Is "The Exorcist" the Greatest Horror Movie Ever Made?

10/24/2008 Posted by Admin


The greatest? That's subjective, of course. But while I do think that "The Exorcist" is among the greatest horror movies ever made--the below review highlights reasons why--I'm curious as to what you think.

What surpasses this movie? What's your favorite horror movie, and why?

The review:

“The Exorcist”

Directed by William Friedkin, written by William Peter Blatty, based on his novel, 132 minutes, rated R.

In 1973, smack in the middle of a tumultuous political environment that saw the fall of a U.S. president and our country caught in the throes of war, came William Friedkin’s “The Exorcist,” a horror film like none other that would go on to be denounced by Billy Graham, championed by the Catholic church, embraced by film critics and finally by the Academy Awards, where it won two of 10 nominations.

The film came during the last golden age of Hollywood--a time when it wasn’t rare for artistry to take precedence over box office receipts--and it was groundbreaking, a movie that shook audiences with its depiction of Regan (Linda Blair), a sweet 12-year-old girl whose soul is gradually--then violently--possessed by the devil.

“The Exorcist” is about the discovery of one’s religious faith; that’s its core. Everything that happens to Regan--the head spinning, the projectile vomiting, the levitations, the infamous “spider walk,” those blasphemous, bloody plunges with the crucifix and her remarkably raunchy mouth (beautifully dubbed by Mercedes McCambridge)--is windowdressing.

Indeed, this film isn’t so much about Regan’s transformation as it is about the transformation of her mother and the priest who eventually comes to help them.

Played superbly by Ellen Burstyn, Regan’s mother, Chris MacNeil, a popular movie star shooting a film on location in Georgetown, is a woman who finds herself caught between the concrete world of medical science and--to her--the more foreign world of religion, which she only turns to once she’s sought the help of “88 doctors” and is desperate to try anything to save her daughter.

When it’s suggested to her that Regan should have an exorcism, Chris, stunned, turns to Father Karras (Jason Miller), a man fighting his own demons after his mother died alone in her home.

With its relationships established, the film then becomes Chris and Karras’ journey into themselves with Regan’s possession used as the catalyst for change and personal reawakening.

Besides the performances, which are uniformly strong, especially Linda Blair’s, which borders on brilliance (consider the range she displays as Regan), what’s so terrific about “The Exorcist” is how the film is in no hurry to get to the meat of its horror. It isn’t exploitative. First and foremost, it’s about its characters, people we come to care about before their lives are viciously torn apart on screen.

This is one of the reasons the film became a classic; before Regan ever blew pea soup out of her mouth or flipped about on a bed, audiences had a strong sense of who she and her mother was.

For those who believed in what they were seeing--and there were those in 1973 who absolutely believed--there was the lingering, creepy sense that this could happen to them. The movie changed movies forever and it stands as a rare original, one whose influence continues to be seen today.

Grade: A

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3 comments:

  1. Lobbyman said...

    I am no judge on horror (if fact I am trying to sort through how many horror movies I have seen.) I have, however, seen the Exorcist, and was impressed. In college we used to watch John Carpenter's "Prince of Darkness" starring Simon and Simon's Jameson Parker (what ever happened to him? - google time). That was a laugh riot.

  2. Dixie said...

    I haven't viewed this movie in years, but just hearing the title again gives me a creeped-out uncomfortable feeling-no other movie of this genre does that.

  3. littlehype said...

    Exercist one of the Greatest Horror films, well in simpler terms... indeed. Although it had a slow brooding start I still know some folks that today that will never attempt to re-watch this...
    YET- If there is something of a surprise. EXORCIST III was incredible. I loved that film or rather to follow the true trilogy of the series which Part 2: The Heretic was not to include but rather something different, The Ninth Configuration which is a Thriller Comedy. The 3rd one however had more chills and at the time of its video release, remember videos, I had to tell my friends the ending since no one could complete the last 10-15 minutes, chilling.

    Although the scariest horror films of all time is a different story.
    BLAIR WITCH PROJECT- great film, tried to watch again after 10 years and still gave me sleepless nights all over again.
    THE GRUDGE- Great ghost story with a chopped up Tarantinoesque or rather Kubrick's The Killing type of set up to tell you of the characters. The films grabs you by the throat...
    Personal Favs: Tough, obviosuly I love horror... but I giress
    SLEEPAWAY CAMP- fun
    SUSPIRIA- beautiful classic
    THE SHINNING-
    I guess any that have an "S"
    Tales from the Crypt '72