In another example of life imitating art, millions of cruel teenagers took to their computers to cyberbully Chloe Grace Moretz after her horror film, “Carrie,” underperformed at this weekend’s boxoffice, opening in third place behind “Gravity” and “Captain Phillips.” According to Zack Randall, a 17-year-old high school bully from Columbus, Ohio, one of the reasons he and millions of other teenagers took so much pleasure in the boxoffice failure of “Carrie,” was because of its negative portrayal of high school bullies.

“I may make my classmates’ lives a living hell on a daily basis, but I would never ever harm an animal, let alone kill a pig and drain its blood for a prank,” Randall told Hollywood & Swine. “Plus my friends and I hated the ending. Carrie White totally overreacted at the prom. Those kids were just having some fun with her for being a weirdo. She didn’t have to kill them.”

The endless cyberbulling of Moretz continued throughout the weekend, as millions of cruel high school bullies went on Facebook and Twitter to torment Moretz for not only the disappointing boxoffice of “Carrie,” but also for “Kick-Ass 2.” Moretz’s breaking point came Sunday night, when bullies posted an embarrassing video of the 16-year-old actress online — a pirated version of the 2012 boxoffice and critical bomb “Dark Shadows,” in which she starred with Johnny Depp.

“One of the reasons I became an actress was so I wouldn’t have to go to high school and deal with bullies,” Moretz said. “Teenagers can be mean, especially teenagers who follow weekend boxoffice projections.”