The Exorcist: Believer

The Exorcist: Believer is intense. You don’t have to actually believe in demonic possession to get a bit unnerved by the the film’s climax. And it’s not just the climax that makes The Exorcist: Believer a movie that merits your attention.

Director David Gordon Green bakes in tension from the film’s opening image of two dogs fighting, to the depiction of the 2010 Haitian earthquake, to a neighbor yelling about garbage cans, to siblings arguing on the way to school, to two girls making a questionable after school choice. 

From a setting of apparent domestic bliss enjoyed by Angela (Lidya Jewett) and her single dad Victor (Leslie Odom Jr.), this young girl and her friend Katherine (Olivia O’Neill) step into misfortune when they walk home from school through a wooded area. They are discovered three days later, cowering in a horse stall on a farm. When they are brought to a hospital, the real trouble begins.

While the girls are missing, Victor has less than pleasant dealings with Katherine’s parents Miranda (Jennifer Nettles) and Tony (Norbert Leo Butz), who make their strong Christian beliefs known immediately. In short order, it becomes obvious that something terrible has affected the girls. 

In the film’s second act, nurse Ann (Ann Dowd) reveals to Victor that Angela somehow knew that the woman was once on track to become a nun but had her dream derailed when she became pregnant. 

Victor tracks down Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) who had written a book about demonic possession. She, of course, is the mom from the 1973 film The Exorcist. She offers hope to Victor, tells him she doesn’t know where her daughter Regan is, and she comes to Katherine’s home to see if she can provide in-person help.

Victor prepares his home for the exorcism. The girls are strapped in. Their parents stand by apprehensively. A Catholic priest is recruited but says the diocese recommends psychiatric help for the girls instead. When he bows out, Ann takes over. Also on hand are Katherine’s Baptist pastor (Raphael Sbarge), a voodoo type healer (Okwui Okpokwasili) and a Pentecostal pastor (Danny McCarthy). 

This team effort produces a frightening mixture of fury and sound with smoke and flames and screams and images and general tumult. The effect IS unnerving. 

This film is said to be a direct sequel to that 50-years-ago movie that gave audience members adverse reactions, with many leaving the theaters and throwing up.

In the half century since William Friedkin’s massive hit, filmgoers have been exposed to lots of horrible things on movie screens. Which means the new Exorcist film does not have the immensely shocking impact of its predecessor. But it does generate an emotional response. 

Hats off to the two young girls for whom these roles had to be challenging. Will their performances affect their future lives? TBD. Ann Dowd’s work in this film is impressive. And how cool to see Ellen Burstyn who was approaching her 90th birthday when she filmed her scenes!

The Exorcist: Believer is rated R.

The Last Voyage of the Demeter

Horror films tend to fall into two main categories: cheesy and over the top or lower key and brooding. The Last Voyage Of The Demeter is of the latter variety. Creepy, yes, with peril lurking but revealing itself gradually. The film takes itself seriously—no winking at the audience.

The title is a bit of a spoiler. The onscreen text at the film’s opening is more of a spoiler. But, even if you know the ultimate outcome—as with Titanic or Apollo 13—the journey and its challenges and surprises provide the cruxes of the tale. 

The story, adapted from a chapter of Bram Stoker’s book Dracula, has hints of trouble from the loading of cargo onto the Demeter at an Aegean port. A wooden box with a curious logo falls and is about to hit young Toby (Woody Norman) when Clemens (Cory Hawkins) saves the kid from certain death. When another would-be crew member bails, Captain Eliot (Liam Cunningham) adds Clemens to the ship’s crew.

As the Demeter prepares to embark on its voyage to London, Toby (and dog Huckleberry) gives Clemons a tour of the lower section including the livestock pens and the cargo hold. The ship looks great in the film, above and below deck. There’s cautious camaraderie among the sailors. First mate Wojchek (David Dastmalchian) is a bit severe. Cook Joseph (Jon Jon Briones) is quite religious. 

Liam Cunningham who was Davos Seaworth in Game Of Thrones, seems to channel Sean Connery a bit in his portrayal of Captain Eliot. (Although Connery was Scottish and Cunningham is Irish.)

In short order, bad things start to happen. Among them, the discovery of a stowaway (Aisling Franciosi). A woman on board is considered bad luck by the crew. Clemons, a med school graduate, helps nurse her out of unconsciousness. She provides clues as to the source evil presence aboard the ship. The livestock is attacked and killed.

Director André Øvredal reveals small glimpses of Dracula which become more complete leading up the film’s climax. Each of the crew members has a confrontation with Drac. The outcomes are not good, some worse than others. 

Without tipping too much in this review, the final scene of the film is, to a certain extent, satisfying. 

The script by Bragi F. Schut and Zak Olkewicz was in so-called “development Hell” for nearly twenty years, per Wikipedia. A round of applause for those Hollywood folks who actually got this movie made!

Interesting credit on the film’s end scroll… for “Covid Marshalls.” The film was shot in 2021, shortly after we all got our first two vaccine shots. You did get your shots, right? 

Pet Sematary

Pet-Sematary-1

That delicious discomfort that drives us to watch scary movies! Hey, it’s a Stephen King story. Which means Pet Sematary has plenty of creepy elements to make an audience tingle with uneasiness.

Weird noises. Flickering lights. Doors that shouldn’t be opened but are opened anyway. Haunting flashbacks. A gory injury. A mysterious neighbor. And the discovery that a new home is nearby to a pet cemetery with a misspelled sign.

As with the recent film Us, a family unit of mom, dad, daughter and son pulls into a new house where all seems idyllic. Also, as in Us, the mom has dark memories of a frightening episode of her life.

Louis (Jason Clarke) and Rachel (Amy Seimetz) are parents to Ellie (Jeté Laurence) and Gage (Hugo and Louie Lavoie). The crusty neighbor is Jud (John Lithgow).

The new home is on the edge of the woods, on the edge of a small town in Maine. In short order, Ellie takes a walk into the woods to check out the pet cemetery and the strange wall of tree branches where she has her first encounter with Jud.

When the family’s cat dies, Jud leads Louis to a burial ground beyond that wall. The cat’s interment sets off the events that lead to some grisly outcomes.

Does Pet Sematary break new ground in filmmaking? No. But co-directors Kevin Kolsch and Dennis Widmyer have constructed an entertaining 100 or so minutes of scary, suspenseful storytelling. And it’s always fun to see John Lithgow onscreen.

Don’t expect a revelation. Or a classic. But the newest version of this Pet Sematary, sourced from Stephen King’s book, is good, creepy fun.