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Cull, Nick. "The Exorcist" History Today. 50.5 (2000). 46-.
 
 

Though the origin of Blatty’s novel is rather well-known, his intent to present the story to the public is not as obvious. Other sources that I have presented suggest that he wanted to bring forth an assertion of God’s existence. In this article, Nick Cull takes a deeper look into the nuances of the book and film, presenting Blatty’s release of the story as a commentary on the times.

Cull views The Exorcist as a proactive device by Blatty to influence the early 1970s; he writes, “It was more than a product of its time; it actively sought to shape that time”. Throughout the essay, he relates the novel to current events of the 1960s and 1970s. In the opening pages of the novel, Blatty included quotations meant to illustrate contemporary evil, including an FBI wire tap of a gangster joking about torture and murder and an account of Communist atrocities against priests. In part III of the novel, Blatty also included an epigram about the 1969 massacre at My Lai. Cull asserts that the demon in The Exorcist is actually a combination of those evils – crime, Communism, genocide, war, and assassination. He goes even further to claim that Blatty’s intention was to “scare a new generation of Americans back into church”.

Cull’s description of the film focuses more on the social evils portrayed: inter-generational conflict, the guilt of the middle-aged over neglect of their parents, and risk of the sacred home. It is here that Cull falls into overanalyzing Blatty’s work. Many resources, and even direct quotes, point to the fact that Blatty was not entirely satisfied with the film, having compromised much creative liberty to William Friedkin. Yet film should not be taken to be Blatty’s ideal interpretation of his novel, which is an assumption that Cull lacks in his analysis. Though Cull eventually concedes that The Exorcist brought more Americans back to horror films than the church, his analysis, even if it overanalyzes Blatty’s intentions, provides a deeper interpretation of the film's subtext.

tagged America_1970s Blatty film Exorcist by lhzhao ...on 06-APR-06
The Exorcist, released on December 26, 1973, created an enormous response from viewers and critics, from loving the film to hating it, all for different reasons. People reacted to all aspects of the film . religion, violence, gore, and sex. A phenomenon had been created. The sensationalism surrounding the film was perpetuated by moviegoers and journalists, who had reported of fainting, heart attacks, vomiting, and miscarriages during the film. The Exorcist was even blamed for a murder in the UK. The extreme emotions evoked by the story is generally attributed to the more superficial elements of the film, but William Peter Blatty, writer of the original novel and of the screenplay, had intended it to be much deeper and thought-provoking. The annotated bibliography contains sources that reveal multiple layers of the film, attempting to capture a piece of the full range of responses.
tagged Blatty horror Exorcist film by lhzhao ...on 06-APR-06

Marriott, James. Horror films. London: Virgin, 2004.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PN1995.9.H6 M323 2004

 

The Exorcist succeeded in large part due to the hype surrounding the film. In fact, there was just as much controversy within the filmmaking process as there was about the film. In the section titled “The Exorcist”, James Marriot provides details behind the making of the film, from inception to the post-release reactions. In it, it is revealed that the film may well have been a product of the director, William Friedkin, rather than that of William Peter Blatty.

Blatty initially wanted to write a factual case history, based on an article he had read in the Washington Post in 1949, but the family had no interest. Producer Paul Monash offered Blatty $400,000 for a six-month option to film his novel, who then sold the option to Warner Brothers for a reported $641,000. After Monash was cut from the project, Blatty wanted an agnostic director but ended up with William Friedkin, a Jewish director who forced Blatty to create a second draft of the script in order to work with him.

Friedkin was a difficult director; having no connections to Iraq, he had to make additional promises to Iraqi filmmakers in order to shoot the opening scenes there. He opted to have all mechanical effects and little optical effects – for the exorcism sequence, the entire room was enclosed and refrigerated. Blatty criticized many of Friedkin’s techniques, such as the spinning head sequence which he deemed unnecessary, saying that “supernatural doesn’t mean impossible” (qtd. in 132). There were additional dangers on the set: a rig that was attached to a mold that had been made for Linda Blair came loose during shooting, requiring back treatment. Friedkin used these difficulties to show journalists and the public that the movie was cursed, increasing the buildup of attention around the film.

After the film’s release, which opened in only 30 cinemas, the term “cinematic neurosis” became popular, when psychiatric problems were exposed from disturbing films in people with no history of mental illness. The movie was blamed for criminal and suicidal acts, including one incident in the UK in October 1974, when a 14-year-old boy blamed for the movie for his murder of a 9-year-old girl. The MPAA changed the rating from R to 17 certificate from increasing public pressure, and the UK gave it an X rating. The public was so caught up in the hype that the movie became the highest grossing horror movie internationally. In this section, Marriott explains the creation and perpetuation of that hype that would dispel any oddities surrounding the movie.

tagged Blatty Exorcist film horror by lhzhao ...and 1 other person ...on 06-APR-06

Magistrale, Tony and Michael A. Morrison, ed. Dark Night's Dreaming : Contemporary American Horror Fiction. Columbia, S.C.: University of South Carolina Press, 1996.
Call#: Van Pelt Library PS374.H67 D37 1996


The Exorcist is based on the book of the same name written by William Peter Blatty, who also wrote the screenplay. Chapter 6, “Casting Out Demons: The Horror Fiction of William Peter Blatty” details Blatty’s inspirations for writing the novel and his thoughts on the reaction to his work. Even the book had an enormous impact, spending 55 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. From this, the more serious intentions of the story can be understood without the visual stimulations of the movie to distract.

Douglas E. Winter writes that Blatty brought a new legitimacy to the horror genre, that he “ushered the reign of Stephen King and the stylized horror genre in the late 1970s and early 1980s” (84). Blatty was raised as a Roman Catholic, having attended a Catholic grammar school, a Jesuit high school, and a Jesuit university – Georgetown. Before writing The Exorcist, he had already published 8 books and produced 11 film scripts, and was known as a comedy writer. It wasn’t until 1971 that he wrote the book based on a successful exorcism he had read about in the Washington Post in 1949. Blatty said, “It seemed a validation of what we were being taught as Catholics, and certainly a validation of our hopes for immortality. Because if there were evil spirits, why not good? Why not a soul? Why not life everlasting?” (qtd. in 87). It was this confirmation that Blatty tried to evoke through his novel, though he concedes that “the real point of the book is nowhere to be found in the film” (qtd. in 91).

Winter praises The Exorcist as a book that confronts religious issues in a thought-provoking manner. He also discusses the social undertones of the story, of women's liberation and the rebellion of youth. The popularity of the book can be attributed to its sensationalism and to the pronounced taboos, but Blatty's real intention, as shown by Winter, was to reveal his hopeful attitude of what the exorcism implies about the justification of religion and the afterlife.


tagged Blatty Exorcist fiction film horror by lhzhao ...on 06-APR-06