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Flanagan has proved himself to be one of the ultimate helmers of King adaptations, but both of these projects face hurdles. Very different hurdles, but hurdles, nonetheless.
What Mountains Must The Dark Tower and Carrie Climb?

As King’s first published book, it’s only natural that Carrie was the first to be adapted. And, under the guiding hand of Brian De Palma, the result was a masterpiece. To this day it is one of the very best movies based on one of the author’s works. A lot of this is due to the casting of Piper Laurie and Sissy Spacek, but even outside of them it’s a film that understands the tone of the source material and goes to great lengths to convey it on screen.
In fact, De Palma’s Carrie is so fantastic that it has made any further attempts at adapting the novel seem destined to fail. Or at least fall short. And they have, thus far. This was applicable of the 2002 made-for-TV movie (a backdoor pilot for a series) and the 2013 theatrical version with Chloรซ Grace Moretz and Julianne Moore. Neither felt like it had anything of note to contribute, so they felt far inferior to both the book and the ’76 movie.
And that’s not all when it comes to Carrie. Those three adaptations aren’t even all there have been for this particular story. It’s also been told in a 1988 musical adaptation, an off-Broadway revival in 2012, and in a 2018 episode of Riverdale. There are few people out there who are even slightly unfamiliar with the material. It’s not unlike how we as the audience kept being told Spider-man and Batman’s origin stories.








