A former priest, now an exorcist, battles the Satanic forces that are threatening the students at a girls school.A former priest, now an exorcist, battles the Satanic forces that are threatening the students at a girls school.A former priest, now an exorcist, battles the Satanic forces that are threatening the students at a girls school.
Stephanie Barton-Farcas
- Biology Student
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This late out of the blocks made-for-t.v. rip-off of "The Exorcist" is unlucky enough to 'star' James Farentino, busy nursing his two expressions until the next mini-series comes along. What redeems this film though are a strong performance by a young Harrison Ford and a simply terrific one by Joan Hackett.Her character oozes madness, repressed sexuality and fierce intelligence, displayed with a clarity reminiscent of Anthony Perkins work in "Psycho". Rarely has insanity been so chillingly portrayed as here, despite the limitations of the format.
The legend could be Star Wars made Harrison. Well, Harrison's acting talent existed before the trilogy and this movie, as well as American Graffiti, are here to prove that.
Harrison plays a Don Juanesque teacher in a catholic girl school in which happens demoniac phenomena. He has already his cool attitude and that's why i like him.
Sure the story is a rip-off of the famous exorcist (only a non conformist priest can help them!) but the production is not that bad, especially when you compare it to today productions. Here the effects are authentic, the photography luminous and clear and the story has a direct plot and not a melting-polt of opinions or a collage of bloody, shocking scenes.
So the 70s was the best period from this frightening genre and even a poor production from this time excels from the today stinkers!
Harrison plays a Don Juanesque teacher in a catholic girl school in which happens demoniac phenomena. He has already his cool attitude and that's why i like him.
Sure the story is a rip-off of the famous exorcist (only a non conformist priest can help them!) but the production is not that bad, especially when you compare it to today productions. Here the effects are authentic, the photography luminous and clear and the story has a direct plot and not a melting-polt of opinions or a collage of bloody, shocking scenes.
So the 70s was the best period from this frightening genre and even a poor production from this time excels from the today stinkers!
Lost-his-faith priest Kevin Leahy (James Farentino) dies in a car accident. He is admonished by God for having lost his faith and returned to Earth on a mission to seek out evil. He quickly finds it at an all girls school run by siblings Ellen (Claudette Nevins) and Louise (Joan Hackett). Fires have been starting with seemingly no source and it appears to actually be targeting the girls. This TV movie plays like a pilot for THE EXORCIST: THE SERIES, but WB Television never went any further with it. Farentino is good in the lead role and you'll notice some familiar faces among the students including P.J. Soles, Dinah Manoff, and Ann Dusenberry. Perhaps the biggest draw for folks is a pre-STAR WARS Harrison Ford as the girls' biology teacher. The fire bits are pretty spooky, as is the performance of the possessed person (I won't spoil it) during the last ten minutes. The end gets down to the EXORCIST-lite moments, including the possessed person puking up nails (!) on the priest.
The nail spitting! I'm now 56 and remember it vividly even though I saw it in about 1980 on late night (British) TV - scared the hell out of me! I can't remember much else about the movie but the fact the brilliant Joan Hackett is in it does it for me, it must be pretty good. I'd love to see it again.
Along with Gargoyles, Trilogy of Terror & Don't Be Afraid of the Dark, this movie scared the crap out of me when I was a kid. The premise, though somewhat formulaic, is still quite effective in this flick. The possession scenes are great, with a particular "hell yea!" during the nail spitting sequence! THAT freaked me out. Poor Harrison Ford hides from this film like it's leprosy or something. I dunno why...it beats "The Devil's Own" ANY day!!!
J Richter
J Richter
Did you know
- TriviaReleased just prior to Star Wars, which made Harrison Ford a star.
- Quotes
Weezie Sumner: Let's go in the back room, and I'll teach you about the chicken and the egg. Which... comes... first.
Paul Winjam: The girl steals my lines.
Weezie Sumner: Yeah, well you stole something of mine.
Paul Winjam: Now wait a minute, who seduced who?
Weezie Sumner: It was a tie.
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content