In the book, Chris and Billy flee the prom and retreat to a roadhouse for some post-prank sex. Then, she telekinetically throws Sue free of the White home, and collapses it onto herself. After Carrie has murdered Margaret, Sue stumbles in and Carrie asks her-with her mouth-why she had to get involved. Then, she goes home to seek comfort from her mother, which of course doesn't go well. She uses her powers to send their vehicle into gruesome collisions that kill them both. After killing most of her graduating class, Carrie stumbles bloody and barefoot out of the school, and follows Chris and Billy as they try to escape. In the movie, this thread is ditched completely and Sue comes because Chris sends her the ominous text message: "Your girl looks good but she won't for long." It's this that spurs her to leave her home and race to the school on prom night. Sue also has a telepathic connection with Carrie. Later, a local drunk says that when he stumbled out to see his town on fire, he knew it was Carrie White who did it, and explains to his interrogators she said this to his mind. First, when Tommy asks her out, he's overcome by a weird sensation, which appears to be him feeling Carrie's excitement and anxiety. In King's story, Carrie's ability to get into people's heads is shown in a few different ways. But Peirce opted out of Carrie's ability to telepathically share her feelings and thoughts with those around her, which was among the book's eerier elements. At one point, she can even propel her own body to fly across the gym to duck out as the whole building collapses in flames around her. On prom night, Carrie kills many of her classmates by willing their bodies into walls, and sparking electrocutions and fires with her brain. Carrie lacks the ability to communicate telepathically, but now she can fly.
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