Showing posts with label VANITY FAIR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VANITY FAIR. Show all posts

Sunday, August 17, 2025

THE EXORCIST: A LOOK BACK (PART 2)


Needless to say, after all the pre-release hype and anticipation, THE EXORCIST made a big haul at the box office. With a budget of $12 million, it raked in a smashing $441 million. For all the effort, it must have made Warner Bros. very happy.


The film is a master class in special and shock effects. Besides the infamous crucifix scene (which I won't describe here), the head-twisting and spider-walk, one of the most talked about scenes was the famous "pea soup" scene.

"That would be too much a vulgar display of power."


The only special visual effect in the film.

In his 1995 book, THE EXORCIST: OUT OF THE SHADOWS, author Bob McCabe gets Dick Smith to describe how he pulled it off.




Smith had sure come a long way since his FAMOUS MONSTERS MAKEUP HANDBOOK!

Another much talked about subject of the film was its use of what the editors called "quick cuts", but what some fans thought were subliminal images. One such topic was a brief glimpse of something mysterious after Regan's throat-bulging scene. When I first saw the film, I thought I detected something quickly flash by that was vaguely disturbing. When I came across this article, I knew I wasn't the only one that noticed it!


The Truth Behind the Hidden Demon in The Exorcist
A deep investigation into a single frame of film—and a bizarre mystery that’s lasted for decades.
By Anthony Breznican | October 27, 2023 | VanityFair.com

I had seen The Exorcist before, but it was an even more disturbing experience to watch it frame by frame. That’s what my friends and I did in the early 1990s, when we were high school students working on a class project about the history of subliminal messaging in media.

We adjusted the levels on the most sophisticated stereo we could find to isolate that part at the very end of the Beatles’ “Strawberry Fields Forever” where a distorted voice supposedly says, “I buried Paul.” A generation before us, that short clip of audio fortified conspiracy theories that Paul McCartney (still with us today) had actually died in 1966. We studied a 1973 book called Subliminal Seduction by Wilson Bryan Key, about how covert messages could be deployed as sales tools. The five of us struggled to find the nude figures he claimed were hidden in the ice cubes of old liquor ads. (And some of us were really looking.)

We also went to the video store to rent a copy of The Exorcist, which had long been rumored to contain subliminal imagery aimed at disturbing viewers in ways they could never fully comprehend. We tried to go frame by frame through the 1973 demonic-possession film, or at least moment by moment, as painstakingly as the crude tech of pausing and unpausing a VHS player would allow.

Then we found something. The young priest Father Karras (played by Jason Miller) has a dream about his recently deceased mother descending the steps into a subway station with an agonized expression on her face. We Catholic school kids understood what that represented—a descent into hell, no doubt. But that was symbolism, not subliminal-ism. In the midst of that sequence, however, comes a split-second flash followed by the momentary appearance of a horrid white face, sneering with decayed teeth, eyes pooling in red sores. It’s terrifying—but barely perceptible.




The face appears for only a handful of frames, and while that might be enough for a viewer to briefly register the image, it’s not long enough for one to actually grasp it. Moviegoers in 1973 would have been left unsure about what, if anything, they had just seen, creating fertile ground for terror. We counted that as proof that there really were subliminal techniques at play in The Exorcist.


While that pallid demonic face is unnerving, it’s also clearly a person in makeup, deliberately slipped into the edit. But as we continued to parse the movie, we found something our minds couldn’t explain as easily.

It happens about 49 minutes into the film, when the possessed young girl, Regan (played by Linda Blair), thrashes on her bed as a team of doctors visit her home. Her eyes roll back and her throat bulges grotesquely (both effectively creepy makeup effects). Then she vaults onto her feet, hauls back her hand, and knocks one of the approaching doctors across the room.

There are a lot of rapid cuts in the sequence, and as we paused and unpaused, looking for hidden images, we saw the young girl’s face suddenly distort. Her eyes became fathomless black pits, her hair appeared to curl into horns, and her face suddenly became more stoic and imposing. We halted on the image, staring at those empty sockets.


It didn’t look like a makeup effect. There was no discernible editing cut either. It just appeared that her face…changed. Right in the middle of the shot. We took a picture of the screen with a camera, and one of my friends reached out to stop the tape. We were deeply freaked out.


We had seen digital morphing effects used for things like Michael Jackson’s “Black or White” music video and the silvery liquid shape-shifter in Terminator 2: Judgment Day, but that technology didn’t exist when The Exorcist was made. It felt like we had gone hunting for a clever trick and discovered something inexplicable, or maybe otherworldly. Sitting in our friend's basement on a dark winter night in Pennsylvania, we debated whether the real face of a demon could manifest in something like a film. Our minds spasmed in all sorts of bizarre directions. One of us ejected the tape from the VHS player. I remember my friend saying he wanted it out of his house.

That was 30 years ago. I don’t really believe in supernatural phenomena, and any notion that we had witnessed an actual satanic cameo now seems absurd. It probably felt ridiculous to us even then, once the spell of the movie had lifted. We were kids who had allowed a legitimately scary film to get under our skin and into our heads.

I knew I had seen something, however, and in the decades since, I’ve sometimes wondered whether it was an accidental image or something created intentionally by the filmmakers to instill an unconscious moment of dread. Or maybe…it was just the tape? VHS was notorious for its poor fidelity, so it seems possible that some of the distortion could have been the result of that format’s innate fuzziness.

I recently opened The Exorcist on the Max streaming service and made a slow-motion recording of the scene in question. Part of me expected not to find anything. But then, right where I remembered it, there was the horrid, eyeless face—now in HD.

The movie’s director, William Friedkin, died this past August, just a few weeks shy of his 88th birthday. But in October 2012, I interviewed him onstage at a post-screening Q&A for the movie, and used it as an opportunity to ask my long-held questions about The Exorcist’s hidden effects.

I had told this anecdote about the VHS tape and the school project to one of the event organizers, and they must have passed it along to Friedkin, although not entirely accurately.

“Another thing that’s often said or speculated about, with this movie, is that you used subliminal techniques to unsettle the audience,” I began.

Friedkin rolled his eyes and became immediately hostile in front of the crowd. “I know … You wrote some bullshit book about that. Go ahead and explain yourself,” he said.

I told the real story, explaining that it wasn’t anything nearly that professional. I had assumed he would have no problem clearing up years of widespread speculation, but Friedkin seemed annoyed by such conjecture. Looking back, maybe he was irked in the way a magician might be if you ask what’s up his sleeve.

After his initial dismissal, Friedkin basically confessed. But not to everything.

“The first time I ever saw subliminal perception used in a film was a great documentary by a French filmmaker named Alain Resnais,” Friedkin said. “He made a documentary called Night and Fog, and it’s about the concentration camps. What he did was he showed in color these beautiful long tracking shots of the weeds and wildflowers that had grown over Auschwitz and two or three of the other camps…. You’d see long tracking shots of a peaceful setting, and there was a narrator’s voice talking about what happened in the camps, and then suddenly there would be these quick black-and-white shots of the dead bodies all piled up, of what had happened in the extermination camps. It was the first time I had ever seen that effect in a film. It was in the middle ’50s.”

Friedkin noted that Resnais did this again in 1959’s Hiroshima Mon Amour, about a European woman who falls in love with a Japanese man, both of them scarred by the events they experienced during World War II. “They were in bed together, and there would be these quick shots of the bombing of Hiroshima,” Friedkin said. “It occurred to me that what he was doing, this technique that he had discovered, was the way we think. You’ll be doing something at your desk or somewhere and a thought will flash into your mind, or an idea or a face, that has nothing to do with what you’re involved with at the moment. Don’t you sometimes have that happen?”

I told him I did.

“We all do, I think,” Friedkin said. “There’ll be a flash, either a thought or an image, and Resnais discovered how to use that in cinema. It was a knockout…. I just took that idea and put it in The Exorcist.”

“So it is there?” I asked

“Oh, of course it’s there,” Friedkin replied.

“You were making it out like I was making this up,” I told him.

Friedkin was smiling at that point. Devilishly, it seemed. He copped to inserting the grimacing pale face glimpsed during the Karras dream sequence. “What’s used there, those quick shots, were the tests that [makeup artist] Dick Smith did on Linda Blair’s double (Eileen Dietz),” he said. “She had an all-white face and red lips, and I didn’t like it as the makeup for the demon, but viewed that way, as a quick cut, it’s very frightening. I took those pieces, maybe three frames, sometimes two frames. Two frames is one twelfth of a second, and three frames is an eighth of a second.”

“Not easy to catch on a VHS tape,” I said.

“Well, you couldn’t catch it before VHS, though,” Friedkin said. “Now you can stop the DVD and stare at it.”

I asked if there were more flashes like that, apart from the pale face. Friedkin admitted to “subliminal sounds, impressionistic sounds,” like the buzzing of bees. “That was me,” he said. “I took a lot of different disturbing industrial sounds and played them way off in the distance."

We never resolved the question of whether the black-eyed face I saw in the slapping scene was an intentional addition. There aren’t many left now who would know for sure.

“I knew that was going to be the first question.”

So said Norman Gay, who 50 years ago was part of the four-member team who would go on to share an Academy Award nomination for their work editing The Exorcist. Two of those editors, Evan A. Lottman and Jordan Leondopoulos, have since died, and Bud S. Smith, credited for the movie’s Iraq sequence, did not reply to an interview request by press time.

Gay, like Friedkin, had heard a lot about the so-called subliminal edits in The Exorcist. He was braced to talk about the matter once again. “I never saw that in it at all,” he said. “My belief is that, if it were there when I was working on the movie, I would’ve heard about it, because everyone told everybody whatever was happening.”

Gay had previously worked with Friedkin on The French Connection, and did not edit the Karras dream sequence or Regan’s slap of the doctor. “I did a lot of the reediting of the opening, which is a very mysterious sequence that takes place in Iraq, and I cut a lot of the sequences with Lee J. Cobb and Ellen Burstyn. And I killed off Max von Sydow, the exorcist. I gave him a heart attack…. Those are the ones I remember spending a lot of time on.”

He doesn’t believe The Exorcist contains material that is truly subliminal, existing below the possibility of perception. “None of us ever talked about anything secretly that we were trying to do or asked to do,” he said. “At that time, I think that a concept of subliminal editing was kind of in the air. I think they were accusing commercials of doing it all the time, and I don’t hear anybody talking about that anymore.”

Instead, the images that casual viewers might call “subliminal” are really just rapid breakaways, which actually are visible, albeit briefly. They create a destabilizing effect since they don’t register long enough for the viewer to fully comprehend them. “I would call them ‘quick cuts,’ but you didn’t use them in most standard films because there was no need for them,” Gay said. “This is a film that is trying to catch you by surprise.”

Gay’s verdict: blame wardrobe. “It appears to me that what we are seeing is a piece of her nightgown that has been blown into the air. It may have been done by a wind machine effect of some sort,” he said. “I don’t think it is an edit because you can see the parts of the nightgown in the next shot.”

The disturbing nature of The Exorcist’s story, he concluded, leads people to project outlandish ideas onto it. “You hear this about a lot of films, all the coincidences,” he said. “I was just looking at something on the internet about all the bad things that happened on Rosemary’s Baby.”

When dealing with a possible demon infestation, it’s best to turn to experts for help. I found two to examine the footage and offer their own explanations of the frightening face that appears to take over the young girl.

If it was a deliberate visual effect, it was a remarkably simple one, said Dana E. Glauberman, whose credits include dramas such as Up in the Air and Creed II, as well as VFX extravaganzas like The Mandalorian and the recent Ahsoka series. She also has supernatural cred, having edited Ghostbusters: Afterlife.

“I’d say her face does change…well, maybe not her entire face, but just her eyes,” Glauberman said. “I think it very well could have been done in color timing, where they darkened the area around her eyes for just those couple of frames.”

It’s so subtle and goes by so quickly, however, that if it was intentional, it was a very small adjustment. “I’d say it’s one frame of a change,” Glauberman said. “There very well could be a jump cut in there right after her eyes go dark, but the one frame looks like her eyes and her facial expression too. I’m shocked that you actually noticed that as a kid!”

Todd Vaziri, a veteran visual effects artist and historian who has written extensively about vintage filmmaking techniques, agreed with Gay’s assessment that the “demon” hidden in this shot is really just a trick of the light from her nightgown and movement.

“I’m looking at your shot and I’m stepping through it, and I’m going to say that for the first part of the shot, you can see that her screen right eye is in shadow. She’s self-shadowing. Her brow is blocking the key light,” Vaziri said. “Then for one frame, it looks like both eyes now are completely black, and it’s a little…” He pauses, then laughs. “I’m just hanging on this frame and it’s freaky as hell.”

Freaky, but most likely accidental, according to Vaziri. “This seems to me like just a lighting issue,” he said. “Her natural movement moved both eye sockets for one frame out of the key light. And that’s the effect.”

Glauberman disagreed, maintaining that the change in Regan’s appearance is too stark. She thinks Friedkin must have darkened the sockets in that one frame. “It’s too perfect,” she said. “If she was just covering the light, why would the shadow be over her eyes and not her whole face?”

Vaziri, though, is sticking with the fluke theory. He believes you could probably find similar distortion in lots of movies, but it stands out in this case because The Exorcist is so disturbing. “This is not an abnormal thing. This happens all the time,” he said. “When great masterpieces exist, we put them under a microscope—especially when the movies have such lore as The Exorcist. The conspiracy theories and the mythology—you can’t control it.”

Maybe for once, the devil was actually not in the details. It’s a testament to the enduring power of The Exorcist that a single frame can still leave people unsettled half a century later.

[Those wanting to learn more about subliminal messages in the media, I refer you to SUBLIMINAL SEDUCTION by Wilson Bryan Key as mentioned in this article. It's available free for viewing and download HERE. Key just might be the Fredric Wertham of advertising!]

The Cast:

Ellen Burstyn as Chris MacNeil.

Linda Blair as Regan MacNeil.

Max Von Sydow as Father Lankester Merrin.

Jason Miller as Father Damian Karras.

Lee J. Cobb as Lt. William F. Kinderman.

Jack MacGowran as Burke Dennings.

Kitty Wynn as Sharon Spencer.

Saturday, August 16, 2025

THE EXORCIST: A LOOK BACK (PART 1)


"In a way, all psychoanalysis and psychotherapy are forms of exorcism, of getting rid of demons."
- Dr. Walter Braun, Mt. Sinai Hospital, NY

From where I'm sitting, the most frightening film of the last fifty years is William Peter Blatty's and William Friedkin's THE EXORCIST. With its disturbing witch's brew of nail-biting suspense, atmospheric dread, ancient evil, perverted religious symbolism, profanity and raw terror, others come close but none are its equal, in my opinion. To add to its enduring legacy, the sheer number of iconic images from this film that have persisted over the years is truly remarkable. Evangelist Billy Graham, who was a major influential religious leader at the time, memorably proclaimed “the Devil is in every frame.”

Promotional poster.

In past posts, I've already shared with you my experience when I went to see it HERE and HERE and when I first read a condensed version of the novel HERE.

Director William "Billy" Friedkin.

That Friedkin was a talented director is a massive understatement. His films appear to me to all have been meticulously made with a keen eye for every detail. See his tribute post HERE to read what his peers thought about him.

Friedkin (L) and William Peter Blatty (R).

Keeping the press and unauthorized personnel off the set during the making of the film only increased its allure and mystery, much like it had for other films as far back as Lon Chaney's THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA a century ago in 1925. In his book THE STORY BEHIND THE EXORCIST, Peter Travers wrote: "They (Blatty and Friedkin) hid the shooting of the film behind a curtain of secrecy that Howard Hughes would envy."

Blatty and Friedkin walk the famous Georgetown steps
40 years later in 2013.

As for the acting, Friedkin told his cast and crew: "The only limits on this film are our own diligence and imaginations."

Friedkin was fiercely protective of Linda Blair during the shoot.


First published in May 1971, "Blatty admitted that he once feared his book could never be put on film". Thanks to the right director, an Academy Award-winning script, excellent cinematography, Academy Award-winning sound and state-of-the-art special effects (by Dick Smith), he need not have worried.




"The blaze of sun wrung pops of sweat from the old man's brow, yet he cupped his hands around the glass of hot sweet tea as if to warm them. He could not shake the premonition. It clung to his back like chill wet leaves."

So opens the novel, THE EXORCIST by William Peter Blatty. These three short sentences set the unsettling tone for the rest of the book.

The above images from my collection are of the first three books I bought and read after I had seen the movie. Actress Shirley MacClaine, who was a friend of Blatty (and his next door neighbor), claimed that the image on the cover was a photo of her daughter that had been retouched and distorted. I was amazed to find that the book WILLIAM PETER BLATTY ON THE EXORCIST is going for upwards of $300 (!), and the making of book is selling for a hundred or so.

Theatergoers wait in line to watch the film.

I have been fascinated with this film ever since I first saw it at the theater and still am after many more viewings over the years. It is a masterpiece of the relationship between good and evil, which is what the author and director planned for it all along.


So, who . . . or what is the demon that possesses Regan (Linda Blair)? We get our first look at him in the opening segment of the film when Father Merrin (Max Von Sydow) is at the archaeological dig in Iraq. Just before the last cut of the prologue, Merrin faces an imposing statue of Pazuzu. It is never stated that Pazuzu is the demon that actually possesses Regan, but the implications are that he was.


Pazuzu was a demon of ancient Mesopotamia (Iraq) and was known as the god of the winds and associated with destructive forces and famine. Like many other gods of mythology, he had a dual role; the second was as a protector of mothers and pregnant women and his frightening visage was to frighten off Lamashtu, who was said to do harm to women in childbirth. Accordingly, protective amulets were worn by women as seen in the above image from the film.


This article from the WASHINGTON POST offers a summary of notable facts from the film.


'The Exorcist'
By Matt Slovick | WashingtonPost.com | 1996

Many scary people have come and gone from Washington, but maybe none as terrifying as Regan . . . MacNeil. This film about demonic possession and exorcism takes place in upscale Georgetown. (There goes the neighborhood. I'm sure today's advisory board would never allow a demon on the streets.) And Georgetown University, a Catholic university, is the backdrop for numerous scenes. 

This movie didn't have a sleazy politician or an evil military leader, but a foul-mouthed, head-spinning, murdering 12-year-old girl. William Peter Blatty, who wrote the novel and won an Oscar for the screenplay, got the idea for his book after reading about an exorcism reputed to have taken place in a small Maryland town. (More details are below.) 

Animatronic or not, the head-twisting scene still shocks.


The special effects were groundbreaking for their time – green projectile vomit, spinning heads, shaking beds and gross makeup – and people flocked to see this terrifying movie. People reportedly vomited, fainted and ran from theaters in tears. 

Cut from the film, the "spider scene" was added back in the DVD version.



Warner Bros. did not preview the film before its opening on Dec. 26, 1973. The studio – not knowing yet that it had a blockbuster – released the movie in just 30 theaters. The film broke box-office records, grossing $165 million in that short period. It's still No. 54 on the all-time list (more than $415 million when adjusted for inflation). It lost the Oscar for Best Picture to "The Sting." 

From The Post:
The movie opened exclusively at the Cinema in Washington. This story from January 1974 details how District police barred those 17 and younger from the film, despite its R rating, because of subject matter and reports of people fainting and vomiting.

Leave it to MAD for the parody.

"I honestly never saw or heard directly of anyone vomiting," Blatty said, "but I can attest to seeing people grow faint. However, this was not a response to anything frightening or shocking. It always occurred during the arteriography scene, when the medical tech inserts the needle and blood spurts from Regan's neck. Apart from the first time Bill Friedkin showed me his first cut of the film on a movieola, every time I happen to watch the film and come to that scene I duck my head and avert my gaze until I know it's over. It's one thing to write 'the two armies fight,' and quite another to watch it." 

Father Merrin arrives at the house to perform the exorcism.

Washington Sites:
The Key Bridge; Georgetown University; Dahlgren Chapel; the 75 steps at Prospect and 36th streets that lead down to M Street in Georgetown; the house near the top of the steps on Prospect Street; a bridge over the C&O Canal. The cardinal's office in the film is actually the office of the president of Georgetown University. Chris MacNeil is invited to a White House dinner, but the residence isn't shown. 

Father Karras saves Regan by convincing the demon to take him instead.

It Wasn't Washington:
Lt. Kinderman mentions a theater called the Crest, which didn't exist in Washington. Blatty said he was thinking of the Biograph, which closed in 1996. The hospital scenes were shot in New York; the scenes inside the house were shot on a sound stage in New York City. The bedroom set was refrigerated for the frosting of the breath. The lights usually raised the temperature again after about three minutes of filming, so a break had to be taken to re-refrigerate. All the crew worked in polar suits. 

Religious symbolism abounds: Regan is praying in her photo.

Film's Background:
The bestselling novel by William Peter Blatty, a Georgetown University graduate, was inspired by a reported exorcism of a young boy that took place in Mount Rainier, Md., in 1949. Here is the story that appeared in The Post. Before writing the novel, Blatty talked to a Jesuit at Georgetown. He told him of a priest at the seminary he attended, who, in his thirties, had shock-white hair and was said to have performed an exorcism. Blatty wrote to this man, who turned out to be the priest who had exorcised the demon from the Mount Rainier boy. The priest, Jesuit William F. Bowdern, was from St. Louis, Mo., and not a local priest. Though he had pledged to keep the exorcism from being publicized, Bowdern said that he and the priest who had assisted him had kept a diary and assured Blatty that what he witnessed was "the real thing." Blatty kept in touch with the priest until his death. Other than the possession syndrome, according to Blatty, everything else in the book was made up. The book isn't the story of what happened in Maryland, it "came entirely out of my head," he said. About 13 million copies of the novel were sold in the United States.

"The power of Christ compels you!"

25 Years Later:
Author Peter Biskind's 1998 book "Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex-Drug-and-Rock 'n' Roll Generation Saved Hollywood" features filmmakers of the '70s. One of those was William Friedkin, who directed "The Exorcist." An one point, Biskind gives his analysis of the movie:

"It is easy to see why people, especially women, detested the picture. It presents a male nightmare of female puberty. Emergent female sexuality is equated with demonic possession, and the men in the picture – almost all of them celibate priests – unite to abuse and torture Regan in their efforts to return her to a presexual innocence. Having Regan thrust a crucifix into her vagina is intended to be a fiendishly inventive bit of sacrilege, but it is also a powerful image of self-inflicted abortion, be it by crucifix or coat hanger. 'The Exorcist' is filled with disgust for female bodily functions; it is perhaps not too much of a stretch to see the famously gross scene in which Blair vomits pea soup as a Carrie-like metaphor for menstruation. Indeed, 'The Exorcist' is drenched in a kind of menstrual panic." 


Blatty responds:
"I heave a sigh of exasperation when I read things like Biskind's analysis, and mentally place them in the same drawer where I keep interpretations of the intended 'meaning' of the film as a 'metaphor for the problems of parents dealing with teenage rebellion.' I once wrote a modest little comic novella supposedly written by the ghost of William Shakespeare in which the ghost 'proves' that Queen Elizabeth was the true author of his plays, and I take the Biskind analysis in much the same spirit. I mean, speaking of 'menstrual panic' . . ." 

Plot:
Famous actress Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn), who lives in a swank section of Georgetown, seeks medical help when her 12-year-old daughter, Regan (Linda Blair), exhibits strange behavior. Doctors administer many tests but find no physical or psychological problem. Chris, an atheist, rejects the doctors' suggestion of religious counsel. But when then now-grotesque Regan begins moving furniture around the room by telekinesis and becomes so violent that she has to be tied to the bed, Chris seeks the help of Father Karras (Jason Miller), whose own faith has been weakening. 

Jason Miller as Father Damian Karras.

During his visits, Karras sees a gross-looking Regan, who utters profanity in a deep voice and has serious convulsions. She can also open drawers without touching them and speaks English backward. The priest believes Regan is possessed and recommends an exorcism. Father Merrin (Max von Sydow) is contacted and arrives in the middle of a foggy night. Karras and Merrin enter Regan's room to battle the demon. 

Note the demon's eyes superimposed to appear behind Regan's.

Memorable Scenes:
• Karras is called to the house late one night to be shown the words "Help Me" spelled out on Regan's stomach. 
• Regan's green projectile vomit hits Father Karras in the face. 
• Regan's head spins 180 degrees, and later 360 degrees. 
• Regan levitates above the bed. 

Memorable Lines:
The film's most memorable line can't be printed here. The possessed Regan said it to Father Karras during the exorcism. It involved an activity that the devil said Karras's dead mother was performing on male souls in hell. 

Regan: Mother? What's wrong with me? 
Chris: It's just like the doctor said, it's nerves and that's all. Okay, you just take your pills and you'll be fine really. Okay? 

Dr. Klein: The shaking of the bed, that's doubtless due to muscular spasms. 
Chris: Oh no, that was no spasm. I got on the bed, the whole bed was thumping and rising off the floor and shaking. The whole thing, with me on it! 
Dr. Klein: Mrs. MacNeil, the problem with your daughter is not her bed, it's her brain. 

Chris: You're telling me that, I should take my daughter to a witch doctor? Is that it? 

Chris: And how do you go about getting an exorcism? 
Father Karras: I beg your pardon? 
Chris: If a person was possessed by a demon of some kind, how do you go about getting an exorcism? 
Father Karras: Well, the first thing I'd do is put them into a time macine and send them back to the 16th century. 
Chris: I didn't get you? 
Father Karras: Well it just doesn't happen anymore Mrs. MacNeil. 
Chris: Oh yeah, since when? 
Father Karras: Since we learned about mental illness, paranoia, schizophrenia. All the things they taught me in Harvard. Mrs. MacNeil since the day I joined the Jesuits, I've never met one priest who has performed an exorcism, not one. 
Chris: Yeah well, it just so happens that somebody very close to me is probably possessed, and needs an exorcist. (she bursts into tears) Father Karras, it's my little girl. 

Linda Blair as Regan MacNeil -- good and evil.

Chris: You show me Regan's double: same face, same voice, same everything. I'd know it wasn't Regan. I'd know in my gut, and I'm telling you that that thing upstairs isn't my daughter! And I want you to tell me that you know for a fact that there's nothing wrong with my daughter except in her mind! You tell me you know for a fact that an exorcism wouldn't do any good! You tell me that! 

Father Karras: Hello Regan. I'm a friend of your mother, I'd like to help you. 
Regan/Demon: You might loosen the straps then. 
Father Karras: I'm affraid you might hurt yourself Regan. 
Regan/Demon: I'm not Regan. 
Father Karras: I see. Well then let's introduce ourselves, I'm Damien Karras. 
Regan/Demon: And I'm the Devil! Now kindly undo these straps! 
Father Karras: If you're the devil, why not make the straps disappear? 
Regan/Demon: That's much to vulgar a display of power Karras. 

Father Merrin prays for Regan.

Father Merrin: We may ask what is relevant, but anything beyond that is dangerous. He is a liar, the demon is a liar. He will lie to confuse us. But he will also mix lies with the truth to attack us. The attack is psychological, Damien, and powerful. So don't listen, remember that, do not listen. 
Father Karras: I think it would be helpful if I gave you some background on the different personalities Regan has manifested. So far, there seems to be three. She's convinced …
Father Merrin: There's only one. 

Memorable Song:
On Halloween, as Regan's mother walks home along Georgetown streets, the haunting song "Tubular Bells" is played. The film helped Mike Oldfield's "Tubular Bells" album reach No. 3 on the charts and sell more than 10 million copies. 

Trivia: 
  • The British Board of Film lifted a 15-year ban in 1999 and allowed Warner Home Video to distribute "The Exoricst" in the United Kingdom. The film was re-released in England's theaters in the second half of 1998 and made more money than any other Warner Bros. film that was released in the country during the year. 
  • Blatty can be seen briefly talking to Burke Dennings, who is directing a scene with Chris MacNeil on the Georgetown campus. Director Bill Friedkin had asked Blatty do improvise the unscripted scene the night before. 
  • The character of Chris MacNeil was based on Shirley MacLaine, who was once a neighbor of Blatty's. Jane Fonda was also considered. MacLaine wanted to star and produce the film, as well. However, Blatty had decided to be the producer. 
  • Regan plays with Captain Howdy on the Ouija board. Blatty chose the name because he thought that in its seeming innocence, it was all the more frightening, like the ventiloquist's dummy that comes alive in "Magic." It was also a play of her father's name, Howard. 
  • The scene in which Father Dyer (Rev. William O'Malley) gives the dying Father Karras his last rites took many takes. Friedkin finally slapped O'Malley across the face before the final take. 
  • During a scene in which Regan backhands her mother across the face, sending her crashing to the floor, stuntmen pulled her with a wire that had been rigged around her midriff. Burstyn complained that they were pulling to hard. On the next take, Burstyn landed on her coccyx and screamed in pain. Friedkin zoomed in on her and used it in the film. 
The atmospheric theatrical release poster.

The Exorcist
  • Rating: R for profanity, violence, horrifying scenes.
  • Release Date: 1973 (by Warner Bros.).
  • Running Time: 2 hours, 1 minute.
  • Director: William Friedkin
  • Cast: Ellen Burstyn (Chris MacNeil); Linda Blair (Regan Teresa MacNeil); Max von Sydow (Father Lankester Merrin); Jason Miller (Father Damien Karras); Lee J. Cobb (Lt. William F. Kinderman); Jack MacGowran (Burke Dennings); Kitty Winn (Sharon Spencer); Mercedes McCambridge (voice of the demon); Rev. William O'Malley (Father Dyer).
  • Total Oscar Nominations: 10.
  • Oscar Wins: William Peter Blatty, best adapted screenplay; Robert Knudson and Chris Newman, best sound.
  • Other Nominations: Best picture; Ellen Burstyn, best actress; Linda Blair, best supporting actress; Jason Miller, best supporting actor; William Friedkin, best director; Owen Roizman, best cinematography; Jordan Leondolpoulos, Bud Smith, Evan Lottman and Norman Gay, best editing; Bill Malley and Jerry Wunderlich, best art direction.

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