Tuesday 27 September 2011

The Exorcist

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Year:1973
Country of origin:USA
Director:William Friedkin
Genre:Demonic possession.
Starring:Ellen Burstyn, Linda Blair, Jason Miller, Max von Sydow
Rating:5/5
IMDB link:http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0070047/
Tagline:Something beyond comprehension is happening to a little girl on this street, in this house. A man has been called for as a last resort to try and save her. That man is The Exorcist.
Favourite line:"Your mother sucks cocks in Hell, Karras, you faithless slime."

Without question the finest horror movie ever made, that has lost none of its power to freeze the blood in the near forty years since its original unleashing.

The plot:
Regan, a young girl, daughter of a well known movie actress begins exhibiting startling and provocative behaviour, the extremity of which appears to be on the rise. Her mother tries all of the usual experts; doctors, psychiatrists, but none of them can explain her bizarre behaviour, much less the fact that, when in her frenzied state, her actual appearance appears to change almost as if she were becoming someone else, and someone damn ugly at that.
At her wits end, Regan's mother turns to those experts in all things spiritual (and a few other things I shall choose not to mention) the Catholic church, and begs a young priest, on the cusp of renouncing his own faith, to perform an exorcism on her daughter. Skeptical at first, he is soon convinced when he pays a visit on Regan, but he himself must seek permission from the Church. His immediate superior accepts his request, on the condition that an elder Priest lead the exorcism, Father Merrin, played with genuine conviction by the marvellous Max Von Sydow.
Can the two priests save the little girl and vanquish the evil spirit?
What was that damn stuff that spewed from her mouth?
And was there anyone that didn't cheer when the annoying drunken Englishman was hurled from the window?

This movie is so good it renders me literally speechless every time I watch it.
It has it all:
It's scary as hell, with an atmosphere to chill the stoniest of hearts.
There's the odd moment of gruelly nastiness, with the infamous pea soup vomit, head twisting sequences and vaginal abuse with a crucifix.
Talking of crucifixes being used inappropriately, there's a healthy line in blasphemy throughout - something I always approve of - with the church held up to ridicule by the monstrosity within the small girl though, of course, ultimately faith wins out over fear.
Shame.
The performances from all are top notch, with special mentions for Linda Blair as Regan, a more convincing teenager as demonic force you'll be hard pushed to find, whilst Ellen Burstyn (she sounds like someone who really needs to take a pee) does a sterling job of capturing the terror any parent would feel should their child happen to be, say, possessed by something monstrous.
Having spent time with my sister's kids, I think it's a more frequent occurrence than you may suspect.
Wonderfully paced, beautifully shot and THAT score from Mike Oldfield, this is about as good as cinema gets.

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