Current:Home > Contact'It's not cheap scares': How 'The Exorcist: Believer' nods to original, charts new path -WealthFlow Academy
'It's not cheap scares': How 'The Exorcist: Believer' nods to original, charts new path
Robert Brown View
Date:2025-04-08 21:57:30
A lot of people witness “The Exorcist” for the first time peeking through their fingers because it’s so terrifying. A teenage David Gordon Green viewed it in “little chapters,” not because he needed a break from the hellish moments but to stay under the radar of hypervigilant librarians.
“I probably watched it 15 or 20 minutes at a time so as not to concern anybody,” says the filmmaker, then a 15-year-old Jesuit Catholic prep school freshman. He was curious about “The Exorcist” but because his parents were “very strict,” Green would sneak peeks via VHS tape at the public library.
The 1973 horror classic “meant a lot” to Green, 48, who continues the story with “The Exorcist: Believer” (in theaters Friday). After rebooting the “Halloween” movies for the next generation, Green now tackles “Exorcist” with a direct sequel to the late William Friedkin’s all-time chiller, starring a new pair of possessed children.
“It's not cheap scares,” Green says of the original movie. “You don't need heads spinning around and you don't need pea soup. These things are secondary little triggers that excite people and make history in their own way. What sticks out to me is just an honest story of a mother trying to save her daughter from something she can't explain.”
Green and producer Jason Blum discuss how “Believer” pays homage to an iconic work while also charting a new “Exorcist” path:
Like the original ‘Exorcist,’ the new ‘Believer’ embraces being a theological thriller
The 1973 "Exorcist" centered on movie star Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) working with a pair of exorcists (Max von Sydow and Jason Miller) to help her possessed daughter Regan (Linda Blair). It took pop culture by storm and also was an Oscar contender (winning for adapted screenplay and snagging a best picture nomination), yet Friedkin famously disliked his film being referred to as a “horror” movie.
In a 2013 USA TODAY interview, Friedkin called it “a story about the power of Christ and the mystery of faith.” That was the mindset filmmakers had going into “Believer,” Blum says, hoping audiences come out “feeling like you had seen an account of a real story.”
Green adds that it’s not easy balancing the slow-burn nature of “the scariest movie ever made” with contemporary audience expectations. “When people are fainting in the theater (in 1973), it's because they're watching a girl get a spinal tap, not because there's somebody jumping out of the closet,” the director says.
Halloween horror movies:Peep these 20 new scary films, from 'Saw X' to 'The Exorcist: Believer'
‘Exorcist’ sequel brings multiple religions to the fore – not just Catholicism
“Believer” centers on single dad Victor (Leslie Odom Jr.), a skeptic who lost his faith after the death of his wife, whose daughter Angela (Lidya Jewett) and her best friend Katherine (Olivia O’Neill) go missing for three days and return possessed by an evil spirit. But the exorcism isn’t just priest vs. demon – the girls are also helped by a Baptist pastor, a Pentecostal preacher and a root doctor.
It was Green's idea to “open the conversation” to various theologies, and he considers himself “a spiritual buffet.” He wanted to bring people together for a common goal: “When we look into our mythologies that are around us every day and focus on what makes us similar, then unity becomes our spiritual superpower.”
Ellen Burstyn reprises her ‘Exorcist’ role, Linda Blair returns as ‘Believer’ consultant
When Blum and Green rebooted “Halloween,” their first calls were to director John Carpenter and star Jamie Lee Curtis. Similarly, they reached out to “Exorcist” veterans about the new sequel. “Initially, Ellen was skeptical,” Blum says, but ultimately “saw eye-to-eye creatively” and agreed to come back as Chris, who Victor reaches out to for help in “Believer.”
Behind the scenes, Blair signed on as “a really wonderful, helpful consultant” for the young actresses, alongside their families and a child psychologist, Green says. “She is very blunt and has a very specific experience.” Blair – who was 13 when she shot the original “Exorcist” – worked with the girls and filmmakers during possession scenes on “how to get something intense and dramatic out of them without taking them to an unhealthy place.”
Ranked:The best horror movies of 2023 so far (from 'M3GAN' to 'No One Will Save You')
The ‘Exorcist’ Easter eggs are plentiful, from ‘Tubular Bells’ to a vintage couch
Green sprinkled references to the original “Exorcist” throughout, from throwback scenes and plot points to the use of Mike Oldfield’s “Tubular Bells.” “It’s powerful and everybody's going to get it,” the director says. “Getting the rights to that was expensive but important.”
His favorite is one for the eagle-eyed fans: The couch in Chris MacNeil’s house when she meets Victor is the same one from her Georgetown place in the 1973 movie. That piece of furniture comes straight from Burstyn’s personal collection.
“Ellen took it home after (‘Exorcist’ completed) because she'd just got into an apartment and needed a couch. She didn't want the bad juju from the set, so she had it reupholstered,” Green says. “It’s something no audience in a million years would ever notice.”
veryGood! (4)
Related
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- Copa América draw: USMNT shares group with Uruguay, Panama
- This African bird will lead you to honey, if you call to it in just the right way
- Indonesia’s youth clean up trash from waterways, but more permanent solutions are still elusive
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Ospreys had safety issues long before they were grounded. A look at the aircraft’s history
- Jon Rahm explains why he's leaving the PGA Tour to join LIV Golf in 2024
- Applesauce recall linked to 64 children sick from high levels of lead in blood, FDA says
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Four women got carbon monoxide poisoning — from a hookah. Now, they're warning others.
Ranking
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- A Jan. 6 rioter praised Vivek Ramaswamy at his sentencing for suggesting riot was an ‘inside job’
- Boy battling cancer receives more than 1,000 cards for his birthday. You can send one too.
- US touts new era of collaboration with Native American tribes to manage public lands and water
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- What to know about the Hall & Oates legal fight, and the business at stake behind all that music
- Adele delivers raunchy, inspiring speech at THR gala: 'The boss at home, the boss at work'
- What to know about Hanukkah and how it's celebrated around the world
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Jon Rahm bolts for LIV Golf in a stunning blow to the PGA Tour
Thousands of tons of dead sardines wash ashore in northern Japan
Food makers focus on Ozempic supplements and side dishes
Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
110 funny Christmas memes for 2023: These might land you on the naughty list
14 Can't Miss Sales Happening This Weekend From Coach to Walmart & So Much More
Emma Stone fuels 'Poor Things,' an absurdist mix of sex, pastries and 'Frankenstein'