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Exorcist: The Beginning (2004)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
20 elokuu 2004 (USA) moreTagline:
A new chapter of evil morePlot:
Years before Father Lancaster Merrin helped save Regan MacNeil's soul, he first encounters the demon Pazuzu in East Africa. This is the tale of Father Merrin's initial battle with Pazuzu and the rediscovery of his faith. full summary | add synopsisAwards:
3 nominations moreUser Comments:
Too brutal, no substance more (296 total)Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Stellan Skarsgård | ... | Father Merrin | |
| Izabella Scorupco | ... | Sarah | |
| James D'Arcy | ... | Father Francis | |
| Remy Sweeney | ... | Joseph | |
| Julian Wadham | ... | Major Granville | |
| Andrew French | ... | Chuma | |
| Ralph Brown | ... | Sergeant Major | |
| Ben Cross | ... | Semelier | |
| David Bradley | ... | Father Gionetti | |
| Alan Ford | ... | Jefferies | |
| Antonie Kamerling | ... | Lieutenant Kessel | |
| Eddie Osei | ... | Emekwi | |
| Israel Aduramo | ... | Jomo | |
| Patrick O'Kane | ... | Bession | |
| James Bellamy | ... | James |
Additional Details
Also Known As:
Exorcist IV: The Beginning (USA) (working title)Exorcist Prequel (USA) (working title)
Exorcist: Dominion (USA) (working title)
more
MPAA:
Rated R for strong violence and gore, disturbing images and rituals, and for language including some sexual dialogue.Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
114 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColor:
ColorAspect Ratio:
2.00 : 1 moreCertification:
Germany:16 | Singapore:M18 (video rating) (cut) | Iceland:16 | Malaysia:18PL | South Korea:18 | Portugal:M/16 | Argentina:18 (theatrical release) | Argentina:13 | Australia:MA | Brazil:16 | Canada:18A | Czech Republic:12 | Finland:K-18 | Hong Kong:IIB (original rating) | Hong Kong:III | Ireland:18 | Japan:PG-12 | Netherlands:16 | Norway:15 | Peru:14 | Philippines:R-13 | Singapore:NC-16 (heavily cut) | Switzerland:16 (canton of Geneva) | Switzerland:16 (canton of Vaud) | UK:15 | USA:R (certificate #41064)Fun Stuff
Goofs:
Anachronisms: Father Gionetti gives Father Merrin a copy of the Rituale Romanum (Roman Ritual). (The administration of exorcism is in Title X of the Rituale Romanum.) The title of the book embossed on its leather cover is "Roman Ritual", in English. Later in the film, Father Merrin asks Joseph to help him by reading passages of the book, and we are shown a couple of printed pages, the text of which is also in English. The Rituale Romanum would have been printed in Latin in 1949, when the film is set, because vulgar translations of liturgical texts were not authorized until the promulgation of the Sacrosanctum Concilium (Constitution on the Sacred Liturgy) by Pope Paul VI on 4 December 1963, as part of the Second Vatican Council. moreSoundtrack:
Sharetny Oyounha moreFAQ
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What do you do when you're stuck with making the third sequel to a long-ago horror classic, and the two previous sequels have played out every possible angle? Why, you make everything as gory and bloody and exploitative as possible, far exceeding all three previous films' violence and gore quotient. You also hire a hack director, in this case Renny Harlin, because any reputable director would either: A. refuse to make this, or B. never be able to top the original, anyhow. In THE EXORCIST, William Friedkin directed a masterpiece to which there should never have been a followup, simple as that. EXORCIST: THE BEGINNING should have been a straight-to-video release, for all the special effects and bloody killings and panoramic desert shots. Stellan Skarsgard is saddled with following in Max Van Sydow's considerable footsteps as a younger Father Merrin in this so-called prequel, and no one else in the cast is worthy of note. There's no Linda Blair or Ellen Burstyn or Jason Miller or J. Lee Cobb here to lend able support. So the whole thing falls on Skarsgard's shoulders, and as mush as I admire the actor, he simply isn't up to it. He spends most of the movie standing around, providing reaction shots to the various doings, which include an endless series of children and adults being shot in the head, some shown repeatedly. As we know, this is really the director's fault. Renny Harlin. How much worse can it get? A couple of scary moments don't make up for all the crap the rest of this film is loaded down with. Plotwise, we have a middle-age, spiritually fatigued Merrin involved in a post-WWII East African dig that unearths the very demon he is destined to meet up with again in a Georgetown townhouse many years later. The good versus evil battle fought here is, shall we say, less than auspicious.