What I Liked:
Brad Dourif’s (Color of Night)
performance is very good as the Gemini killer.
His monologues are totally psychotic and theatrically over the top with
excellent phrasing and pacing.
George C. Scott (Hardcore)
is pretty good too in the hero role.
This was getting on towards the end of his career (and life) and he
shows that he’s still got that rough gruff boldness to make you sit up and pay
attention.
Things develop quickly and the story moves at a fairly rapid
pace.
What I Didn’t Like:
Scenes feel rushed a lot of the time with jarring cuts right on the actor’s
last syllable. I would’ve liked a little
more breathing room.
The story isn’t as developed as it could’ve been and things
aren’t explained as well as they should’ve been.
The exorcism at the end is completely shoehorned in and has
been rightly reprimanded since its release.
And it’s the Hollywood execs who wanted it. You mean they thought there ought to be an
exorcism in an Exorcist movie? Sounds like I should agree with the suits on
this one. The problem is the film is
based on William Peter Blatty’s book “Legion” which takes place in the same
universe as “The Exorcist”, and deals with demon possession but is supposed to
be kinda different at the same time. It
would all be fine if the execs didn’t demand they brand this an Exorcist picture. So here we are with an innocent product
that’s forced into sequel territory with a reshot ending that contains an
exorcism (the book does not from what I understand).
Overall Impressions:
This should’ve been a cool first sequel to the original because Blatty thought
outside the box. He didn’t continue
Regan’s story nor did he simply rehash the same shit that happened in the first
go around. The plot deals with a serial
killer demon that inhabits the body of Father Karras after his fatal tumble
down the stairs. This spirit then picks
up where it left off with murdering folks in the same manner as when he was
alive. The cop from the first film
investigates and of course he finds things entirely unbelievable. Isn’t Karras dead? Isn’t the Gemini killer dead? Who’s the mental patient locked away in the
disturbed wing of the hospital? What’s going
on?
The idea of a more psychological horror film isn’t anything
new but it’s also something that’s not attempted too often so I found the
premise refreshing. It’s definitely the
strongest aspect of the film. The thing
is it’s not executed great. They gave
Blatty the reigns and he does a serviceable job but it feels very bookish. Scenes are generally too wordy and there are
also some parts and characters that felt unnecessary. This really needed to be handled by a set of
seasoned filmmakers that could streamline the book better into a script and
bring a grittier visual style to the fold.
It’s not bad though.
I enjoyed this much more than Exorcist II and didn’t find it nearly as silly as Exorcist I.
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