The Exorcist
Upon its release, in 1973, The Exorcist altered America's cinematic
landscape, igniting a Hollywood obsession with the supernatural that has yet to
abate. Lauded by critics, denounced by Billy Graham, embraced by the Catholic
church, it set box-office records and was nominated for 10 Academy Awards
(winning two, for sound and screen adaptation). Women fainted, men vomited in
the aisles, and protests were staged nightly. Shot on location in Iraq and
Georgetown, the film offered unassuming cinematography, innovative use of
effects, and non-actors like playwright Jason Miller (in his Oscar-nominated
debut as Father Damien Karras). Screen legends like Max von Sydow (the elderly
exorcist of the title) and Lee J. Cobb (a crusty detective) have nothing on the
astonishing pre-teen Linda Blair as Regan McNeil, a young girl whose psychotic
behavior baffles doctors and drives her mother (Ellen Burstyn in a
gut-wrenching performance) to seek the help of priests, who decide that Regan
is possessed by a demon.
The director's cut, a collaboration between director William Friedkin and
producer/writer William Peter Blatty, features a completely revamped digital
sound design and 11 minutes of previously excised footage. One shocking scene,
known for years among fans as "The Spider Walk," is well worth the 27-year
wait. This extraordinarily moving and terrifying film has lost none of its
power -- it makes the ersatz splatterfests that pass for horror movies these
days look like ghoulish cartoons. At the Hoyts Providence Place 16, Opera
House, and Showcase cinemas.
-- Peg Aloi
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