carrie , fans immediately wondered how he would handle this dark and twisted story. Is it another prom-night bloodbath? Another tragic telekinetic rampage? According to Flanagan… not even close.
Speaking about his vision for the upcoming Carrie series, Flanagan made it clear that he's not here to rehash the familiar.
'The thing I would say is the original story is half a century old and it's wonderful. Its themes were about youth and bullying and the consequences of that. I believe that in today's modern world, the power of what it means to be a bully, the breadth of that and the impact of bullying, have changed a lot.'
The world Carrie White inhabits today would look very different than the one King wrote in 1974, and for Flanagan, that shift is central.
'The central tenets are still the same, but it's about much more than Carrie White. I can't really talk about what we're doing, I can only really talk about what we're not doing.
'We're not retelling the story as it's been told, and we're not making a show about telekinesis. It's in there, but that's not what it's about.'
He wen't on to explain:
'There's a version of it where Carrie White carries a tragic superhero origin story that goes horribly wrong. I feel like they've done that, too.'
Instead, Flanagan wants to zoom out, expanding the lens to capture not just one girl's pain, but the ecosystem that fed it.
'We're focused way more on the destruction of a community through these very modern tools. What happens in a world where the internet has created an environment of perceived anonymity?'
This version of Carrie is less about blood-soaked prom dresses and more about what happens when cruelty hides behind screens. It's about how communities fracture, not just in a moment of violence, but in the slow erosion of empathy.
'Carrie White in the locker room in every iteration is a horrifying scene,' Flanagan says. 'Carrie White in the locker room when people have phones in their hands is a whole different thing.'
Flanagan thrives in exploring the horror that hits closest to home. Not ghosts. Not ghouls. But people. Systems. The very tools we use every day.
Flanagan understands Stephen King's work in a way few filmmakers do. He doesn't just recreate King's stories, he engages with them, challenges them, and reinterprets them for a modern audience.
Whatever this new Carrie ends up looking like, one thing's clear… it won't be what we expect, and that's exciting!
Source: Variety
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