Thursday, October 5, 2023

The Exorcist

I had never seen The Exorcist so, because it is back in theaters for its 50th Anniversary, I took the opportunity last night just in time for the release of the new sequel next weekend.  I found it to be incredibly unsettling (more than scary) and I may or may not have looked away from the screen at one point because I was so unnerved!  Actress Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) is living in Washington, D.C. with her twelve year old daughter Regan (Linda Blair) while filming a movie at Georgetown University.  Regan begins exhibiting troubling behavior so Chris seeks help from both doctors and psychiatrists but nothing helps so someone suggests an exorcism which she rejects.  However, when she suspects that Regan might be responsible for the death of her director Burke Dennings (Jack MacGowran), she seeks out Father Damien Karras (Jason Miller), a psychiatrist at Georgetown University who is tormented by his mother's recent death for which he feels responsible.  Father Karras is skeptical but eventually comes to believe that Regan is possessed by a demon and requests permission to perform an exorcism from the Catholic Church which they grant on the condition that Father Lankester Merrin (Max von Sydow), an experienced but world-weary exorcist, conduct it with his assistance.  During the ensuing exorcism both priests must battle the devil and their own weaknesses.  There are some intense and disturbing scenes, both within the realm of science as Regan undergoes some truly invasive medical procedures and within the realm of the unknown as she swivels her head 360 degrees and projectile vomits, and I honestly don't know which were more upsetting to me.  I was also struck by the brilliant character development, which I was not expecting in a horror movie, because it builds and builds very slowly through incremental events until it is clear that all three main characters are broken (the iconic scene where Father Merrin arrives at the MacNeil house by the light of an upstairs window is incredibly effective at conveying everything he is feeling without any dialogue) and this is very compelling.  All of the performances are excellent (I was especially impressed with Blair because the role is so grueling), the score is atmospheric, and the practical effects are convincing (I think they hold up well even after 50 years).  This has long been considered to be one of the best horror movies of all time and I can definitely understand why now that I've seen it!  It is a masterpiece (although I never want to see it again).

Note:  While I was reading the novel by William Peter Blatty, which I was assigned for a class on popular culture in college, the door to my bedroom slammed shut.  I'm pretty sure it was the devil.

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