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The Exorcist
(1973)
In William Friedkin's blockbuster horror film about
demonic possession, there were many scary scenes of a possessed twelve year-old's monstrous appearance
with a vicious demon inside of her; the film's intense special effects
and violent horrors of devil possession were visibly presented; the
horror film masterpiece, the first major horror blockbuster, was
one of the most opposed and talked-about films, especially during
its pre-release time period:
- in the film's opening at ancient temple
ruins in Northern Iraq, Father Lankester Merrin (Max von Sydow),
an elderly (with heart issues), scholarly Jesuit Catholic priest
and archaeologist, unearthed a small, greenish, gargoyle-like stone
amulet or statuette [in the figure of the Mesopotamian demon Pazuzu,
known for its serpent-like phallus] - a symbol of pure pagan evil;
shortly later, he visited ancient temple ruins and looked up at
a full-sized stone statue of the demon Pazuzu, as the camera
zoomed in on the face of the open-mouthed, fearsome creature
Small Pazuzu Amulet or Statuette Found in Archaeologist's
Dig
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Disturbed Father Merrin (Max von Sydow)
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Full-Sized Demonic Pazuzu Creature
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- at Halloween-time in the Washington DC suburb of
Georgetown, divorced mother Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) lived
in a two-story brick house with her sweet,
pre-teenaged, 12 year-old daughter Regan MacNeil (Linda Blair);
there were preliminary signs that the house was beginning to become
infested or possessed by an evil, malevolent spirit; there were
unsettling sounds from the attic similar to the dirt-digging sounds
of the prologue; Chris was an actress working with British director
Burke Dennings (Jack MacGowran) on a film set; she was expressing
torment about her recent well-publicized breakup with her husband
Father Damien Karras (Jason Miller) - Doubting Jesuit
Priest
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Karras' Elderly Sick Mother (Vasiliki Maliaros)
Before Her Death
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- another secondary character was introduced - troubled
priest Father Damien Karras (Jason Miller) who was overheard by
Chris as she walked home; Karras was expressing doubts about his
profession and faith: "There's not a day in my life that I don't
feel like a fraud"; he often visited his dying, white-haired, sick
mother, Mother Karras (Vasiliki Maliaros) who lived alone in a
tenement building in a derelict section of NYC; shortly later in
a local bar, he told his superior priest: "I need out. I'm unfit.
I think I've lost my faith"
- one of the more objectionable and blasphemous
scenes was the sight on the Georgetown University campus of a white
marble statue of the Virgin Mary, discovered by one of the Jesuit
priests in the chapel; it had been desecrated with red paint and
other materials, and taken on the appearance of a harlot. The defiled
statue had long, conical red-tipped breasts, red color on both
hands, and an elongated, erect yet sagging penis-shaped clay protuberance
also daubed in red
- during a physical exam to treat a string of Regan's
recent symptoms, including hyperactivity, a bad temper, and the
telling of lies (she claimed her bed shook at night), she let loose
a string of obscenities and swear words; Dr. Klein (Barton Heyman)
diagnosed Regan as having a "disorder of the nerves...often seen
in adolescence," and she was prescribed the stimulant Ritalin to
counteract her symptoms; the doctor speculated her problems might
stem from her father's recent separation; during Regan's exam,
she had her first vision of a demonic creature
- psychiatrist-priest Father Karras was summoned to
Bellevue psychiatric hospital where his mother, now distressed,
haggard and hearing voices; Karras was made to feel guilty by his
Uncle because of his career choice of God and the priesthood, rather
than entering lucrative private practice as a psychiatrist that
left his mother destitute; she blamed her son for her 'imprisonment': "Dimmy,
why would you do this to me, Dimmy?"; Karras raged against
all the demons and turmoils in his crumbling life, and a few nights
later, she passed away
- during a big dinner party at the MacNeil house hosted
by Chris, Regan seemed happy and was put to bed, but shortly later,
she interrupted a song-fest at the piano by appearing downstairs
in her nightgown, when she inappropriately told an Astronaut (Dick
Callinan) guest: "You're gonna die up there"; trance-like, she
urinated on the carpet-covered floor in front of everyone; it was
very embarrassing and confusing for Chris; was she truly possessed
by a malevolent evil spirit?; during a hot spong bath, Chris asked
Regan: "What made you say that Regan?" but there was no response;
when Regan was put to bed, she asked: "Mother? What's wrong with
me?"; Chris responded briefly with the doctor's diagnosis of a
nervous disorder
- later that night, Chris heard screaming and crashing
noises generated from Regan's room with the door closed; she
rushed there, where she saw Regan holding on desperately to on
her shaking, convulsing and thumping bed ("Mother help me!")
- meanwhile, Father Karras was wracked with guilt
over not being present when his mother died, and he began to skeptically
doubt his decision to pursue a career as a priest; that night as
he slept, his dreams were filled with a montage of surrealistic
images involving his deceased mother emerging and then disappearing
back into a NYC subway station, including the appearance of a ghoulish,
ghostly-white demonic face
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The Hospital Medical Examination Sequence - Arteriogram
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- Chris was forced to return Regan to Dr. Klein for
more tests, as she protested with more curse words and screaming,
and a new diagnosis concluded that Regan had a brain tumor; one
of the most controversial scenes was the long intercut sequence
of invasive medical testing performed on the hapless patient -
criticized as medical pornography; during a terrifying visit to
a hospital, Regan was subjected to a controversial, loud and lengthy
excruciatingly-torturous, "deflowering" medical examination
sequence (and blood-letting) known as an arteriogram (or angiogram)
- with markedly sexual overtones; to Dr. Tanney's (Robert Symonds)
surprise after viewing a series of skull X-rays, he declared: "There's
just nothing there. No vascular displacement at all"
- once Regan was returned home, her hysterical, despairing
screams were heard and "things
have gotten worse...they've gotten violent"; doctors were summoned
to her room, where they witnessed Regan's upper torso violently
being whipped and thrown back and forth on the bed, as she cried
out: "Mother make it stop!"; her uncontrollable seizures were accompanied
by low gutteral growls, almost animalistic, and her throat below
her chin bubbled out; she back-handedly
slapped Dr. Klein across the face and knocked him
onto the floor, as her physically-repulsive voice warned: "Keep
away! The sow is mine!"; from the camera's POV behind her,
she pulled up the front of her nightgown, pantomimed rubbing herself,
and in a deep, strange voice, beckoned: "F--k
me! F--k me!"; to calm her down, she was given a strong sedative
injection by Dr. Klein
Rolled-Back Eyes
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Bubbled Up Throat
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"Keep away! The sow is mine!"
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Pulling Up Nightgown
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- another spinal test was recommended - a pneumoencephalogram
- a high-tech, painful test and diagnostic procedure involving an X-ray
of the brain made by replacing spinal fluid with a gas (often oxygen);
again, the diagnosis was that nothing was wrong with her brain
- after Chris returned home (with the lights strangely
flickering), she found Regan
asleep in her freezing cold and dark upstairs bedroom - her breath
was visible in the air; she also received bad news - after Burke
had come to visit Regan, his body was found at the bottom of a
long and very steep flight of stairs (just outside Regan's bedroom
window) - he died of a broken neck
- [Note: in the extended version of the film, The
Exorcist: The Version You've Never Seen (2000), in addition
to other minor additions and changes, at this point in the plot,
Regan swiftly and quietly descendson all fours down the stairs,
upside-down with blood dripping from her mouth, to everyone's
horror.]
- for further assessment, Regan met with a
psychiatrist (Arthur Storch) in her home; she sat in her bedroom's
chair and was asked questions about her invisible friend inside
of her named Captain Howdy; the session ended abruptly when Regan
fiercely growled and reached out to grab the psychiatrist's
crotch-area and painfully squeezed him
- wily homicide Detective Lt. Kinderman
(Lee J. Cobb) questioned knowledgeable Father Karras about the subject
of witchcraft, divulging that Burke Dennings was found dead "with
his head turned completely around - facing backwards" - judged
as "a witchcraft kind of murder"; he also mentioned the defilement
of the Virgin Mary statue; he asked if the priest might be able to
identify any of those he counseled who would be capable of committing the murder
- at a clinic, Regan was strapped down with
symptoms and ailments similar to a form of possession; it was suggested
to her distressed mother Chris by the Barringer Clinic's Director
Dr. Barringer (Peter Masterson) that a religious exorcism might
cure and rid Regan of her possession
- at the same time, Lt. Kinderman
was poking around the location of Dennings' death at the foot of
the stairs outside Regan's window, where he found a pig-faced stone
statuette - resembling the Pazuzu amulet found
in Iraq in the film's first sequence; shortly later, he spoke to
Chris about finding ominous signs in his investigation that Regan
was a prime suspect in Burke Dennings' death - the
bedridden Regan was the only one in the house with Burke just before
his death; he also noticed that small sculpted
clay animals in the MacNeil house - made by Regan - matched the one
he had just found at the base of the stone stairway
The Notorious Crucifix-Stabbing
Scene
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- Chris heard disturbing crashing sounds from her
daughter's room; as she entered, objects were being hurled at the
bedroom's closed window; she watched as her daughter performed
sacrilegious self-abuse under her blood-splattered
nightgown, symbolically simulating
the loss of virginity for the young teenager as she stabbed her
crotch with a bloody crucifix; the camera registered
the horror on the face of Regan's mother Chris, as Regan c bellowed
obscenities in the Devil's voice: "Let Jesus f--k
you, let Jesus f--k you! Let him f--k you!"; there
was a violent struggle to get the cross out of Regan's super-strong
arm and her mother tussled with her for control of the offending
object; Regan held her mother's head down into her crotch and repeated: "Lick me!" - covering
her mother's face in blood
- Regan then punched her mother with a violent left-handed
blow, sending her backwards across the bedroom floor, and then
barred the door by telekinetically moving a chair against it, and
then menacingly moved a heavy wooden bureau toward her mother sprawled
on the floor; as a bloody-faced Regan sat on her bed, she spun
her head backwards 180 degrees, threatening in a deep malevolent
voice as she imitated the British accent of a dead family friend
Burke Dennings, to taunt Chris about his murder: "Do
you know what she did? Your c--ting daughter?"
- Regan's separated, film-star mother called on a dedicated,
faith-questioning Jesuit priest Father Damien Karras, recommended
by her friend Father Dyer (William O'Malley), to exorcise the
malevolent devil from her daughter's body; during Chris' long stroll
with Father Karras, he didn't agree to an exorcism,
but reluctantly agreed to see and counsel her daughter "as
a psychiatrist," believing
that Regan's horrible descent into hell was a psychiatric illness;
however, Chris was at wit's end about psychiatrists and became
exasperated: "She needs a priest. She's
already seen every f--king psychiatrist in the world and they sent
me to you. Now you're gonna send me back to them?"
- Father Karras was brought to Regan's bedroom where awful sounds still emanated
from her bedroom as they climbed the stairs; when Karras entered,
the girl was strapped to a padded four-poster bed. Her face was
cut, her hair matted, her eyes wild-looking, and she had a plastic
tube taped to one nostril. The grotesque girl spoke with a disgusting,
low-pitched growl coming straight from hell "I'm the Devil!"; she
claimed where Regan was: "In here, with us" and then taunted him:
"Your mother's in here with us Karras, would you like to leave
a message? I'll see that she gets it"
- as he approached closer,
in the grossest scene of the film, Regan lurched forward on the
bed and spewed bilious, pea-green soup vomit from her mouth in
a single projectile stream directly into his face; the thick green
slime stuck to his face and clothing; bits of vomit and bile acid
also dribbled down onto Regan's nightgown
Father Karras' First View of Regan - Followed
by Vomit-Spewing
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- after visiting with Regan, Father Karras Karras
went about various tests to determine whether Regan's case of demon
possession was authentic; he was impressed by her telekinetic power
to open a drawer, and her ability to speak Latin and French phrases;
he sprinkled plain tap water on Regan, although she thought it
was blessed 'holy water', and it caused her to squirm in pain
- and later Karras concluded: "That doesn't help support a case
of possession"; he made audio-taped recordings of her voices and
took them to a sound expert - who after playing them declared that
it was English in reverse; house assistant Sharon secretly showed
him raised welts that were developing on Regan's abdomen in her
freezing-cold room, reading: "help me" - he surmised that she was
pleading for relief
- after Karras received church approval from a Cardinal,
the elderly priest Father Merrin - whose archaeology project had released the
Satanic being - was ironically chosen and summoned to the MacNeil's
Georgetown house to be the skilled exorcist, while Father Karras
would function as his assistant; Merrin's arrival was classically-filmed
- his silhouetted
image appeared on a dark and foggy night under a lamp-post
- in the dramatic finale, the
two priests entered Regan's ice-cold bedroom, prepared to do spiritual
battle at her bedside, to risk their lives (especially Merrin
with his heart condition) and administer rites of exorcism with
incantations and holy water; garbed in priestly outfits, they also
brought weapons of the spirit for exorcism - holy water, holy texts,
and a crucifix; the devil's voice emanated from the demonic, staring,
fixed-eyes visage of Regan. It cursed at Father Merrin as he recited
holy scripture, with the foulest epithet in the film: "Stick
your c--k up her ass, you mother-f--king worthless c--ks--ker." Merrin
splashed her body with holy water and yelled back: "Be silent!"
Foul String of Obscenities Directed Toward Merrin
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Rite of Exorcism Attempt
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Puking in Merrin's Face and Attempting to Intimidate Him
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- Regan screamed and squirmed away, twisting in pain
as if burned by the sanctified water. Regan puked in Father Merrin's
face as he read the Rite of Exorcism, and shouted insults at Father
Karras: ("Your mother sucks c--ks in hell, Karras"),
followed by more threatening gestures as the demon was cast out, including
a darting purple tongue, the levitation and rocking of the bed, the
opening and closing of cabinet doors, the cracking walls and ceiling,
and Regan's 360-degree spinning head as she sat up; she accused Karras
of murder ("You killed your mother. You left her alone to
die") before her milky-white eyes rolled demonically backwards, and
she levitated off the bed; after coming back down through chants of
"The power of Christ compels you," Karras tied Regan's hands, but then
was struck from behind
- throughout the film - and especially during the exorcism,
Regan's demonic tortured and vulgar voice (supplied by veteran character
actress Mercedes McCambridge) screamed foul obscenities and diabolical
sounds that emanated from her mouth - growling dogs, squealing pigs,
rasping groans, and foul language
- the forces of the demon were unleashed -
symbolized by back-lit demonic Pazuzu statue that appeared behind
her; during a brief rest
period, Merrin summarized the reason for Regan's torment: "I think
the point is to make us despair, to see ourselves as animal
and ugly, to reject the possibillity that God could love us"
- Karras alone reentered
the bedroom where Regan had transformed herself into a vision of
his mother seated upright on the bed and wearing a white nightgown,
condemning him and taunting him with his mother's voice: "Dimmy,
why did you do this to me?"; although tormented, he responded with
a loud scream: "You're not my mother!"; Merrin,
who had returned to the bedroom, perished shortly later - the ordeal
was too much for his weak heart
- in a supremely self-sacrificial act during the cathartic
finale, Father Karras taunted the demon inside Regan, provoking and
welcoming the demon to leave Regan's body
and come into his own so that he could destroy the Evil: ("Take
me. Come into me. God damn you. Take me. Take me"); with his eyes
turned green, he battled the demon's attempt to get him to kill Regan;
however, his will succeeded - he suffered his own demise when he
threw himself through Regan's bedroom window to his death in the
street below; he gave his own life to save Regan's spirit and life,
with the promise of being reborn; Regan was left cowering on the floor,
crying but now restored to her own self
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Demonic Possession Transferred: "Take me.
Come into me. God damn you. Take me. Take me"
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from the bedroom window, Lt. Kinderman viewed
Karras' bloodied body at the foot of the steep staircase steps Father
Dyer broke through and grabbed Karras' dying hand, beseeching
him to confess, absolve him of his sins and receive his last
rites: "Do you want to make a confession? Are you sorry for having offended
God and for all the sins of your past life?"; signaling
his assent, Karras unclenched and gripped Dyer's hand
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as the film concluded, the MacNeil's were packing
up the house to vacate; Chris told Father Dyer about Regan's state
of mind and health after her ordeal: "She doesn't remember
any of it"; as Chris drove off, she stopped momentarily to
hand Father Dyer Karras' St. Joseph medal for safe-keeping; he solemnly
paused at the top of the stairs, just below the boarded-up window
of Regan's bedroom
Regan Restored to Herself
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Karras' St. Joseph's Medal in Father Dyer's Palm
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Actress and Single Mother Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn)
British Director Burke Dennings (Jack MacGowran)
Happy 12 Year-Old Daughter Regan MacNeil (Linda Blair)
Desecrated Virgin Mary Statue in University Chapel
Regan's First Vision of a Demonic Creature During Doctor's Exam
Regan's Appearance in Living Room During Party and Her Warning to Astronaut:
"You're gonna die up there"
Regan's Public Urination on the Rug at Her Mother's Party
Regan's Bed Shaking Ferociously: "Mother, help me!!"
Image of Demonic Face in Father Karras' Dream
Extended Version Addition of Regan's Stairway Spider-Walk
Regan Asked Questions by a Psychiatrist Just before Attacking Him
Lt. Kinderman (Lee J. Cobb) - Investigating Dennings' Death and Regan's
Complicity
Regan Strapped Down at the Barringer Clinic - An Exorcism Was Suggested
Pazuza-Like Amulet Found by Lt. Kinderman At Foot of Stairs Where Burke
Dennings Died
Head Rotation 180 degrees - While Spewing Obscenities:
"Do you know what she did?..."
Raised Welts on Regan's Abdomen: "help me"
The
Arrival of Father Merrin
Father Merrin Before Exorcism
The Casting Out of the Demon by Father Merrin
360 Degree Spinning Head
Demonic Eye-Rolling
Levitation Off the Bed
The Release of Pazuzu In Regan
Regan Transformed Into Father Karras' Dead Mother
With Father Merrin Dead on the Floor, Father Karras Pummels the Demon
in Regan
Karras Hurled to His Death Down the Steep Staircase
to the Street Below
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