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Critics reviews

THE EXORCIST

William Friedkin United States, 1973
Signs and Sirens
Though I've always admired horror as a film genre . . . I've never found it especially scary. . . . I'm more frightened by the threat of unemployment or climate change — real life, in other words. But William Friedkin's 1973 masterpiece frightens precisely because it channels cinéma vérité to feast upon everything fetid in our culture then and now: Freud, corrupt leadership, economic inequality, dysfunctional nuclear families, and misogyny, not to mention the Catholic Church.
December 26, 2017
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It's topped countless lists of the greatest horror movies ever made, but William Friedkin's 1973 supernatural shocker has always struck me as one of the greatest of all religious films — a movie in which unbelief and spiritual despair are enemies as dangerous as the devil himself.
October 31, 2016
Ferdy on Films
Blatty's script was certainly strong, but much of The Exorcist's ultimate success was due to Friedkin's skill as a filmmaker, in spite of the work's many moments of excessive, showy literalness. Just as The French Connection adopted a docudrama approach and cast people really involved with the case it described, Friedkin builds in The Exorcist, layer by layer, an intimately depicted, finely detailed context for the drama, a pseudo-realistic approach mixed with traditional genre style elements.
October 27, 2013
As the drama of The Exorcist is more or less a classically fashioned chamber piece, Friedkin infuses the film with his drastically stylized mise-en-scène and coarseness to heighten the atmosphere into a metaphysical state of mind, declaring a bold, yet ruthless, new mainstream artistry.
October 22, 2013
At the one-hour point, when Chris returns home at night, the lights flicker in the kitchen and a demon's head appears above her own. This first of a small handful of new, quite subtle digital effects shots (care of digital effects artist Jennifer Law-Stump) is followed by more demon sightings in Regan's bedroom, including a noirish image of the stone figure viewed in Iraq by Mr. Exorcist himself, Father Merrin.
September 21, 2000
As a key visual source for Mel Gibson's depiction of evil in The Passion of the Christ, as well as an early indication of how seriously pulp can be taken when religious faith is involved, this 1973 horror thriller is highly instructive as well as unnerving.
September 1, 2000