The Exorcist (1973) REACTION

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  • Опубліковано 13 жов 2022
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 648

  • @matthewmarcinko9157
    @matthewmarcinko9157 Рік тому +168

    Almost 50 years after being released, "The Exorcist" to this day still remains the measuring stick to which all other horror films are compared. That is legendary.

    • @alanh.7668
      @alanh.7668 Рік тому +7

      Yeah, that combination of really good acting, screenplay and practical fx is rarely achieved!

    • @mrnohax5436
      @mrnohax5436 8 місяців тому

      *its the only movie that sacred me the right way*

    • @kevinknight9950
      @kevinknight9950 6 місяців тому

      That flight of stairs outside,some people are a little hesitant to walk them,because of the movie.

  • @TTM9691
    @TTM9691 Рік тому +73

    16:04 - Best reaction ever to the staircase scene. A scream so blood-curdling it could have been in the movie!

    • @Webwyrm
      @Webwyrm Рік тому +17

      I was doing some work listening…. I heard that yell and looked up..saw the staircase and was like..yup..that will do it lol

    • @dedo7326
      @dedo7326 Рік тому +3

      I’m so confused because I just watched this movie on HBO and that scene wasn’t on there at all and I’m so mad. I watched it and right away went and watched this reaction. The HBO version has so many missing parts and it’s still 2 hrs long

    • @TTM9691
      @TTM9691 Рік тому +12

      @@dedo7326 That's because you watched the original theatrical version; the staircase scene is only in the Director's Cut.

    • @Officer_jackie
      @Officer_jackie 10 місяців тому +1

      I have heard similar scream in an Indian thriller movie..
      Also.. It reminds me of a scream I guess from "silence of the lamb" Movie..
      That psychopathic scream thingy!!

  • @DylansPen
    @DylansPen Рік тому +12

    "This will be the first horror movie I have watched." That's like saying, "Hey, I'm a new mountain climber, just bought these boots, and I'm going to climb Mt. Everest."

  • @a-top7090
    @a-top7090 Рік тому +111

    Even though this film is like...50 years old. It's still creepy and not dated at all....no wonder people back in the day were so frightened by this.

    • @MrOuran369
      @MrOuran369 Рік тому +5

      One of my aunts saw this when she was in her 20's. The movie scared people so much that the theaters were giving out vomit bags for people who had a weak stomach. Some even left the theaters during the movie cause they couldn't handle it.

    • @potterj09
      @potterj09 Рік тому +2

      First time i saw "c******" as a verb heh

    • @brycealthoff8092
      @brycealthoff8092 Рік тому +4

      My mom saw this film with her sisters back when this came out. They were so spooked by it they slept in the same room together for a week!

    • @breakingames7772
      @breakingames7772 Рік тому +3

      The voice and wheezing noises she makes came from a woman who was found by scouting for a person who smoked 4 packs of cigarettes a day...she later died of cancer

    • @neilmcdonald9164
      @neilmcdonald9164 Рік тому +3

      It is dated in some ways,c'mon...but it is very much a classic,yes🎩

  • @MrGpschmidt
    @MrGpschmidt Рік тому +30

    One of the greatest films - horror or not - ever. Visceral and completely unnerving. I met William Friedkin several yrs ago - intense but very polite & kind. Longer ago I went to a special screening in NYC @ Radio City Music Hall (decades before they used to run movies there too) and when I arrived at the entrance an elegantly dressed woman arrived at the same exact moment. Being a gentleman I opened it for her and ushered her into the lobby - she smiled and said 'Thank you!' Moments later the same woman, Ellen Burstyn who plays the mom, was onstage introducing the film. Great job Trix.

  • @asterix7842
    @asterix7842 Рік тому +6

    "I've seen The Exorcist about 167 times and it keeps getting funnier EVERY TIME I SEE IT!"
    - Beetlejuice

  • @PraxizC
    @PraxizC Рік тому +10

    This is not "old school" horror, this is first day of school horror. This is the where true horror was born

  • @tarzapopohead
    @tarzapopohead Рік тому +5

    The scene where she is reverse crab walking down the stairs is the extra scene they added for the directors extended cut.

  • @elvispressley9598
    @elvispressley9598 Рік тому +51

    Trixy: There are things in old movies, such as this one, that young reactors like you must miss simply because of your youth. For example, the tiny white pills in a tiny metal container was Nitro Glycerin commonly described for heart patients when this movie was made. The movie was letting its viewers know the old priest had a serious heart condition the demon would later exploit to cause him to have a heart attack. Another example: When a patient would get an MRI brain scan, they would shoot dye into the neck of the patient to better show what was going on in the brain. Also, when this movie came out, there were NO demonic possession movies. This was the first of its kind, based on a true story. That made it scarier. The only way to see was on the big screen in a darkened movie theater. That, too, made it scarier. It was the only movie of its kind in which the charters were true to life and reacted to the events in the movie the way people would have reacted in real life. That made it feel more real. That made the movie scarier, too. Lastly, you can't just sit in silence and take fully take in the movie, and how frightening it truly is when you have to think about what you are going to say and say it because you are doing a reaction video. The bottom line is, for us that saw it in 1973, this movie was, by miles, the scariest movie we ever saw or will ever see.

    • @Fast_Eddy_Magic
      @Fast_Eddy_Magic Рік тому +1

      The movies the detective described to the priests, too. If the reactors knew who the actors he mentioned were, they'd know how ridiculous they'd be playing those parts.

    • @Joe-hh8gd
      @Joe-hh8gd Рік тому +2

      Reactors are too young to fully "get" most earlier films. Especially from the 70s. Saying things like "why are they talking that way?" or "why is he smoking?", etc. And forget about cultural references which means they miss half the jokes in some comedies. I dread the day when we go to a theater and half the audience wont stop talking (reacting)! I consider these more as Mystery Science Theater...for good movies. And they ask questions about things that are covered in the film but they missed it hecause theyre talking over dialogue. And their displays! One guy i saw was "reacting" to 2001...on a 20-inch monitor! Another was watching Forbidden Planet...on a tablet! Really sad way to see/experience films when you think about it.

    • @paulsullivan1650
      @paulsullivan1650 Рік тому

      Hate to say it, but so many young people are just plain idiots today. And have you noticed that about half are illiterate too?

    • @usgreth
      @usgreth Рік тому

      Oh yeah, I was going to mention those nitro-glycerin tablets, think they were marketed under a different name so people wouldn't think they were eating explosives (the tablets are a non-explosive form of the chemical).

    • @dmp1520
      @dmp1520 Рік тому

      @@Joe-hh8gd many people today are just stupid and lazy and have no sense of civilization whatsoever...

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose2000 Рік тому +16

    Hey Blue, I think the reason, "The Exorcist " resonate so deeply after all these years is the fact that it is one of the first reality based horror flicks that was created. Before that horror movies were about vampires and Werewolves and they were pretty over the top, so you could detach yourself from these events actually taking place. Not so with "The Exorcist" I will never touch a Weegee board in life and don't even try to bring one in the room. I will run the other way for sure. With the Exorcist you fell that you this could definitely happen to you or a love one. And you would be powerless to fight back. Lengenary for sure.

  • @robertkramer2271
    @robertkramer2271 Рік тому +11

    Nobody really ever seems to realize what Father Karras does at the end. He's not attacking "Regan". All he sees is the demon and by willing it into himself he sacrifices his life to save someone he never met. Again, remember, he never met Regan, he only met the demon.

    • @sausagefestcity5078
      @sausagefestcity5078 6 місяців тому +1

      You are correct. People have low comprehension levels I swear. The DEMON wanted to choke and kill Regan. Karras takes control of his body and dives out the window.

  • @pierredavid22
    @pierredavid22 Рік тому +9

    21:05 ''Holy Jesus, what the hell did i just witness?'' Welcome to the OG horror movie. Almost 50 years later, still in the top 5.

  • @drums4metal
    @drums4metal Рік тому +27

    This is not just a horror movie, this is The Horror Movie for excellence. My favorite along with The Shining, Rosemary's Baby, The Omen, The Thing (John Carpenter's), Silence of the Lambs and Poltergeist.

    • @robertarodecker2558
      @robertarodecker2558 Рік тому +1

      The onlybthing I don't like on the shining it has the same ending as burnt offerings with oliver reed. Which came out before the shineing

    • @carlosrojas8175
      @carlosrojas8175 Рік тому +1

      Excelent films

  • @hk43xx
    @hk43xx Рік тому +22

    When I saw you were reacting to this movie, I said "Hell Yeah!" This is the only movie that I have to mentally prepare myself to watch. Kudos to you for watching it alone.

    • @johnbernhardtsen3008
      @johnbernhardtsen3008 Рік тому +1

      I saw it back in my local cinema for the 30th anniversary almost 20 yrs ago !dang it was still my best movie experience of all time! sat in a strange position because of my 1st slipped disc, when father Merrin arrived and Megan screamed his name, I had the best goosebumps from a movie ever!

  • @matthewcostello3530
    @matthewcostello3530 Рік тому +5

    not a coin, a holy medallion with the likeness of a saint on it

  • @chickmcgee1000
    @chickmcgee1000 Рік тому +23

    I’ve never thought the newer films that depend on CGI compare to these incredibly well done practical effects. When I saw this at the theater when it was released in the early 70s I was thirteen. It scared most people who saw it. If you really enjoy the novel.

    • @kevinkingmaker7395
      @kevinkingmaker7395 Рік тому +3

      Linda Blair paid for those practical effects with a lifelong back injury.

    • @davidsavage5630
      @davidsavage5630 Рік тому +4

      CGI certainly has its place but not as an alternative to the type of work done in The Exorcist. Because everything in The Exorcist looks phenomenal..

    • @jonalberts980
      @jonalberts980 Рік тому +2

      @@davidsavage5630 The best example I can think of is the wall scene in A Nightmare on Elm Street. Stretching a spandex "wall" in the original was a LOT scarier than the cgi cartoon in the reboot, which was probably 100-100,000 times more expensive.

    • @davidsavage5630
      @davidsavage5630 Рік тому +2

      @@jonalberts980 Yep. The latex wall from 1984 was and still is super creepy and effective. The CGI one in the 2010s remake was just...nothing. Didn't even look like good CGI. All that stuff should be practical. But then stuff like Transformers....I'd still do as much practical as possible even then....but the Transformers themselves and a lot of the weaponry. CGI is the literal only way to do that in the way it needs to be. But they should never quit using one in favor of the other..

  • @izzysantiago978
    @izzysantiago978 10 місяців тому +2

    Fun Fact" Max Von Sydow AKA Father Merrin was only 44 when he played the 80 year old priest in The Exorcist.

  • @mikeman2862
    @mikeman2862 Рік тому +48

    The spider/backwards crawl down the stairs is still one of the creepiest and scariest moments in movie history. The build up of tension of things prior and surprise of it is brilliant.
    Your reaction to it is completely understandable

    • @zeer0squared
      @zeer0squared Рік тому +6

      They actually had to take that scene out of the theater release - they thought it would scare the audience too much and put people into shock. (or that could be a really cool rumor)

    • @mikeman2862
      @mikeman2862 Рік тому +5

      @@zeer0squared Aye i remember hearing it was removed for being too much for the times

    • @PadraicCepek
      @PadraicCepek Рік тому +2

      The reason why it wasn’t in the theatrical cut is because the director thought it was poor pacing to find out about Burkes death and then have that jump scare right after.

    • @robertarodecker2558
      @robertarodecker2558 Рік тому +2

      No the director said you can see the strings. That's why they took it out. Now they can remove it so you can't notice it.

    • @bloodzerox20
      @bloodzerox20 Рік тому +2

      I don't watch reactions that don't include this scene, it's my favorite scene and gets the beat scare reaction 😅

  • @nikolatesla5553
    @nikolatesla5553 Рік тому +10

    I saw this back in 1973 at the theater. I still consider it to be the scariest movie I have ever seen.

  • @McKamikazeHighlander
    @McKamikazeHighlander Рік тому +3

    My Mum went to see this film in the cinema when she was 14. Afterwards, she was that scared by it that whilst on the bus home the ticket inspector tapped her on the shoulder to ask to see her ticket and she screamed. She always maintained this was the scariest film she ever saw. These days we're desensitized to such things that we rely on jump scares but back then, this would have been genuinely terrifying

  • @everyonelovesmajima
    @everyonelovesmajima Рік тому +4

    The only thing that actually ages this movie is the amount of people smoking in a hospital.

  • @kevinjones8583
    @kevinjones8583 Рік тому +10

    This is one of the scariest movies I've seen, still one of the best horror films in my opinion. Some of the other great ones about exorcism are The Rite, with Anthony Hopkins and The exorcism of Emily Rose. Both based on real events.

  • @jeffelliott7353
    @jeffelliott7353 Рік тому +2

    Note how the mother didn't seem to be familiar with the term "exorcism". That was true of most folks. This movie made many people aware of it and laid the groundwork for future possession-type movies.
    As well this movie shows you can generate real horror from something as mundane as crab-walking, which was an actual exercise in my PE class before this came out. Lol...the school district dropped it immediately after this film came out

  • @Noahsampeer
    @Noahsampeer Рік тому +12

    The first time I saw this was in theaters for the 2000 re-release along with the extended cut. I was 17 or 18 at the time and I was a fan of horror movies. This one REALLY stuck with me. Especially that creepy face that keeps flashing every so often. I still hate that face to this day.

    • @steewith2ees14
      @steewith2ees14 Рік тому

      same here - I was 21 and having been born in the UK in 1979 I had no access to even the theatrical cut up until then as it had been banned in the early 80's during the 'video nasty' moral panic.

  • @billbabcock1833
    @billbabcock1833 Рік тому +8

    This movie came out the day after Christmas in 1973 when I was 19. How do I remember that? I took a date to this the day it opened. I thought it'd be a regular horror movie because there had never been a movie like this before.
    My date made us leave at the bed shaking scene. I had to go back by myself a week later to see the rest of the movie.

  • @CalciumChief
    @CalciumChief Рік тому +6

    "I’ve seen 'The Exorcist' about 167 times and it keeps getting funnier every single time I see it".

  • @jamzales
    @jamzales Рік тому +5

    I was 9 in 1973. This was one of the scariest movies in the 1970's. There was Rosemarie's Baby, and the 3 The Omen films. And then of course Alien in 1979 which I saw when I was 15.

  • @rokmin8550
    @rokmin8550 Рік тому +8

    good reaction for one so young, I'm going to try to explain a little of this. I was born Catholic so exorcism is part of our religion, though rarely talked about. This movie was based on the last church approved exorcism in the USA. To me its the element of truth that makes this more than just a "scary movie" since I totally believe in possession its especially worrisome. The thing to remember about possession is that the demon has to be invited in, as when the priest said "take me" at the end. A Ouija board is supposed to open the door to the "other side", its not a toy though its often marketed as one. There's lots more, including the relevance of the very beginning excavation scene. But I'll stop here, all the best!

  • @sinnerforlife2827
    @sinnerforlife2827 10 місяців тому +3

    I was raised Catholic and this movie is a masterpiece. Even now as an atheist I still love it.

    • @kevinknight9950
      @kevinknight9950 16 днів тому

      To me,the freakiest part of this movie,after the preist goes out the window,then down a flight of stairs.later on wiggles his fingers.

  • @cheezebag
    @cheezebag Рік тому +7

    omg your reaction to her coming down the stairs on all 4s was priceless, i dont think ive ever heard you scream that loud

  • @kazumajay
    @kazumajay Рік тому +5

    Glad to see more people discovering the Exorcist.

  • @sweatd0g
    @sweatd0g Рік тому +5

    Loved your reaction. This movie was the first of its kind in that it was based in reality. When it was released, people were crying and fainting in the theaters, and many just walked out. They couldn't handle it. In my opinion, the 80s were the golden age of horror films. My recommendation for you is The Thing (1982)...or anything horror-related made by John Carpenter.

  • @davidanderson1639
    @davidanderson1639 Рік тому +2

    I got to see The Exorcist in the cinema when it was reissued in the late 90s; it was absolutely stunning on the big screen. The juxtaposition of very bright, loud scenes & dark, quiet scenes in one of the things that helps add to the terrifying nature of this film.
    Personally I actually prefer the extended directors cut, as it adds a little bit more to the film.
    Fun Fact:
    In ancient Mesopotamia, the demon Pazuzu was the king of the demons of the wind, brother of Humbaba and son of the god Hanbi. He also represented the southwestern wind, the bearer of storms and drought.
    Pazuzu is often depicted as a combination of diverse animal and human parts. He has the body of a man, the head of a lion or dog, talons of an eagle, two pairs of wings, a scorpion's tail and a serpentine penis. He has his right hand up and left hand down.
    Pazuzu was invoked in apotropaic amulets (the charm we see falling & which Regan has). These combat the powers of his rival, the malicious goddess Lamashtu, who was believed to cause harm to mother and child during childbirth. Although Pazuzu is, himself, considered to be an evil spirit, he drives and frightens away other evil spirits, therefore protecting humans against plagues and misfortunes. So technically when Pazuzu appears in Regan’s bedroom, he was protecting her.
    Also Regarding Ouija Boards
    The Ouija board, in fact, came straight out of the American 19th century obsession with spiritualism, the belief that the dead are able to communicate with the living. Spiritualism, which had been around for years in Europe, hit America hard in 1848 with the sudden prominence of the Fox sisters of upstate New York; the Foxes claimed to receive messages from spirits who rapped on the walls in answer to questions, recreating this feat of channeling in parlors across the state. Aided by the stories about the celebrity sisters and other spiritualists in the new national press, spiritualism reached millions of adherents at its peak in the second half of the 19th century. Spiritualism worked for Americans: it was compatible with Christian dogma, meaning one could hold a séance on Saturday night and have no qualms about going to church the next day. It was an acceptable, even wholesome activity to contact spirits at séances, through automatic writing, or table turning parties, in which participants would place their hands on a small table and watch it begin shake and rattle, while they all declared that they weren’t moving it. The movement also offered solace in an era when the average lifespan was less than 50: Women died in childbirth; children died of disease; and men died in war. Even Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of the venerable president, conducted séances in the White House after their 11-year-old son died of a fever in 1862; during the Civil War, spiritualism gained adherents in droves, people desperate to connect with loved ones who’d gone away to war and never come home.
    Over the years the popularity of Ouija boards fluctuated, but following the success of The Exorcist, the fabric of popular culture surrounding them was forever changed & we’re left with what is nothing more than an irrational fear of a board game.
    Fun Fact: several of the Priests were actually practicing Priests. They were initially hired as technical advisers, but were then cast into the roles. They accepted these under the condition that the concept of possession was treated with the utmost seriousness.
    Also, when you see the actress who portrayed Regan’s mother fall & grab her back…..that reaction was genuine, due to the stage hands pulling her over with such force.
    Oh & another thing; one of the radiographer (Paul Bateson) was a real life serial killer!!

  • @Linda-zf2ps
    @Linda-zf2ps Рік тому +4

    I have no idea how many horror movies I've watched, but only two have made me come out of my seat. This is one. On the pyramid of horror, this movie is at the top.

  • @titoburrito777
    @titoburrito777 Рік тому +5

    I absolutely loved your reaction. The more you find out about the details of the movie, the deeper and heavier it gets. For example; Reagan, the little girl, is the one who defaced the statue in the church. At the same time she stole that crucifix. So many incredible details that make it so much scarier. Happy Halloween from California.

  • @taylortyler1867
    @taylortyler1867 Рік тому +22

    Loved your reaction. Now you know why this movie is so iconic. People had never seen anything like it in 1973 (I think it was '73). Not only was the movie upsetting to many, but the things they subjected this little girl (I think Linda Blair was 12 at the time) to, was even _more_ upsetting. I have a few suggestions for you, if you're going to continue the Halloween themed reactions. "An American Werewolf in London" is a fantastic horror/comedy from 1981? (or "82?). Gore, jump scares, humor, surprise dream sequences, love story, sex scene(not very graphic), unusual ending. It's got it all. Oh yeah, the Werewolf transformation scene is iconic, It's been 40 years and no other movie has done anything near as well/good. "The Haunting of Hill House" is probably the best horror series I've seen in a long time. It has 10 episodes, probably too many for you to react to, but I suggest you watch them on your free time. It's much deeper than just a horror story. Most people I've seen reacting to it, cry at some point (some at _several_ points).

    • @hungfao
      @hungfao Рік тому +1

      She was 14 portraying a 12 year old.

    • @cmr8er8
      @cmr8er8 Рік тому +1

      And had a body double for certain scenes. Eileen Dietzen, I believe, was the name of her body double...but not for the scene you'd imagine(if I remember correctly).

    • @taylortyler1867
      @taylortyler1867 Рік тому

      @@cmr8er8 I read somewhere that Linda actually broke bones in her back while filming the scene where she was going violently back & forth on the bed. I could understand using a double for several scenes, but she must've done something to bteak bones. Like I said, I just _read_ it somewhere, I don't remember where.

    • @hungfao
      @hungfao Рік тому

      @@taylortyler1867 She had back problems for life.

    • @cmr8er8
      @cmr8er8 Рік тому

      @@taylortyler1867 Yeah, she's stated in interviews that that scene messed up her back. If I remember correctly, the use of the body double came about as a result of all the make-up and prosthetics they had to use.

  • @kenehlears7716
    @kenehlears7716 Рік тому +22

    The demon was after Karras.he was having a crises of faith and made him a target.the girl and even Merrin were just pawns to get Karras..you did a wonderful job Blue as usual

    • @nyronfranklin5789
      @nyronfranklin5789 Рік тому +6

      You're half right. The girl was just bait. But the demon's beef was with Father Merrin. Merrin had exorcize the demon 12 years prior. It nearly killed Merrin. The demon used Damien to get Merrin there. The demon essentially wanted a rematch. It had unfinished business.

  • @mego73
    @mego73 Рік тому +2

    The spider walk was one of the scenes added for the extended cut. There are a few reasons it was not originally used in 1973 but I think the main reason was that they were not able to hide the wires in 1973. With the 2000 extended re-release they used digital technology to erase the wires.

  • @michaelm6948
    @michaelm6948 Рік тому +3

    It was a holy medal of a saint used for protection against evil. The medal showed up with the artifact in Iraq. It was a sign to Father Merrin that the demon he had faced before was coming to face him again.

  • @kj6446
    @kj6446 Рік тому +1

    not a commonly known fact, but the man to whom Regan says "You're going to die up there" is an astronaut and there is actually a side sequel movie about him going into space.

  • @IlseBelievesInPink
    @IlseBelievesInPink Рік тому +3

    16:02 best reaction to the spider walk scene

  • @pardwayne
    @pardwayne Рік тому +1

    I was 9 years old when this was shown on WGN "Chicago's very own channel 9."
    My dad was in an indulgent mood and let me watch it with him. This was before our area had cable access, so movies like this were heavily censored for TV. Still, he had 2nd thoughts in the middle of the movie and sent me to bed. I sheepishly complied, letting both my parents know how pissed off I was.
    10 minutes later, they let me out to watch the rest of it.
    I don't know what he was worried about. While he knew how offensive the movie was in the theater (we also didn't have a VCR), it wasn't the 1st time he'd watched it on TV so he must've known the "fuck me" bits would be cut.

  • @AneudiD78
    @AneudiD78 Рік тому +1

    I love The Exorcist because it's a slow burn leading up to the finale. My friend's brother was 12 years old when he watched this in '73. It's almost like a right of passage by saying that you watched it. All the commenters statements are true, after 50 years, this movie still holds up.

  • @VadersRage
    @VadersRage Рік тому +3

    Jesus.....you picked one HELL of a movie to be your first horror film! Everything else from here on out will seem tame by comparison.
    Great vid as usual!

  • @barkingmonkee
    @barkingmonkee Рік тому +1

    Said nobody else, ever, when watching the Exorcist, "It's just like Beetlegeuse all over again!"

  • @djfabianfontes
    @djfabianfontes 10 місяців тому +1

    The story is really about Father Karras. He's a guilt ridden priest who is questioning his faith.
    But then he is presented with something he can't explain with logic and in the end he commits
    the ultimate act of love by sacrificing his life to save someone he never met. Remember,
    he never met Reagan, he only met the demon.

  • @jamesoblivion
    @jamesoblivion Рік тому +1

    The age makeup on Max Von Sydow is so good. Dick Smith was a makeup legend, and you never doubt Merrin's age or frailty here, despite the actor being only in his 40s and quite fit.

  • @dayceem
    @dayceem Рік тому +1

    The priest's medallion had a relief of St. Joseph, among other things the patron saint of a satisfying death.

  • @newworldastrology1102
    @newworldastrology1102 Рік тому +2

    Creepy fact: they mixed real audio from slaughterhouses into the demon sounds.

  • @Insolation1
    @Insolation1 Рік тому +1

    Did you know that author William Peter Blatty's novel The Exorcist was inspired by the actual 1949 exorcism of a young boy from Cottage City, Maryland, and the horrifying 1634 Loudun exorcisms? The story goes that Blatty heard about the Maryland case while he was a student at Georgetown University.

    • @Psilocybin77
      @Psilocybin77 Рік тому

      Definitely some elements from the case of Anneliese Michel which inspired the film "The Exorcism of Emily Rose". The fantastic podcast "Last Podcast On the Left" did a lengthy episode about her story and it's extremely creepy and heartbreaking. The film was a very loose interpretation of the actual events and I think failed to do her story justice.

    • @lisal29
      @lisal29 Рік тому

      He actually made a guess appearance in the movie too

  • @ennuieffect
    @ennuieffect Рік тому +2

    The Exorcist was the first of it’s kind. Virtually every single movie about possession takes from the this masterpiece. And this without CG and modern sound effects. Everything was analog and while some of it is dated, it gave us one of the most frightening experiences in motion picture history.

  • @unclejunesgaming4325
    @unclejunesgaming4325 Рік тому +2

    that spider walk. YES!!! JUMP

  • @steve6valdez
    @steve6valdez Рік тому +2

    You definitely picked up on the fact that Father Merrin and the demon had battled before. I believe that when Father Merrin's dig discovered the artifacts in the beginning that they were a warning from the demon and a hint as to who his next victim would be. The medallion that they found that was "not of the same period" was similar to the medallion Damien wore around his neck. The demon head figurine was similar to the sculptures that Regan made in her basement, including the one that Kinderman found at the bottom of the steps. Merrin may not have understood the clues to Regan and Damien but he definitely recognized the demon head. I think he knew at that moment that he would soon be called to fight the demon again. As someone else commented, despite all that Regan went through, she was not the demon's target. It was a priest, to get back at Merrin for casting him out during the exorcism in Africa years before. With Damien's crisis of faith, he was an easy choice for the demon. "It will bring us together. ... You and us."

  • @smavtmb2196
    @smavtmb2196 Рік тому +13

    Excited for your reaction.
    You did not disappoint.
    Hope you're not traumatized
    This movie starts out slowly building up the tension. The creepy music really helps with that. The movie has some gross things in it but I think its more of a psychological horror
    So disturbing/creepy
    Watched this as a kid with friends around 1991. My friend Steven ran out of the room and refused to come back in.
    Everyone did a very convincing acting job. I'm not a big horror fan but I definitely appreciate how well this was made especially for 1973

  • @soyluismanueltea
    @soyluismanueltea Рік тому +2

    The spider walk doesn’t even exist in the book. Instead, a worst description of what happens that night made me close the book and wait to the next day to collect the courage to continue reading.

  • @ericaabbott2938
    @ericaabbott2938 Рік тому +3

    I've watched a bunch of other reactions and you are the 1st one I've seen that actually gets the movie. Just a side note.... the spiderwalk scene was not in the theatrical release. Also I've been to the steps it's not that far from me. It's absolutely insane to stand at the top of them and look down. I am in awe of that the stunt man he act did that twice. Great reaction!

  • @namco003
    @namco003 Рік тому +3

    16:00 Girl, how you managed to get your eyes that freakin' wide is amazing!! I've seen you scared, but you are straight up TERRIFIED right here! OMG, I feel a bit guilty. Glad you came out smiling after LOL!!

  • @Kap00rwith2os
    @Kap00rwith2os Рік тому +2

    16:02 RIP people with headphones... 😅

  • @flexxappeal1
    @flexxappeal1 Рік тому +2

    The Exorcist is the Queen Mother of Horror Films…EVER!!! 😱🫣❤️👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾

  • @Apostasy362
    @Apostasy362 Рік тому

    To answer your question about the priest's necklace...
    It wasn't the same coin that Father Merrin found in the dig in Iraq. That was a St. Christopher's medallion. In the Catholic faith, St. Christopher was one of the 14 Holy Helpers and is the patron saint of travelers. Christians sometimes wear his medallion as a sigil of protection, as Father Karras did. The demon wasn't able to possess him until it removed the medallion.
    Another bit of trivia. According to the book the movie was based on, the demon's name was Pazuzu. The figurine and the statue that we saw in Iraq were both depictions of Pazuzu. I highly recommend reading the book at some point; among other things, it goes into much greater detail about the significance of the demon killing Burke by twisting his head around (that's a form of demonic execution).

  • @nativetexan9776
    @nativetexan9776 Рік тому +1

    It was the first movie of this magnitude ever made and it did its job in scarring and entire generation. I was alone in my car at a drive-in movie and it scared the bejesus out of me.

  • @owenwildish331
    @owenwildish331 Рік тому +3

    This film is iconic and one of the best horror films of its time... there was actually a sequel to the 'Exorcist', 'Exorcist II: The Heretic'... but that one is apparently considered to be one of the worst films ever made. I hope you'll react to 'The Omen', one of the actors in that film played one of the earliest Doctors in Doctor Who, and I also suggest something a bit more light-hearted, a horror comedy, 'Carry On Screaming' (it's one of the classic Carry On films, one of my favourites), it also features another early classic Doctor Who Doctors... ;)

  • @Yldcatz
    @Yldcatz Рік тому +5

    You did well to get through it. I saw it in the theater when it came out and was quite terrified

  • @ThalesPo
    @ThalesPo Рік тому +4

    Great reaction. And as I always say, read the novel to get the full story.

  • @kevinknight9950
    @kevinknight9950 9 місяців тому +1

    Don,t feel bad,trixie.that "spider walk"down the stairs still freaks me out too.

  • @willowwisp357
    @willowwisp357 10 місяців тому +1

    I’ve seen this movie like 10,000 times and it just keeps getting funnier every time I see it! 😂😂

  • @chrisclark7170
    @chrisclark7170 Рік тому +4

    It's not a horror movie that wants to cheap scares, it wants to leave you feeling disturbed, it wants to linger and touch your soul in a bad way.

  • @NicholasRamos
    @NicholasRamos Рік тому +2

    The Exorcist (1973) is a classic, suspense, horror movie like NO OTHER horror movie. It's not your typical slasher/mass shooting, cheaply made, horror movie. It scared many religious people, in the US & around the world, in the 70's which made it a highly disturbing/controversial movie at the time. Also, unlike typical horror movies, The Exorcist featured popular, highly respected actors of the 70's. Acting legends like Ellen Burstyn (mother), Max Von Sydow (Father Merrin), Lee J Cobb (homicide detective), & strong, newcomers like Jason Miller (Father Karras) & Linda Blair (Regan). You will not find a better cast of actors assembled in the cheap horror films produced after The Exorcist. It was nominated for 10 Oscars, including a nomination for Best Picture, Best Actress (Burstyn), & Best Supporting Actress (Blair). The Exorcist won 2 Oscars. Cheap horror films, & their sequels, get little to no critic acclaim like The Exorcist (1973) did. That's why The Exorcist is considered the BEST suspense, horror film ever made.

    • @JoelCraike
      @JoelCraike 11 місяців тому +1

      The Exorcist is my favourite movie of all time

  • @gedrooney9305
    @gedrooney9305 10 місяців тому

    The flash of the demons face during the dream sequence of Karra’s is still one of the scariest scenes in cinema history, it lasts for a a second..great cinema!

  • @carlosyamara
    @carlosyamara Рік тому

    “What the hell did I just witness?!” And you’re watching it with lights on and a small screen. Can you even imagine what it must have been like in 1973? In a dark theater with lights off and a giant screen with others screaming? No wonder there were people running out of the theaters, watch the videos on UA-cam they are very insightful. We have to remember people hadn’t been desensitized with decades of horror, blood and gore in their movies back then. It was shocking to say the least. Great reaction video.

  • @chriscorvino2685
    @chriscorvino2685 Рік тому +1

    Loving that "what the hell did I just watch" face at 14:16.

  • @nathanschumacher3772
    @nathanschumacher3772 Рік тому

    The radiographer is actually in jail or murder. She was first having a Carotid Angiogram and then a Pneumoencephalogram on the Philips Polytome, that's the device that had the x-ray spinning above her. In reality the table would be moving in a seesaw motion at the same time. Otherwise they put you in a chair and spun you upside down and took scans at a dozen different degrees to get different vascular/CSF displacements. Both are dangerous. Both phased out now for modern use of MRI and CT. CT came out a few years after this film was made then MRI came out another 10 years later. Pneumoencephalograms require a 'spinal tap' they remove CSF fluid from your brain and replace with air. This is to make the contrast better on x-ray, as x-ray is very poor at discriminating soft tissue. Yes, she would have been crying and screaming. She would have been in pain for weeks after the procedure.

  • @davidsuttles101
    @davidsuttles101 Рік тому +4

    Great reaction! As old as this movie is, it still holds up today…creepy AF! I would have loved to have watched this with you!

  • @TheJuRK
    @TheJuRK 9 місяців тому

    The "coin" at the end was a St. Joseph's medal. Father Merrin finds one in Iraq at the beginning. Father Karrass sees one falling in his dream. The demon pulls Karrass' medal off in the bedroom at the end before leaping into the priest.
    (I would recommend The Shining. Alien. Psycho.)

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose2000 Рік тому +3

    I knew Blue would have an out of body experience with "THe Exorcist" once Riley peed herself at the dinner party. If Blue was disturbed then, I don't know if she could handle the rest. Lucifer trying to make her mother eat her cooch, or the infamous crab walk down the stairs. We have a long way to go.
    I hope BLue doesn't need a night light for the next 6 months. "The Exorcist " can make you rethink your soul for sure.
    Oh I almost forgot the 360 head spin with viseral neck cracking. A sight only a mother of a possessed girl could bear to watch.

  • @sammylane21
    @sammylane21 Рік тому +2

    So....Trixy is reacting from either a friend's house or a studio? She said "After this I have to go home." indicating she lives elsewhere.

  • @mlong1958
    @mlong1958 Рік тому

    I saw this in the theater when I was 12. Max Von Sydow (Father Merrin) was only 44 when he made this movie. He is also the guy who gave the map to Po in The Force Awakens. The Exorcism of Emily Rose is a really scary exorcism movie.

  • @billshinn7001
    @billshinn7001 Рік тому +2

    "Why in the throat???" That's the way they used to do arteriograms. And yes, thank goodness for progress. :) I've seen this film around 800 times since 1980, and you did an admirable job for your first time.

    • @fr_reynolds5002
      @fr_reynolds5002 Рік тому +1

      Your life sounds action packed

    • @jonalberts980
      @jonalberts980 Рік тому +2

      The procedure is still similar.

    • @billshinn7001
      @billshinn7001 Рік тому +1

      @@jonalberts980 I'm sorry to hear that.

    • @billshinn7001
      @billshinn7001 Рік тому

      @@fr_reynolds5002 I assure you, it is. :)

    • @jonalberts980
      @jonalberts980 Рік тому +2

      @@billshinn7001 The photograph procedure doesn't sound like machine gun fire anymore, so that's good.

  • @branmakmorn
    @branmakmorn 9 місяців тому

    Interesting fact: Linda Blair who played Rags came up with the green vomit. If you wanna know what happened to Fr. Karras check out The Exorcist III

  • @bigfootfound5301
    @bigfootfound5301 Рік тому +1

    Love seeing a kid react how people did 50 years ago!! YES! You know why it get's you, on the scare meter? Because the long, low key, dull scenes of everyday life transition into fast paced nightmare scenes... without much warning. Great juxtaposition, unexpected gross outs and chills.

  • @9012505
    @9012505 Рік тому

    The scary thing it that it is based on a true story. It was a 14 year old boy, not a 12 year old girl. The real house is still standing and located in Bel Nor, Montana. It has been featured on some ghost hunting shows.

  • @rubbersole79
    @rubbersole79 Рік тому

    When this came out, you needed a note if a minor to get admission, which at 13, my friends and I all got from our parents. None of us ever spoke of it ever again, and I slept with the lights on for at least a year after. Still a powerful thing. Honestly wish I'd never seen it.

  • @philmullineaux5405
    @philmullineaux5405 2 місяці тому

    I believe it's from a true story that happened in Germany in the 50s or 60s. The girl, Linda Blair, couldn't get many acting jobs after this, kinda cursed! But she should have got an Oscar and lifetime Oscar for this! The mom is Ellen Burstin, with many fine acting roles. What she did in Requiem for a Dream, was outstanding!! So many pro tips on this...look up in here, any shorts or documentary on it. It still sets the standard for horror! To put movies up with this I would say first 3 evil dead, drag me to hell( same director 😮) the descent, barbarian, the nun, woman in black, The Thing, The Fly, Alien, the shining, and as good or better than this, hereditary! The old priest was only 42, makeup job. He had some trouble getting roles after this because directors thought he was older! The green puke hit him in the face, it wasn't supposed to but the director had it happen for a more surprised look on his face! Sometimes the director fired gunshots next to an actor, for A very surprised look on their faces! He kept the room at 40 degrees! The mom was permanently hurt during her fight scene with Reagan! The woman who does the voice was originally uncredited, she didn't want it known it was her! Orson Welles called her the greatest voice actress of all time! She smoked cigs and drank whiskey daily her whole life! Linda had to have 24/7 security for almost a year, people were convinced she was possessed! Basically this movie is a second rematch. Marron found the idol, and the Catholic pendant, in the beginning. In Iraq. How they both got here, I don't know. 'm guessing the pendant was with the idol, to keep it contained. Likely it was this demon, Pazuzu or Paimon. Then his exorcism that lasted 6 months in Africa, it was this demon again. Somehow, the pendant made it's way to the younger priest who wore it for protection and a piece of the idol, made it to this house.this is why the old priest, and this demon knew each other. In Iraq, the evil idol, and st judes pendant, were together. As if the pendant was holding back the demon.

  • @MaoKatz
    @MaoKatz Рік тому +1

    13:21 Don't be that happy yet, the injection of contrast via jugular for brain angiography is still used and CT Scan and MRI still sound like that...

  • @khagen50
    @khagen50 Рік тому +1

    To me this movie is more like a documentary rather than a horror.

  • @MrTech226
    @MrTech226 Рік тому

    Trixy Blue
    Production has to hire an adult actress as Linda Blair's (Regan) double for those most disturbing scenes because of Linda Blair was either 13 or 14 years old during filming. Someone stated that this movie will have its 50th Anniversary for next year still holds up. Because its script and practical special effects done by late legendary special makeup artist, Dick Smith and his team. They transformed Linda Blair as possessed teen and 45'ish Max von Sydow (Father Merrin) into late 70's to early 80's elderly man. For Regan's head that eerily completely turns, Smith and his team made a head of Linda's that rotates 360 degrees.

  • @markadams3976
    @markadams3976 Рік тому +1

    I saw this film on the first day of release in Glasgow and there was a picket line of priests and nuns outside the cinema urging folk not to go in and risk their souls - seriously it was not a publicity stunt! The churches had tried and failed to get the film banned. The hype had been so great that folk were fainting, running out of the cinema and throwing up during the showing.

  • @ZantiMisfit198
    @ZantiMisfit198 Рік тому +1

    Father Merrin was the one who released the evil spirit when he removed the sculpture of the demons head from the ground and the gust of wind that came out of the hole was the spirit being released,

  • @shallowgal462
    @shallowgal462 Рік тому +1

    The saint medal protected Damien. The demon had to tear it off him before it could enter.
    Once the demon entered him, he fought it just long enough to hurl himself out the window to protect Reagan. He sacrificed himself to save her.
    I recommend The Blair Witch Project and The Village.

  • @constantdvdcollector
    @constantdvdcollector Рік тому +1

    It's a good movie. I find the ending a little preposterous, though, with Kinderman not arresting or investigating any further after Damian Karras' death. Maybe it's just me, but since Detective Kinderman confident that Regan technically is physically responsible for Burke Dennings' death, and two more men have died in her presence (Merrin by Heart Attack and Karras by suicide by swan diving out the window), that is all reason to detain her and the rest of the household for questioning.

  • @xephrenata
    @xephrenata Рік тому +2

    Timeless! And before CGI was even a thing!

  • @h-e-acc
    @h-e-acc Рік тому

    In the novel, possessed regan was no longer eating that’s why she had the nasogastric tube in. So when she threw up, she was vomiting bile. That was what she vomited at father karras in the novel.

  • @daveeskin1193
    @daveeskin1193 Рік тому

    Scariest part of the Exorcist has to be location. I grew up about three or four blocks from that house and those freaking stairs. First saw the movie when I was 15, did not want to go near those stairs for the longest time….still won’t go down (or up) those stairs at night.

  • @liamwilliams6088
    @liamwilliams6088 Рік тому +1

    The staircase scene, and many other scenes, didn't make the cut eventually being cut from the movie's Theatrical release

  • @zoso7889
    @zoso7889 Рік тому +1

    @24:15 “What is that a cracker?”
    Guess she is not a Catholic lol

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose2000 Рік тому +2

    Hey Blue, Exorcist was intense for me to watch at age 10 or so, especially as I'm more deeply religious. I saw Friday 13th first at 8 or 9 years old, and I thought Friday 13th was the peak of fear until I watched Poltergeist. at 11. I could not be in the house alone for years. As a teen male, I had to put on a brave front, but now at 50, I can let the skeletons out of the closet. HA!!

  • @Deb-ex9st
    @Deb-ex9st Рік тому

    I experienced this first hand in the 70s. Only two movies in history has had a psychological cultural effect on people, this movie and Jaws. An entire country was afraid to go into the ocean that summer when Jaws came out. The exorcist people were passing out couldn't sleep and so on

  • @move_i_got_this5659
    @move_i_got_this5659 Рік тому +1

    Reagan spider walks down stairs and Blues face dives straight into a pillow. 😂

  • @Psilocybin77
    @Psilocybin77 Рік тому

    I think "The Exorcist" and "Ghostbusters" sparked a lifelong interest in the occult in me. We were allowed to watch whatever we wanted as a kid, the Eighties were wild. As an adult, I'm fascinated by the paranormal and mysticism, questions of the unknown and ineffable. Like Regan, I also had a pretty strange experience with a Ouija board when I was 12 years old. My mom found out what we were doing though and freaked out and that was the end of that. I've seen a lot of people scoff at the idea of a Ouija board being anything other than a toy that operates on shared delusion. Just like most things in life, we tend to belittle things we've never experienced or do not understand. The memory of my own experiences has stuck with me for decades. Whether it was "real" or not, it has made an indelible memory. I'm not advocating the use of such things by the way, because the potential for danger (real or imagined) is not worth the risk. I do have an analytical mind, take pride on my critical thinking skills, but there's something so utterly fascinating about this mysterious universe, we know so little about. Anyhow. Great Reaction Blue, your reaction to the spider walk made my day.

  • @jorgelopez-pr6dr
    @jorgelopez-pr6dr Рік тому +1

    The demon that is found in the expedition is called Pazuzu, and he is who is possesing the girl.