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The Exorcism (2024)

The Exorcism
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Movie The Exorcism (2024)
Real Title The Exorcism
Rating 3.7
Duration 95 Min
Aired 2024-05-30
Languages ENGLISH
Subtitle Esubs
Quality
Sources IMDB | TMDB

Countries

United States of America

Genres

HorrorThrillerHollywood MoviesEnglish Movies

Tags

ExorcismSurvival horrorBroken familyPsychological horrorAmused

Directors

Joshua John Miller

Stars

Russell Crowe, Ryan Simpkins, Sam Worthington, Chloe Bailey, Adam Goldberg, David Hyde Pierce

Writers

Joshua John Miller, M.A. Fortin

Companies

Miramax, Outerbanks Entertainment

Taglines

Taglines: They were making a cursed movie. They were warned not to. They should have listened.

Description

A troubled actor begins to unravel while shooting a supernatural horror film, leading his estranged daughter to wonder if he's slipping back into his past addictions or if there's something more sinister at play.

Reviews:

Author: Geronimo1967
Clearly the Pope wasn't so impressed with Russell's last outing as his exorcist so abandoned the project to some new producers who have decided he might do better as an dissolute actor ("Anthony") cast to play a priest who is an exorcist. Unbeknown to him, though, we know that the studio set is home to a malevolent spirit - who saw off his predecessor (or perhaps he just volunteered) - and is now determined to cause more mischief. Luckily, director "Peter" (Adam Goldberg) has engaged the services of a real priest (David Hyde Pierce) to authenticate the clerical aspects of the film as "Anthony" and co-star "Joe" (Sam Worthington) find their efforts constantly disrupted by his increasingly vivid dreams, lots of bursting light bulbs and the tiniest bit of Satanic body-bopping. There's really nothing at all to recommend this to anyone. It's not original, nor is it funny. The acting is wooden and it appears to have been written by someone who extensively studied the Janet & John book of dog-collar horror and thought it would make an entertaining film. Neither big name here do themselves any favours, and it ends, weakly, not a moment too soon. Perhaps an October/Halloween release might have served it better, but otherwise this is just a derivatively poor exercise on how the mighty have fallen.

The Exorcism in Multiple Formats

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