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The Exorcist is a 1973 American supernatural horror film directed by William Friedkin and written for the screen by William Peter Blatty, based on his 1971 novel of the same name. The film stars Ellen Burstyn, Max von Sydow, Lee J. Cobb, Kitty Winn, Jack MacGowran (in his final film role), Jason Miller and Linda Blair. It is the first installment in The Exorcist film series, and follows the demonic possession of a young girl and her mother's attempt to rescue her through an exorcism conducted by a pair of Catholic priests.

Despite the book's bestseller status, Blatty, who produced, and Friedkin, his choice for director, had difficulty casting the film. After turning down, or being turned down by, major stars of the era, they cast Burstyn, a relative unknown, as well as unknowns Blair and Miller (author of a hit play with no film acting experience); the casting choices were vigorously opposed by studio executives at Warner Bros. Pictures. Principal photography was also difficult. A fire destroyed the majority of the set, and Blair and Burstyn suffered long-term injuries in on-set accidents. Ultimately production took twice as long as scheduled and cost more than twice the initial budget.

The Exorcist was released in 24 theaters in the United States and Canada in late December 1973. Despite initial mixed critical reviews, audiences flocked to it, waiting in long lines during winter weather and many doing so more than once. Some viewers suffered adverse physical reactions, fainting or vomiting to scenes in which the protagonist undergoes a realistic cerebral angiography and later violently masturbates with a crucifix. Heart attacks and a miscarriage were reported; a psychiatric journal published a paper on "cinematic neurosis" triggered by the film. Many children were allowed to see the film, leading to charges that the MPAA ratings board had accommodated Warner Bros by giving the film an R-rating instead of the X-rating they thought it deserved, in order to ensure its commercial success. Several cities attempted to ban it outright or prevent children from attending.

The cultural conversation around the film, which also encompassed its treatment of Catholicism, helped it become the first horror film to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture, one of ten Academy Awards for which it was nominated, winning for Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Sound. It was the highest-grossing R-rated horror film (unadjusted for inflation) until the 2017 release of It. The Exorcist has had a significant influence on popular culture and has received critical acclaim, with several publications regarding it as one of the greatest horror films ever made. English film critic Mark Kermode named it his "favorite film of all time". In 2010, the Library of Congress selected the film to be preserved in its National Film Registry, citing it as "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."

Plot[]

Theatrical cut[]

In northern Iraq, Catholic priest Lankester Merrin participates in an archaeological dig which unearths a medallion of Saint Joseph and an artifact representing Pazuzu, an ancient demon. As Merrin prepares to leave Iraq, he encounters a large statue of Pazuzu and observes two dogs fighting in the desert.

In Georgetown, actress Chris MacNeil works on a film directed by her friend Burke Dennings. A temporary resident, Chris lives in a well-appointed house with servants and her daughter Regan. Georgetown-based priest Damien Karras visits his mother in New York. He confides to a colleague that he feels unfit in his role as counselor to other priests, citing a crisis of faith. Chris hears noises in the attic, and Regan tells her of an imaginary friend named "Captain Howdy". In a local church, a statue of Mary is found desecrated.

Chris hosts a party. Karras' friend Father Dyer explains Karras' role as counselor, mentioning that his mother died recently. Regan appears and urinates on the carpet. After Chris puts Regan to bed, her bed shakes violently. Dyer consoles Karras, and Karras expresses guilt at not having been with his mother when she died. Karras dreams of his mother, a Saint Joseph medallion and—briefly—a demonic face.

Regan becomes violent. She is subjected to several medical tests which fail to find anything physiologically wrong with her. During a house call, Regan spasms violently and a demon possesses her body; the possessed Regan exhibits abnormal strength. One night, Chris finds the house empty except for a sleeping Regan. Dennings is found dead at the foot of an outdoor staircase beneath Regan's window. Homicide detective William Kinderman questions Karras, confiding that Dennings' body was found with its head turned backwards.

Regan's condition worsens, and her body becomes covered with sores. A doctor mentions exorcism as a remote option, suggesting a possible psychological benefit. Kinderman visits Chris, explaining that the only plausible explanation for Dennings' death is that he was pushed from Regan's window. As Kinderman leaves, the possessed Regan stabs her genitals with a crucifix. To Chris' horror, the possessed Regan turns her head backwards and speaks in Dennings' voice. The possessed Regan is confined to her bedroom.

Chris seeks out Karras, who visits Regan. Over two meetings, the possessed Regan claims to be the Devil himself, projectile vomits into Karras' face, speaks in tongues, and reacts violently when tap water is sprinkled on her, which Karras had claimed was holy water—a point against genuine possession. The demon says it will remain in Regan until she is dead. Desperate, Chris confides that the possessed Regan killed Dennings. At night, Regan's nanny calls Karras to the house. They witness the words "help me" materialize on Regan's skin. Still ambivalent, Karras nevertheless concludes that an exorcism is warranted. His superior grants permission on the condition that an experienced priest lead the ritual while Karras assists. Merrin, having performed an exorcism before, is summoned.

Merrin arrives at the house, warning Karras that the demon uses a psychological attack. As the priests read from the Roman Ritual, the demon curses them. It focuses on Karras, verbally attacking his loss of faith and guilt over the circumstances of his mother's death. The priests rest momentarily and Merrin, shaking, takes nitroglycerin. Karras enters the bedroom where the demon appears as his mother. Showing weakness, Karras exclaims that the demon is not his mother. Merrin excuses Karras and continues the exorcism by himself. Karras assures Chris that Regan will not die and re-enters the room, finding Merrin dead. Karras beats the possessed Regan and demands that the demon take him instead. The demon rips a medallion of Saint Joseph from Karras' neck and begins to possess him, freeing Regan. Karras hurls himself out the window, tumbling down the stairs outside. Chris and Kinderman enter the room. Chris embraces Regan, and Kinderman surveys the violence and confusion. Outside, Dyer administers the last rites as Karras dies.

The MacNeils prepare to leave, and Father Dyer says goodbye. Despite having no memory of her ordeal, Regan is moved by the sight of Dyer's clerical collar to kiss him on the cheek. As the MacNeils leave, Chris gives Dyer the medallion found in Regan's room.

Director's cut ending[]

In 2000, a version of the film known as the "Version You've Never Seen" or the "Extended Director's Cut" was released. In the ending of this version, when Chris gives Karras' medallion to Dyer, Dyer places it back in her hand and suggests that she keep it. After she and Regan drive away, Dyer pauses at the top of the stone steps before walking away and coming across Kinderman, who narrowly missed Chris and Regan's departure; Kinderman and Dyer begin to develop a friendship.

Cast[]

  • Ellen Burstyn as Chris MacNeil
  • Jason Miller as Father / Dr. Damien Karras, S.J.
  • Linda Blair as Regan MacNeil
  • Max von Sydow as Father Lankester Merrin
  • Lee J. Cobb as Lieutenant William F. Kinderman
  • Kitty Winn as Sharon Spencer
  • Jack MacGowran as Burke Dennings
  • Father William O'Malley as Father Joseph Dyer
  • Father Thomas Bermingham as Tom, President of Georgetown University
  • Peter Masterson as Dr. Barringer
  • Robert Symonds as Dr. Taney
  • Barton Heyman as Dr. Samuel Klein
  • Rudolf Schündler as Karl, House Servant
  • Arthur Storch as The Psychiatrist
  • Vasiliki Maliaros as Mrs. Karras, Damien's Mother
  • Titos Vandis as John, Damien's Uncle
  • Dick Callinan as Captain Billy Cutshaw
  • William Peter Blatty as Fromme, The Producer
  • Mercedes McCambridge as The Voice of Pazuzu
  • Eileen Dietz as The Face of Pazuzu (uncredited)

Production[]

Writing[]

Aspects of Blatty's fiction novel were inspired by the 1949 exorcism performed on an anonymous young boy known as "Roland Doe" or "Robbie Mannheim" (pseudonyms) by the Jesuit priest Fr. William S. Bowdern, who formerly taught at both St. Louis University and St. Louis University High School. Doe's family became convinced the boy's aggressive behavior was attributable to demonic possession, and called upon the services of several Catholic priests, including Bowdern, to perform the rite of exorcism. It was one of three exorcisms to have been sanctioned by the Catholic Church in the United States at that time. Later analysis by paranormal skeptics asserted that Doe was likely a mentally ill teenager acting out, as the actual events likely to have occurred (such as words being carved on skin) were such that they could have been faked by Doe himself. The novel changed several details of the case, such as changing the sex of the allegedly possessed victim from a boy to a girl and changing the alleged victim's age.

Although Friedkin has admitted he is very reluctant to speak about the factual aspects of the film, he made the film with the intention of immortalizing the events involving Doe that took place in 1949, and despite the relatively minor changes that were made, the film depicts everything that could be verified by those involved. In order to make the film, Friedkin was allowed access to the diaries of the priests involved, as well as the doctors and nurses; he also discussed the events with Doe's aunt in great detail. Friedkin has said that he does not believe that the "head-spinning" actually occurred, but this has been disputed. Friedkin is secular, coming from a Jewish family.

Casting[]

The film's lead roles, particularly Regan, were not easily cast. Although many name stars of the era were considered for the role, with Stacy Keach actually having signed to play Father Karras at one point, Blatty and Friedkin ultimately went with less well-known actors, to the consternation of the studio.

Chris and father Karras[]

The studio wanted Marlon Brando for the role of Lankester Merrin. Friedkin immediately vetoed this by stating it would become a "Brando movie". Jack Nicholson was up for the part of Karras before Stacy Keach was hired by Blatty. According to Friedkin, Paul Newman also wanted to portray Karras.

Friedkin then spotted Jason Miller following a performance of Miller's play That Championship Season in New York, and asked to talk to him. He originally went to talk to Miller solely about the lapsed Catholicism in the play as a background for the film. Since Miller had not read the novel, Friedkin left him a copy.

Three A-list actresses of the time were considered for Chris. Friedkin first approached Audrey Hepburn, who said she was willing to take the role but only if the movie could be shot in Rome, since she had moved to Italy with her husband. Since that would have raised the costs of the movie considerably, as well as creating language barriers and making it impossible to work with crew members Friedkin was comfortable with, like cinematographer Owen Roizman, he looked next to Anne Bancroft. She, too, was willing but asked if production could be delayed nine months as she had just gotten pregnant. Again, Friedkin declined her request as he could not wait that long; he also did not think the material was something she would want to be working on while tending to a newborn, which might also make it more difficult for her to work. Jane Fonda, next on the list, purportedly derided the film and turned it down.

Blatty also suggested his friend Shirley MacLaine for the part, but Friedkin was hesitant to cast her, given her lead role in another possession film, The Possession of Joel Delaney (1971) two years before. Ellen Burstyn received the part after she phoned Friedkin and emphatically stated that she was "destined" to play Chris. Studio head Ted Ashley vigorously opposed casting her, not only telling Friedkin that he would do so over his dead body, but dramatizing that opposition by making Friedkin walk over him as he lay on the floor, then grabbing the director's leg and telling him he would come back from the dead if necessary to keep Friedkin from doing so. However, no other alternatives emerged, and Ashley relented.

With Burstyn now set in the part, Friedkin was surprised when Miller called him back. He had read the novel, and told the director "that guy is me", referring to Father Karras. Miller had had a Catholic education, and had studied to be a Jesuit priest himself for three years at Catholic University of America until experiencing a crisis of faith, just as Karras at the beginning of the story. Friedkin thanked him for his interest but told him Keach had already been signed.

Miller, who had done some stage acting but had never been in a film, asked to at least be given a screen test. After taking the train to Los Angeles since he disliked flying, Friedkin had the playwright and Burstyn do the scene where Chris tells Karras she thinks Regan might be possessed. Afterwards, he had Burstyn interview Miller about his life with the camera focusing on him from over her shoulder, and finally asked Miller to say Mass as if for the first time.

Burstyn felt that Miller was too short for the part, unlike her boyfriend at the time, whom Friedkin had auditioned but passed on. The director felt the test was promising but, after viewing the footage the next morning, realized Miller's "dark good looks, haunted eyes, quiet intensity, and low, compassionate voice", qualities which to him evoked John Garfield, were exactly what the part needed. The studio bought out Keach's contract.

Supporting roles[]

The film's supporting roles were more quickly cast. After Blatty showed Friedkin a photograph of Gerald Lankester Harding, his inspiration for Father Merrin, Friedkin immediately thought of Max von Sydow for the part; he accepted it as soon as he finished reading the script. While out seeing a play starring an actor who had been recommended to them for the film, Blatty and Friedkin ran into Lee J. Cobb, which led to his casting as Lt. Kinderman. Father William O'Malley, another Jesuit priest who taught English and theology at McQuaid Jesuit High School outside Rochester, New York, had become acquainted with Blatty through his criticism of the novel. After Blatty introduced him to Friedkin, they decided to cast him as Father Dyer, a character O'Malley had considered clichéd in the novel.

Greek actor Titos Vandis was cast in the role of Father Karras's uncle. He wore a hat in one shot that obscured his face, as Friedkin felt that Vandis's face would be connected with his previous role in the Woody Allen film Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask).

Regan[]

The question of whether or not such a young actress, even a talented one, could carry the film on her shoulders was an issue from the beginning. Film directors considered for the project were skeptical. Mike Nichols had turned down the project specifically because he did not believe a 12-year-old girl capable of playing the part, as well as able to handle the likely psychological stress it would cause, could be found.

The first actresses considered for the part were names known to the public. Pamelyn Ferdin, a veteran of science fiction and supernatural drama, was a candidate, but was ultimately turned down because her career thus far had made her too familiar to the public. April Winchell was considered, until she developed pyelonephritis and could not work. Denise Nickerson, who had played Violet Beauregarde in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory, was considered, but the material troubled her parents too much. Jamie Lee Curtis was asked to audition for the role, but her mother Janet Leigh declined. Anissa Jones, known for her role as Buffy in Family Affair, auditioned for the role, but she too was rejected, for much the same reason as Ferdin.

Friedkin had started to interview young women as old as 16 who looked young enough to play Regan, but was not finding any who he thought could. Then Elinore Blair came in unannounced to the director's New York office with her daughter Linda; the agency representing Linda had not sent her for the part, but she had previously met with Warner Bros. Pictures' casting department and then with Friedkin. Both mother and daughter impressed the director. Elinore was not a typical stage mother, and Linda's credits were primarily in modeling; she was mainly interested in showing and riding horses around her Westport, Connecticut, home. "[S]mart but not precocious. Cute but not beautiful. A normal, happy twelve-year-old girl", Friedkin later recalled.

With Linda having demonstrated the personal qualities Friedkin was looking for, he then went on to see whether she could handle the material. He asked if she knew what The Exorcist was about; she told him she had read the book. "[I]t's about a little girl who gets possessed by the devil and does a whole bunch of bad things." Friedkin then asked her what sort of bad things she meant. "[S]he pushes a man out of her bedroom window and she hits her mother across the face and she masturbates with a crucifix." Friedkin then asked Linda if she knew what masturbation meant. "It's like jerking off, isn't it?", and she giggled a little bit. "Have you ever done that?" he asked. "Sure; haven't you?" Linda responded. She was quickly cast as Regan after tests with Burstyn; Friedkin realized he needed to keep that level of spontaneity on set.

Friedkin originally intended to use Blair's voice, electronically deepened and roughened, for the demon's dialogue. Although Friedkin felt this worked fine in some places, he felt scenes with the demon confronting the two priests lacked the dramatic power required and selected Oscar-winning actress Mercedes McCambridge, an experienced voice actress, to provide the demon's voice. After filming, Warner Bros. did not include a credit for McCambridge, which led to Screen Actors Guild arbitration before she was credited for her performance. Ken Nordine was also considered for the demon's voice, but Friedkin thought it would be best not to use a man's voice.

Actress Eileen Dietz, 15 years older than Blair, stood in for Blair in the crucifix scene, the fistfight with Father Karras, and other scenes that were too violent or disturbing for Blair to perform. She also appears as the face of Pazuzu.

Direction[]

Warners had approached Arthur Penn, Stanley Kubrick, and Mike Nichols to direct, all of whom turned the project down. Originally Mark Rydell was hired to direct, but William Peter Blatty insisted on Friedkin as he had met Friedkin years before.

After a standoff with the studio, which initially refused to budge over Rydell, Blatty eventually got his way. Principal photography for The Exorcist began on August 21, 1972. The shooting schedule was estimated to run 105 days, but ultimately ran well over 200.

Friedkin went to extraordinary lengths manipulating the actors, reminiscent of the old Hollywood directing style, to get the genuine reactions he wanted. Yanked violently around in harnesses, both Blair and Burstyn suffered back injuries and their painful screams were included in the film. Burstyn injured her back after landing on her coccyx when a stuntman jerked her around using a special effects cable during the scene when Regan slaps her mother. In the documentary Fear of God: The Making of the Exorcist, the crew member operating the cable that pulled Burstyn to the ground claimed her chiropractor examined her after she was injured and told her she would be fine. It became a chronic injury she has dealt with for the rest of her career. Burstyn was upset the shot of her screaming in pain was used in the film. After O'Malley confirmed to Friedkin that he trusted the director, Friedkin slapped him hard across the face to generate a deeply solemn reaction for the last rites scene; this offended the many Catholic crew members on the set. He also fired blanks without warning on the set to elicit shock from Jason Miller for a take, and told Miller that the pea soup would hit him in the chest rather than the face in the projectile vomiting scene, resulting in his disgusted reaction.

Filming[]

The film's opening sequences were filmed in and near the city of Mosul, Iraq. The archaeological dig site seen at the film's beginning is the actual site of ancient Hatra, south of Mosul. Temperatures during the days filming took place there reached 54 °C (130 °F), limiting shooting to the early mornings and late evening.

The stairs were padded with half-inch-thick (13 mm) rubber to film the death of the character Father Damien Karras. Because the house from which Karras falls was set back slightly from the steps, the film crew constructed an eastward extension with a false front to the house in order to film the scene. The stuntman tumbled down the stairs twice. Georgetown University students charged people around $5 each to watch the stunt from the rooftops.

Although the film is set in Washington, D.C., many interior scenes were shot in various parts of New York City. The MacNeil residence interiors were filmed at CECO Studios in Manhattan. The bedroom set was refrigerated to capture the authentic icy breath of the actors in the exorcism scenes. It was chilled so much that a thin layer of snow fell onto the set one humid morning. Since the set lighting warmed the air, it could only remain cold enough for three minutes of filming at a time. Nevertheless, Blair, who was only in a thin nightgown while the crew wore cold weather clothing, said she cannot stand being cold. Exteriors of the MacNeil house were filmed using a family home on 36th and Prospect in Washington, on the former site of E. D. E. N. Southworth's residence. A false wing was constructed to convey that the windows of Regan's bedroom were close to the steps, while a mansard roof was added due to the scene in which Chris investigates the scratching noises in the attic.

The scenes involving Regan's medical tests were filmed at New York University Medical Center and were performed by actual medical staff that normally carried out the procedures. Paul Bateson, convicted of murdering a journalist several years after the film, is the radiographer talking to Regan through the cerebral angiography. In the film Regan first undergoes an electroencephalography (EEG), then the angiography, and finally a pneumoencephalography.

The scene in which Father Karras listens to the tapes of Regan's dialogue was filmed in the basement of Keating Hall at Fordham University in the Bronx. William O'Malley, who plays Father Joseph Dyer in the film, is a real-life Jesuit and was assistant professor of theology at Fordham at the time.

The interior of Karras' room at Georgetown was a meticulous reconstruction of Theology professor Father Thomas M. King, S.J.'s "corridor Jesuit" room in New North Hall. King's room was photographed by production staff after a visit by Blatty, a Georgetown graduate, and Friedkin. Upon returning to New York, every element of King's room, including posters and books, was recreated for the set, including a poster of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, S.J., a theologian on whom the character of Fr. Merrin was loosely based. Georgetown was paid $1,000 per day of filming, which included both exteriors such as Burstyn's first scene, shot on the steps of the Flemish Romanesque Healy Hall, and interiors such as the defilement of the statue of the Virgin Mary in Dahlgren Chapel, or the Archbishop's office, which is actually the office of the president of the university. One scene was filmed in The Tombs, a student hangout across from the steps that was founded by a Blatty classmate.

Father Merrin's arrival scene[]

Father Merrin's arrival scene was filmed on Max von Sydow's first day of work. The scene where the elderly priest steps out of a cab and stands in front of the MacNeil residence, silhouetted in a misty streetlamp's glow and staring up at a beam of light from a bedroom window, is one of the most famous scenes in the movie. The shot was used for film posters and home DVD/VHS release covers. The scene and photo were inspired by the 1954 painting Empire of Light (L'Empire des lumières) by René Magritte.

"Spider-walk" scene[]

Stuntwoman Ann Miles performed the spider-walk scene in November 1972. Friedkin deleted this scene against Blatty's objection just prior to the premiere, as he judged the scene as appearing too early in the film's plot. In the book, the spider-walk is more muted, consisting of Regan following Sharon around near the floor and flicking a snakelike tongue at her ankles. A take of this version of the scene was filmed but went unused. However, a different take showing Regan with blood flowing from her mouth was inserted into the 2000 Director's Cut of the film.

Editing[]

Special effects[]

The Exorcist contained a number of special effects, engineered by makeup artist Dick Smith. In one scene from the film, Max von Sydow is actually wearing more makeup than the possessed girl (Linda Blair). This was because director Friedkin wanted some very detailed facial close-ups. When this film was made, von Sydow was 44, though he was made up to look 74. Alan McKenzie stated in his book Hollywood Tricks of the Trade that the fact "that audiences didn't realize von Sydow was wearing makeup at all is a tribute to the skills of veteran makeup artist Dick Smith."

Sound effects[]

Special sound effects for the film were created by Ron Nagle, Doc Siegel, Gonzalo Gavira, and Bob Fine. Nagle spent two weeks recording animal sounds, including bees, dogs, hamsters, and pigs; these were incorporated into the multilayered mix of the demon's voice. Gavira achieved the sound effect of Regan's head rotating by twisting a leather wallet.

Alleged subliminal imagery[]

The Exorcist was also at the center of controversy due to its alleged use of subliminal imagery introduced as special effects during the production of the film. Wilson Bryan Key wrote a whole chapter on the film in his book Media Sexploitation alleging repeated use of subliminal and semi-subliminal imagery and sound effects. Key observed the use of the Pazuzu face (which Key mistakenly assumed was Jason Miller in death mask makeup, instead of actress Eileen Dietz) and claimed that the safety padding on the bedposts was shaped to cast phallic shadows on the wall and that a skull face is superimposed into one of Father Merrin's breath clouds. Key also wrote much about the sound design, identifying the use of pig squeals, for instance, and elaborating on his opinion of the subliminal intent of it all. A detailed article in the July/August 1991 issue of Video Watchdog examined the phenomenon, providing still frames identifying several uses of subliminal "flashing" throughout the film.

In an interview from the same issue, Friedkin explained, "I saw subliminal cuts in a number of films before I ever put them in The Exorcist, and I thought it was a very effective storytelling device. ...The subliminal editing in The Exorcist was done for dramatic effect – to create, achieve, and sustain a kind of dreamlike state." However, these quick, scary flashes have been labeled "[not] truly subliminal" and "quasi-" or "semi-subliminal". In an interview in a 1999 book about the film, The Exorcist author Blatty addressed the controversy by explaining that, "There are no subliminal images. If you can see it, it's not subliminal."

Titles[]

The editing of the title sequence was the first major project for the film title designer Dan Perri. As a result of the success of The Exorcist, Perri went on to design opening titles for a number of major films including Taxi Driver (1976), Star Wars (1977), and Gangs of New York (2002).

Music[]

Lalo Schifrin's working score was rejected by Friedkin. Schifrin had written six minutes of music for the initial film trailer but audiences were reportedly too scared by its combination of sights and sounds. According to Schifrin, Warner Bros. executives told Friedkin to instruct him to tone it down with softer music, but Friedkin did not relay the message. It has been claimed Schifrin later used the music written for The Exorcist for The Amityville Horror, but he has denied this in interviews. According to The Fear of God: The Making of the Exorcist on the 25th Anniversary DVD release of the film, Friedkin took the tapes that Schifrin had recorded and threw them away in the studio parking lot.

In the soundtrack liner notes for his 1977 film, Sorcerer, Friedkin said that if he had heard the music of Tangerine Dream earlier, then he would have had them score The Exorcist. Instead, he used modern classical compositions, including portions of the 1972 Cello Concerto No. 1, of Polymorphia, and other pieces by Polish composer Krzysztof Penderecki, Five Pieces for Orchestra by Austrian composer Anton Webern as well as some original music by Jack Nitzsche. The music was heard only during scene transitions. The 2000 "Version You've Never Seen" features new original music by Steve Boeddeker, as well as brief source music by Les Baxter.

What is now considered the "Theme from The Exorcist", i.e. the piano-based melody which opens the first part of Tubular Bells, the 1973 debut album by English progressive rock musician Mike Oldfield, became very popular after the film's release, although Oldfield himself was not impressed with the way his work was used.

In 1998 a restored and remastered soundtrack was released by Warner Bros. (without Tubular Bells) that included three pieces from Lalo Schifrin's rejected score. The pieces are "Music from the unused Trailer", an 11-minute "Suite from the Unused Score", and "Rock Ballad (Unused Theme)".

That same year, the Japanese version of the original soundtrack LP did not include the Schifrin pieces but did include the main theme from Tubular Bells by Mike Oldfield, and the movement titled Night of the Electric Insects from George Crumb's string quartet Black Angels.

Waxwork Records released the score in 2017 on two different variations of 180 gram vinyl, "Pazuzu" with clear and black smoke and "Exorcism" that featured blue and black smoke. The record was re-mastered from the original tapes; it included liner notes from Friedkin with art by Justin Erickson from Phantom City Creative.

The Greek song playing on the radio when Father Karras leaves his mother's house is called "Paramythaki mou" (My Tale) and is sung by Giannis Kalatzis. Lyric writer Lefteris Papadopoulos has admitted that a few years later when he was in financial difficulties he asked for some compensation for the intellectual rights of the song. Part of Hans Werner Henze's 1966 composition Fantasia for Strings is played over the closing credits.

Release[]

Theatrical run[]

Upon its December 26, 1973, release, the film received mixed reviews from critics, "ranging from 'classic' to 'claptrap'". Audience reaction was strong, with many viewers waiting in long lines in cold temperatures to see it again and again. It opened in 24 theaters grossing $1.9 million in its first week, setting house records in each theater and within its first month the film had grossed $7.4 million nationwide, by which time Warners' executives expected it to easily surpass My Fair Lady's $34 million take to become the studio's most financially successful film.

Home media[]

Special edition 25th anniversary VHS and DVD release[]

A limited special edition box set was released in 1998 for the film's 25th anniversary; it was limited to 50,000 copies, with available copies circulating around the Internet. There are two versions: a special edition VHS released on November 10, 1998, and a special edition DVD released on December 1, 1998. The only difference between the two copies is the recording format. A 30th anniversary edition was released on DVD by Warner Home Video on August 5, 2003.

DVD features[]

  • The original film with restored film and digitally remastered audio, with a 1.85:1 widescreen aspect ratio.
  • An introduction by director Friedkin.
  • The 1998 BBC documentary The Fear of God: The Making of "The Exorcist".
  • Two audio commentaries.
  • Interviews with the director and writer.
  • Theatrical trailers and TV spots.

Box features[]

  • A commemorative 52-page tribute book, covering highlights of the film's preparation, production, and release; features previously unreleased historical data and archival photographs.
  • Limited edition soundtrack CD of the film's score, including the original (unused) soundtrack ("Tubular Bells" and "Night of the Electric Insects" omitted).
  • Eight lobby card reprints.
  • Exclusive senitype film frame (magnification included).

Extended edition DVD releases[]

The extended edition labeled "The Version You've Never Seen" (which was released theatrically in 2000) was released on DVD on February 3, 2004.

The extended edition was later re-released on DVD (and released on Blu-ray) with slight alterations under the new label "Extended Director's Cut" on October 5, 2010.

Blu-ray[]

In an interview with DVD Review, Friedkin mentioned that he was scheduled to begin work on The Exorcist Blu-ray on December 2, 2008. This edition features a new restoration, including both the 1973 theatrical version and the 2000 "Version You've Never Seen" (re-labeled as "Extended Director's Cut"). It was released on October 5, 2010. A 40th Anniversary Edition Blu-ray was released on October 8, 2013, containing both cuts of the film and many of the previously released bonus features in addition to two featurettes that revolve around author William Peter Blatty.

The Exorcist: The Complete Anthology[]

The Exorcist: The Complete Anthology (box set) was released on DVD on October 10, 2006, and on Blu-ray on September 23, 2014. This collection includes the original theatrical release version of The Exorcist, the extended version (labelled The Exorcist: The Version You've Never Seen on the DVD release and The Exorcist: Extended Director's Cut on the Blu-ray release), the sequels Exorcist II: The Heretic and The Exorcist III, and the prequels Exorcist: The Beginning and Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist.

Reception[]

Box office[]

Since it was a horror film that had gone well over budget and did not have any major stars in the lead roles, Warner did not have high expectations for The Exorcist. It did not preview the film for critics and booked its initial release for only 30 screens in 24 theaters, mostly in large cities. It grossed $1.9 million in its first week, setting house records in each theater. The huge crowds attracted to the film forced the studio to expand it into wide release very quickly; at the time that releasing strategy was rarely used for anything but exploitation films (two years later, Universal would learn from The Exorcist and open Jaws on 500 screens across the country).

None of the theaters were in Black neighborhoods such as South Central Los Angeles since the studio did not expect black people to take much interest in the film; after the theater in predominantly white Westwood that had shown the film was overwhelmed with moviegoers from South Central, it was quickly booked into theaters in that neighborhood. Black American enthusiasm for The Exorcist has been credited with ending mainstream studio support for blaxploitation movies, since Hollywood realized that black audiences would flock to films that did not have content specifically geared to them.

The film earned $66.3 million in distributors' rentals during its theatrical release in 1974 in the United States and Canada, becoming the second most popular film of that year (trailing The Sting which earned $68.5 million) and Warners' highest-grossing film of all time. The film earned rentals of $46 million overseas for a worldwide total of $112.3 million.

After several reissues, the film has grossed $232.6 million in the United States and Canada, which when adjusted for inflation, makes it the ninth highest-grossing film of all time in the U.S. and Canada and the top-grossing R-rated film of all time. As of 2019, it has grossed $441 million worldwide. Adjusted to 2014 prices, The Exorcist has grossed $1.8 billion.

Critical response[]

Stanley Kauffmann, in The New Republic, wrote, "This is the scariest film I've seen in years – the only scary film I've seen in years. ...If you want to be shaken – and I found out, while the picture was going, that that's what I wanted – then The Exorcist will scare the hell out of you". Arthur D. Murphy of Variety noted that it was "an expert telling of a supernatural horror story. ...The climactic sequences assault the senses and the intellect with pure cinematic terror". In the magazine publication Castle of Frankenstein, Joe Dante called it "an amazing film, and one destined to become at the very least a horror classic. Director Friedkin's film will be profoundly disturbing to all audiences, especially the more sensitive and those who tend to 'live' the movies they see. ...Suffice it to say, there has never been anything like this on the screen before". Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film a complete 4 star review, praising the actors (particularly Burstyn) and the convincing special effects, but at the end of the review wrote, "I am not sure exactly what reasons people will have for seeing this movie; surely enjoyment won't be one, because what we get here aren't the delicious chills of a Vincent Price thriller, but raw and painful experience. Are people so numb they need movies of this intensity in order to feel anything at all?" Ebert, while praising the film, believed the special effects to be unusually graphic. He wrote, "That it received an R rating and not the X is stupefying".

Vincent Canby, writing in The New York Times, dismissed The Exorcist as "a chunk of elegant occultist claptrap ... a practically impossible film to sit through. ...It establishes a new low for grotesque special effects." Andrew Sarris of The Village Voice complained that "Friedkin's biggest weakness is his inability to provide enough visual information about his characters. ...Whole passages of the movie's exposition were one long buzz of small talk and name droppings. ...The Exorcist succeeds on one level as an effectively excruciating entertainment, but on another, deeper level it is a thoroughly evil film". Writing in Rolling Stone, Jon Landau felt the film was "nothing more than a religious porn film, the gaudiest piece of shlock this side of Cecil B. DeMille (minus that gentleman's wit and ability to tell a story)."

Angiography scene[]

The angiography scene, in which a needle is inserted into Regan's neck and spurts blood and which closely imitates the real-life procedure, has come under some criticism. In his 1986 Guide for the Film Fanatic, Danny Peary called it the film's "most needless scene". British comedian Graeme Garden, trained as a physician, agreed the scene was "genuinely disturbing" in his review for the New Scientist; he called it "the really irresponsible feature of this film".

Medical professionals have described the scene as a realistic depiction of the procedure. It is also of historical interest in the field, as around the time of the film's release, radiologists had begun to stop using the carotid artery for the puncture as they do in the film, in favor of a more distant artery. It has also been described as the most realistic depiction of a medical procedure in a popular film. Friedkin said in his 2012 commentary on the DVD release of the 2000 cut that the scene was used as a training film for radiologists for years afterwards.

Rating controversy[]

The Motion Picture Association of America's (MPAA) ratings board had been established several years before to replace the Motion Picture Production Code after it expired in 1968. It had already been criticized for its indirect censorship: as many as a third of the films submitted to it had had to be recut after being rated X, meaning no minors could be admitted. Since many theaters would not show such films, and newspapers would not run ads for them, the X rating greatly limited a non-pornographic film's commercial prospects.

While Friedkin wanted more blood and gore in The Exorcist than had been in any Hollywood film previously, he also needed the film to have an R rating (children admitted only with an adult) to reach a large audience. Before release, Aaron Stern, the head of the MPAA ratings board, decided to watch the film himself before the rest of the board. He then called Friedkin and said that since The Exorcist was "an important film", he would allow it to receive an R rating without any cuts.

Some critics, both anticipating and reacting to reports of the film's effect on children who might be or had been taken to see it, questioned the R rating. While he had praised the film, Roy Meacham, a critic for Metromedia television stations based in Washington, D.C., wrote in The New York Times in February 1974 that he had strongly cautioned that children should not be allowed to see it at all, a warning his station repeated for several days. Nevertheless, some had, and he had heard of one girl being taken from the theater in an ambulance.

In Washington, the film drew strong interest as well since it was a rare film set in the area that did not involve government activity. Children Meacham saw leaving showings, he recalled, "were drained and drawn afterward; their eyes had a look I had never seen before". He suggested that the ratings board had somehow yielded to pressure from Warners not to give the film an X rating, which would have likely limited its economic prospects, and was skeptical of MPAA head Jack Valenti's claims that since the film had no sex or nudity, it could receive an R. After a week in Washington's theaters, Meacham recalled, authorities cited the crucifix scene to invoke a local ordinance that forbid minors from seeing any scenes with sexual content even where the actors were fully clothed; police warned theaters that staff would be arrested if any minors were admitted to The Exorcist.

"The review board [has] surrendered all right to the claim that it provides moral and ethical leadership to the movie industry", Meacham wrote. He feared that, as a result, communities across the country would feel it necessary to pass their own, perhaps more restrictive, laws regarding the content of movies that could be shown in their jurisdictions: "For if the movie industry cannot provide safeguards for minors, authorities will have to".

Two communities, Boston and Hattiesburg, Mississippi, attempted to prevent the film from being shown outright in their jurisdictions. A court in the former city blocked the ban, saying the film did not meet the U.S. Supreme Court's standard of obscenity. Nonetheless, in Boston the authorities told theaters they could not admit any minors despite the R rating. In Mississippi, the theater chain showing the movie was convicted at trial, but the state's Supreme Court overturned the conviction in 1976, finding that the state's obscenity statute was too vague to be enforceable in the wake of the Supreme Court's 1972 Miller v. California decision which laid down a new standard for obscenity.

New Yorker film critic Pauline Kael echoed Meacham's insinuations that the board had yielded to studio pressure in rating the film R: "If The Exorcist had cost under a million or been made abroad, it would almost certainly be an X film. But when a movie is as expensive as this one, the [board] doesn't dare give it an X".

There was also concern that theaters were not strictly enforcing, or even enforcing at all, the R rating, allowing unaccompanied minors to view the film. Times critic Lawrence Van Gelder reported that a 16-year-old girl in California said that not only was she sold a ticket to see the film despite no adult being with her, others who seemed even younger were able to do so as well. On the other hand, another Times writer, Judy Lee Klemesrud, said she saw no unaccompanied minors, and indeed very few minors, when she went to see the film in Manhattan. Nevertheless, "I think that if a movie ever deserved an X rating simply because it would keep the kids out of the theater, it is The Exorcist".

In 1974, Stern's tenure as chairman of the MPAA ratings board ended. His eventual replacement, Richard Heffner, asked during the interview process about films with controversial ratings, including The Exorcist, said: "How could anything be worse than this? And it got an R?" After he took over as head, he would spearhead efforts to be more aggressive with the X rating, especially over violence in films.

Viewing restrictions in UK[]

The Exorcist was released in London on March 14, 1974. The film was protested against around the UK by the Nationwide Festival of Light, a Christian public action group concerned with the influence of media on society, and especially on the young. These protests involved members of local clergy and concerned citizens handing out leaflets to those queuing to see the film, offering spiritual support afterwards for those who asked for it. A letter-writing campaign to local councils by the Nationwide Festival of Light led many councils to screen The Exorcist before permitting it to be screened in their council district. This led to the film's being banned from exhibition in a number of counties, such as in Dinefwr and Ceredigion in Wales.

The Exorcist was available on home video from 1981 in the UK. After the passage of the Video Recordings Act 1984, the film was submitted to the British Board of Film Classification for a home video certificate. James Ferman, Director of the Board, vetoed the decision to grant a certificate to the film, despite the majority of the group willing to pass it. It was out of Ferman's concerns that, even with a proposed 18 certificate, the film's notoriety would entice underage viewers to seek it out. As a result, all video copies of The Exorcist were withdrawn in the UK in 1988 and remained unavailable for purchase until 1999.

Following a successful re-release in cinemas in 1998, the film was submitted for home video release again in February 1999, and was passed uncut with an 18 certificate, signifying a relaxation of the censorship rules with relation to home video in the UK, in part due to James Ferman's departure. The film was shown on terrestrial television in the UK for the first time in 2001, on Channel 4.

Since release[]

The Exorcist set box office records that stood for many years. For almost half a century, until the 2017 adaptation of Stephen King's It, it was the top-grossing R-rated horror film. In 1999, The Sixth Sense finally bested The Exorcist as the highest-grossing supernatural horror film; it remains in third place after It claimed that title as well. On both charts The Exorcist, along with The Blair Witch Project, are the only 20th-century releases in the top 10.

Since its release, The Exorcist's critical reputation has grown considerably. According to the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 83% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 83 reviews, with an average rating of 8.30/10. The site's critics consensus states: "The Exorcist rides its supernatural theme to magical effect, with remarkable special effects and an eerie atmosphere, resulting in one of the scariest films of all time". At Metacritic, which assigns and normalizes scores of critic reviews, the film has a weighted average score of 82 out of 100 based on 20 critics, indicating "universal acclaim". Chicago Tribune film critic Gene Siskel placed it in the top five films released that year. BBC film critic Mark Kermode believes the film to be the best film ever made, saying: "There's a theory that great films give back to you whatever it is you bring to them. It's absolutely true with The Exorcist – it reflects the anxieties of the audience. Some people think it's an outright horror-fest, but I don't. It was written by a devout Catholic who hoped it would make people think positively about the existence of God. William Peter Blatty, who wrote the book, thought that if there are demons then there are also angels and life after death. He couldn't see why people thought it was scary. I've seen it about 200 times and every time I see something I haven't seen before".

Director Martin Scorsese placed The Exorcist on his list of the 11 scariest horror films of all time. Directors Stanley Kubrick, Robert Eggers, Alex Proyas and David Fincher placed The Exorcist as one of their favorite films. The musician Elton John listed the Exorcist in his five favorite films of all time. In 2008, the film was selected by Empire as one of The 500 Greatest Movies Ever Made. It was also placed on a similar list of 1000 films by The New York Times.

Audience reaction[]

Despite its mixed reviews and the controversies over its content and viewer reaction, The Exorcist was a runaway hit. In New York City, where its initial run was limited to a few theaters, patrons endured cold as severe as 6 °F (−14 °C) sometimes with rain and sleet, waiting for hours in long lines during what is normally a slow time of year for the movies to buy tickets, many not for the first time. The crowds gathered outside theaters, sometimes rioted, and police were called in to quell disturbances in not only New York but Kansas City.

The New York Times asked some of those in line what drew them there. Those who had read the novel accounted for about a third; they wanted to see if the film could realistically depict some of the scenes in the book. Others said: "We're here because we're nuts and because we wanted to be part of the madness". A repeat viewer told the newspaper that it was the best horror film he had seen in decades, "much better than Psycho. You feel contaminated when you leave the theater. There's something that is impossible to erase". Many made a point of saying that they had either never waited in line that long for a movie before, or not in a long time. "It makes the movie better," William Hurt, then a drama student at Juilliard, said of the experience. "The more you pay for something, the more it's worth."

Reports of strong audience reactions were widespread, many including accounts of nausea and fainting. A woman in New York was said to have miscarried during a showing. Some theaters have been said to have provided "Exorcist barf bags"; while there are no contemporary reports of even providing regular sickness bags, Mad magazine depicted one on the cover of its October 1974 issue, which contained a parody of the film. A reviewer for Cinefantastique said that there was so much vomit in the bathroom at the showing he attended that it was impossible to reach the sinks.

Other theaters arranged for ambulances to be on call. Some patrons had to be helped to leave the places they had hidden in theaters. Despite its lack of any supernatural content, many audience members found the angiography, where blood spurts from the tube inserted into Regan's neck, to be the film's most unsettling scene (Blatty said he only watched it once, while the film was being edited, and avoided it on every other viewing). Friedkin speculates that it is easier to empathize with Regan in that scene, as compared to what she suffers while possessed later in the film.

In 1975, The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease published a paper by a psychiatrist documenting four cases of what he called "cinematic neurosis" triggered by viewing the film. In all he believed the neurosis was already present and merely triggered by viewing scenes in the film, particularly those depicting Regan's possession. He recommended that treating physicians view the movie with their patient to help him or her identify the sources of their trauma.

"The Exorcist ... was one of the rare horror movies that became part of the national conversation", wrote Jason Zinoman almost 40 years later: "It was a movie you needed to have an opinion about". Three separate production histories were published. Journalists complained that coverage of the film and its controversies was distracting the public from the ongoing Watergate scandal.

Much of the coverage, in fact, focused on the audience which, in the later words of film historian William Paul, "had become a spectacle equal to the film". He cites an Associated Press cartoon in which a couple trying to purchase tickets to the film was told that while the film itself is sold out, "we're selling tickets to the lobby to watch the audience." Paul does not think any other film's audience has received as much coverage as The Exorcist's.

Legal disputes[]

Within a year of The Exorcist's release, two films were quickly made that appeared to appropriate elements of its plot or production design. Warner took legal action against the producers of both, accusing them of copyright infringement. The lawsuits resulted in one film being pulled from distribution and the other one having to change its advertisements.

Abby, released almost a year after The Exorcist, put a blaxploitation spin on the material. In it a Yoruba demon released during an archeological dig in Africa crosses the Atlantic Ocean and possesses the archaeologist's daughter at home in Kentucky. Director William Girdler acknowledged the movie was intended to cash in on the success of The Exorcist. Warner's lawsuit early in 1975 resulted in most prints of the film being confiscated; the film has rarely been screened since and is not available on any home media.

Later, in 1975, Warner Bros. brought suit against Film Ventures International (FVI) over Beyond the Door, which had also been released near the end of 1974, alleging that its main character, also a possessed woman whose head spins around completely, projectile vomits and speaks with a deep voice when possessed, infringed the studio's copyright on Regan. Judge David W. Williams of the United States District Court for the Central District of California held first that since Blatty had based the character on what he was told was a true story, Regan was not original to either film and thus Warner could not hold a copyright on Regan. Even if she had been a creation, she could not be copyrighted since she was subordinate to the story. The writers of the FVI film had also further distanced themselves from an infringement claim by having their possessed female, Jessica, be a pregnant adult woman.

However, he found that some of Beyond the Door's advertising graphics, such as an image of light coming from behind a door into a darkened room, and the letter "T" drawn as a Christian cross, were similar enough to those used to promote The Exorcist that the public could reasonably have been confused into thinking the two films were the same, or made by the same people, and enjoined FVI from further use of those graphics.

Legacy[]

"The Exorcist has done for the horror film what 2001 did for science fiction", wrote the Cinefantastique reviewer who had described the vomit-covered bathroom, "legitimizing it in the eyes of thousands who previously considered horror movies nothing more than a giggle". In the years following, studios allotted large budgets to films like The Omen, The Sentinel, Burnt Offerings, Audrey Rose and The Amityville Horror, all of which had similar themes or plot elements and cast established stars, who until then often avoided the genre until their later years.

The film's success led Warner to initiate a sequel, one of the first times a studio had done that with a major film, launching a franchise. While many of the classic horror films of the 1930s, like Frankenstein and King Kong had spawned series of films over the decades, the practice had declined in the 60s, and although there had been some exceptions, like Bride of Frankenstein, most sequels had been considered secondary properties for the studios. The other big-budget horror films made in the wake of The Exorcist also led to sequels and franchises of their own.

Accolades[]

The Exorcist was nominated for ten Academy Awards in 1974, winning two. It was the first horror film to be nominated for Best Picture.

Award Category Nominees Result
Academy Awards Best Picture William Peter Blatty Nominated
Best Director William Friedkin Nominated
Best Actress Ellen Burstyn Nominated
Best Supporting Actor Jason Miller Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Linda Blair Nominated
Best Screenplay – Based on Material from Another Medium William Peter Blatty Won
Best Art Direction Bill Malley and Jerry Wunderlich Nominated
Best Cinematography Owen Roizman Nominated
Best Film Editing Jordan Leondopoulos, Bud Smith, Evan A. Lottman and Norman Gay Nominated
Best Sound Robert Knudson and Chris Newman Won
Golden Globe Awards Best Motion Picture – Drama Won
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama Ellen Burstyn Nominated
Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture Max von Sydow Nominated
Best Supporting Actress – Motion Picture Linda Blair Won
Best Director – Motion Picture William Friedkin Won
Best Screenplay – Motion Picture William Peter Blatty Won
Most Promising Newcomer – Female Linda Blair Nominated

American Film Institute Lists[]

  • AFI's 100 Years...100 Thrills – #3
  • AFI's 100 Years...100 Heroes and Villains:
    • Regan MacNeil – #9 Villain

Alternative and uncut versions[]

Several versions of The Exorcist have been released:

  • The 1979 theatrical reissue was converted to 70mm, with its 1.75:1 ratio expanded to 2.20:1 to use all the available screen width that 70mm offers. This was also the first time the sound was remixed to six-channel Dolby Stereo. Almost all video versions feature this soundtrack.
  • The network TV version originally broadcast on CBS in 1980 was edited by Friedkin, who filmed a shot of the Virgin Mary statue crying blood to replace the desecrated statue image. Friedkin himself delivered the demon's new, censored dialogue because he was unwilling to work with Mercedes McCambridge again. The lines "Your mother sucks cocks in hell, Karras, you faithless slime!" and "Shove it up your ass, you faggot!" were redubbed as "Your mother still rots in hell" and "Shut your face, you faggot". Several of Chris' lines were redubbed by Burstyn, replacing "Jesus Christ" with "Judas Priest" and omitting the expletive "fuck". Moments in which Regan masturbates with a crucifix and forces her mother's head into her crotch are removed, along with most of the character's profanity. There is also a brief alternative shot shortly after Merrin arrives at the MacNeil house of Regan's face morphing into the demon's white visage (theatrical versions show only the beginning of the transformation).
  • In some network versions Regan is not masturbating but having another fit.
  • The 25th Anniversary Special Edition DVD includes the original ending (not used in the theatrical release) as a special feature: as Father Dyer walks away from the MacNeil residence, he is approached by Lt. Kinderman. They talk briefly about Regan and the events that took place and then Kinderman invites Dyer to the movies to see Wuthering Heights. Kinderman quotes Casablanca, telling Dyer, "I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship".
  • The Special Edition DVD contains a 75-minute documentary on the making of The Exorcist titled The Fear of God, which features screen tests and additional deleted scenes.
  • The scene in which the demonic entity leaves Father Karras was originally achieved by filming Miller in possession makeup, then stopping the camera and shooting him again with makeup removed. This creates a noticeable jump in Father Karras' position as he is unpossessed. The 25th anniversary video smooths over the jumpy transition with a subtle computer morphing effect. This update was not featured in prints used for Warner Bros. 75th anniversary film festivals.
  • A new edition labeled "The Version You've Never Seen" (later re-labeled "Extended Director's Cut") was released in theaters on September 22, 2000, and included new additions and changes.
  • In both the TV-PG and TV-14 rated network edits, the image of the obscenely defiled statue of the Virgin Mary is intact, appearing on-screen for several more seconds in the TV-14 version. In the original TV airings, the desecrated statue was replaced by an alternative version showing the face smashed in, but no other defilement. Edits may vary between networks; non-premium cable networks usually show only edited/censored versions of the film.
  • The Exorcist: The Complete Anthology (box set) was released on DVD in October, 2006, and on Blu-ray in September, 2014. This collection includes the original theatrical release of The Exorcist; the extended version, The Exorcist: The Version You've Never Seen; Exorcist II: The Heretic; The Exorcist III; and two prequels: Exorcist: The Beginning, and Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist. Morgan Creek, the current owner of the franchise, produced a television series of Blatty's novel, which is also the basis for the original film.

To appease the screenwriter and some fans of The Exorcist, Friedkin reinstated the bloody variant of the spider-walk scene for the 2000 theatrical re-release of The Exorcist: The Version You've Never Seen. In October 2010, Warner Bros. released The Exorcist (Extended Director's Cut & Original Theatrical Edition) on Blu-ray, which includes behind-the-scenes footage of the spider-walk scene. Linda R. Hager, the lighting double for Linda Blair, was incorrectly credited as the stunt performer. In 2015, Warner Bros. finally acknowledged that stuntwoman Ann Miles is the only person who performed the stunt.

Sequels[]

The film has gone on to spawn multiple sequels and an overarching media franchise including a television series.

Direct sequels[]

In August 2020, it was announced that a reboot of the film from Morgan Creek Entertainment is slated for release in 2021. The announcement received a generally negative reaction from audiences loyal to the original and resulted in a petition being launched to have the project canceled. In December 2020, Blumhouse and Morgan Creek announced that the reboot would be a "direct sequel" to the 1973 film and that David Gordon Green would direct.

In July 2021, it was revealed that a trilogy of sequels are in development with David Gordon Green attached as director on each film. Jason Blum will serve as producer, alongside James Robinson and David Robinson. Burstyn will reprise her role from the original film, with Leslie Odom Jr. co-starring. The projects will be joint-venture productions between Blumhouse Productions and Morgan Creek Entertainment, with Universal Pictures serving as distributing company. Universal collaborated with Peacock to purchase distribution rights for $400 million total. The second and third films of the trilogy are being optioned as Peacock exclusive films. The first film is scheduled to be released on October 13, 2023.

Related works[]

Blatty's script for the film has been published on several occasions. In 1974 he published the book William Peter Blatty on The Exorcist: From Novel to Film, which included the first draft of the screenplay. In 1998 the script was published in an anthology titled The Exorcist/Legion - Two Classic Screenplays, and again as a standalone text in 2000.

Gallery[]

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References[]

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1930: Second ChoiceLilies of the FieldSallyPlaying AroundGeneral CrackIn the Next RoomWide OpenLoose AnklesThe Other TomorrowShe Couldn't Say NoNo, No, NanetteIsle of EscapeStrictly ModernThe Green GoddessSon of the GodsSong of the WestOn the BorderThe FuriesUnder a Texas MoonMurder Will OutSpring Is HereThose Who DanceShowgirl in HollywoodThe Second Floor MysteryHold EverythingA Notorious AffairThe Man HunterDumbbells in ErmineThe Flirting WidowThe Man from Blankley'sSong of the FlameMammyBack PayCourageRough WatersGolden DawnSweethearts and WivesBride of the RegimentSweet MamaRecaptured LoveRoad to ParadiseSweet Kitty BellairsDancing SweetiesThree Faces EastThe Matrimonial BedNumbered MenThe Dawn PatrolOh Sailor BehaveThe Office WifeTop SpeedThe Way of All MenBig Boy (film)Moby DickThe Bad ManBright LightsOld EnglishScarlet PagesMaybe It's LoveCollege LoversSinner's HolidayThe Girl of the Golden WestThe Doorway to HellThe Truth About YouthThe Life of the PartyA Soldier's PlaythingRiver's EndThe GorillaSunnyCall of the SeaThe Widow from ChicagoOutward BoundOne Night at Susie'sMan to ManMothers CryDivorce Among FriendsThe LashGoing WildCaptain Thunder

1931: Viennese NightsLittle CaesarThe Naughty FlirtOther Men's WomenKismetCaptain ApplejackGoing WildThe Right of WayIllicitKiss Me AgainSit TightFather's SonFifty Million FrenchmenThe Hot HeiressThe Silent PartnerWoman HungryThe Finger PointsMisbehaving LadiesGod's Gift to WomenSvengaliToo Young to MarryMy PastThe MillionaireThe Public EnemyThe Lady Who DaredParty HusbandThe Maltese FalconMen of the SkyGold Dust GertieBig Business GirlSmart MoneyChancesChildren of DreamsBroadmindedStranger in TownNight NurseBought!The Reckless HourThe Star WitnessThe Last FlightThe BargainAlexander HamiltonI Like Your NerveSide ShowFive Star FinalPenrod and SamThe Road to SingaporeHonor of the FamilyExpensive WomenThe Ruling VoiceThe Mad GeniusBlonde CrazyLocal Boy Makes GoodCompromisedSafe in HellManhattan ParadeUnder EighteenHer Majesty, Love
1932: The Woman from Monte CarloUnion DepotTaxi!High PressureThe Hatchet ManThe Man Who Played GodFireman, Save My ChildA Fool's AdviceThe ExpertPlay GirlAlias the DoctorThe Heart of New YorkIt's Tough to Be FamousBeauty and the BossThe Crowd RoarsMan WantedSo BigThe MouthpieceThe Famous Ferguson CaseThe Rich Are Always with UsThe TenderfootThe Strange Love of Molly LouvainTwo SecondsStreet of WomenThe Dark HorseLove Is a RacketWeek-End MarriageWinner Take AllThe Purchase PriceMiss PinkertonJewel RobberyCroonerDoctor XTwo Against the WorldBig City BluesBlessed EventLife BeginsA Successful CalamityTiger SharkIllegalThe Big StampedeThe CrashThe Cabin in the CottonOne Way PassageThree on a MatchThey Call It SinScarlet DawnI Am a Fugitive from a Chain GangYou Said a MouthfulCentral ParkHaunted Gold20,000 Years in Sing SingSilver DollarThe Match King
1933: Lawyer ManFrisco JennyHard to HandleParachute JumperLadies They Talk AboutEmployees' EntranceMystery of the Wax MuseumThe King's VacationBlondie JohnsonGirl Missing42nd StreetGrand SlamThe Telegraph TrailThe KeyholeThe Mind ReaderUntamed AfricaCentral AirportThe Working ManElmer, the GreatPicture SnatcherLilly TurnerEx-LadyThe Little GiantGold Diggers of 1933The Life of Jimmy DolanPrivate Detective 62The Silk ExpressHeroes for SaleThe Mayor of HellBaby FaceThe Narrow CornerShe Had to Say YesMary Stevens, M.D.VoltaireCaptured!Goodbye AgainBureau of Missing PersonsI Loved a WomanWild Boys of the RoadFootlight ParadeThe Kennel Murder CaseEver in My HeartCollege CoachFemaleFrom HeadquartersHavana WidowsThe World ChangesLady KillerConvention CityThe House on 56th StreetSon of a Sailor
1934: The Big ShakedownEasy to LoveHi, Nellie!MassacreBedsideDark HazardMandalayAs the Earth TurnsFashions of 1934I've Got Your NumberHeat LightningJimmy the GentJournal of a CrimeWonder BarRegistered NurseHarold TeenA Modern HeroUpperworldA Very Honorable GuyMerry Wives of RenoSmartyTwenty Million SweetheartsThe Merry FrinksFog Over FriscoThe KeyHe Was Her ManDr. MonicaThe Circus ClownReturn of the TerrorThe Personality KidMidnight AlibiSide StreetsHere Comes the NavyFriends of Mr. SweeneyThe Man with Two FacesHousewifeThe Dragon Murder CaseDamesDesirableBritish AgentA Lost LadyThe Case of the Howling DogBig Hearted HerbertKansas City PrincessMadame Du Barry6 Day Bike RiderI Sell AnythingHappiness AheadThe FirebirdThe St. Louis KidGentlemen Are BornI Am a ThiefFlirtation WalkBabbittThe Church MouseMurder in the CloudsThe Secret BrideSweet Adeline
1935: Maybe It's LoveBordertownThe Right to LiveThe White CockatooRed Hot TiresDevil Dogs of the AirThe Woman in RedThe Singer of NaplesSweet MusicLiving on VelvetWhile the Patient SleptGold Diggers of 1935A Night at the RitzTraveling SalesladyThe Florentine DaggerThe Case of the Curious BrideGo into Your DanceMary Jane's PaG MenDinkyBlack FuryIn CalienteThe Girl from 10th AvenueOil for the Lamps of ChinaAlibi IkeStrandedDon't Bet on BlondesFront Page WomanBright LightsBroadway GondolierThe Irish in UsWe're in the MoneyGoing HighbrowLittle Big ShotPage Miss GlorySpecial AgentThe Goose and the GanderI Live for LoveA Midsummer Night's DreamThe Case of the Lucky LegsShipmates ForeverDr. SocratesPersonal Maid's SecretMoonlight on the PrairieThe PayoffI Found Stella ParishStars Over BroadwayFrisco KidBroadway HostessMiss Pacific FleetMan of IronDangerousCaptain Blood
1936: The Murder of Dr. HarriganCeiling ZeroFreshman LoveThe Widow from Monte CarloThe Petrified ForestMr. Cohen Takes a WalkMan HuntThe Story of Louis PasteurSong of the SaddleBoulder DamThe Walking DeadColleenRoad GangSnowed UnderThe Singing KidBrides Are Like ThatI Married a DoctorTreachery Rides the RangeTimes Square PlayboyThe Law in Her HandsThe Golden ArrowSons o' GunsBullets or BallotsMurder by an AristocratHearts DividedThe Big NoiseThe White AngelTwo Against the WorldHot MoneySatan Met a LadyEarthworm TractorsPublic Enemy's WifeBengal TigerThe Green PasturesJailbreakThe Case of the Velvet ClawsChina ClipperLove Begins at 20Anthony AdverseTrailin' WestStage StruckGive Me Your HeartDown the StretchCain and MabelIsle of FuryThe Charge of the Light BrigadeHere Comes CarterThe Case of the Black CatCalifornia MailThe Captain's KidThree Men on a HorseFugitive in the SkyPolo JoeKing of HockeyGold Diggers of 1937Great Guy
1937: Guns of the PecosSmart BlondeSing Me a Love SongGod's Country and the WomanOnce a DoctorBlack LegionStolen HolidayThe Great O'MalleyGreen LightHer Husband's SecretaryPenrod and SamMidnight CourtReady, Willing and AbleLand Beyond the LawThe King and the Chorus GirlMen in ExileMarked WomanCall It a DayThat Man's Here AgainMountain JusticeMelody for TwoThe Prince and the PauperThe Cherokee StripDraegerman CourageThe Go GetterKid GalahadThe Case of the Stuttering BishopBlazing SixesFly-Away BabySlimAnother DawnThe Singing MarineEmpty HolstersPublic WeddingMarry the GirlEver Since EveTalent ScoutWhite BondageSan QuentinDance Charlie DanceThe Devil's Saddle LegionThe Footloose HeiressMr. Dodd Takes the AirConfessionVarsity ShowPrairie ThunderWine, Women and HorsesThat Certain WomanBack in CirculationThe Life of Emile ZolaLove Is on the AirThey Won't ForgetOver the GoalThe Perfect SpecimenThe Great GarrickWest of ShanghaiAlcatraz IslandThe Adventurous BlondeIt's Love I'm AfterExpensive HusbandsSubmarine D-1First LadyMissing WitnessesSh! The OctopusShe Loved a FiremanTovarich
1938: Sergeant MurphyThe Patient in Room 18Swing Your LadyHollywood HotelThe Invisible MenaceBlondes at WorkDaredevil DriversGold Is Where You Find ItPenrod and His Twin BrotherA Slight Case of MurderLove, Honor and BehaveHe Couldn't Say NoJezebelOver the WallAccidents Will HappenFools for ScandalWomen Are Like ThatThe Beloved BratTorchy Blane in PanamaThe Adventures of Robin HoodMystery HouseCrime SchoolLittle Miss ThoroughbredGold Diggers in ParisWhen Were You BornWhite BannersCowboy from BrooklynMy BillMen Are Such FoolsRacket BustersPenrod's Double TroubleThe Amazing Dr. ClitterhouseMr. ChumpFour DaughtersBoy Meets GirlFour's a CrowdSecrets of an ActressValley of the GiantsGarden of the MoonBroadway MusketeersThe SistersGirls on ProbationBrother RatHard to GetTorchy Gets Her ManNancy Drew... DetectiveAngels with Dirty FacesComet Over BroadwayHeart of the NorthThe Dawn PatrolGoing Places
1939: Devil's IslandKing of the UnderworldOff the RecordThey Made Me a CriminalTorchy Blane in ChinatownWings of the NavyNancy Drew... ReporterYes, My Darling DaughterSecret Service of the AirThe Oklahoma KidThe Adventures of Jane ArdenBlackwell's IslandOn TrialDodge CityWomen in the WindDark VictoryJuarezConfessions of a Nazi SpyTorchy Runs for MayorSweepstakes WinnerYou Can't Get Away with MurderThe Kid from KokomoCode of the Secret ServiceThe Man Who DaredNancy Drew... Trouble ShooterNaughty but NiceHell's KitchenWaterfrontDaughters CourageousEach Dawn I DieThe Cowboy QuarterbackIndianapolis SpeedwayTorchy Blane... Playing with DynamiteThe Angels Wash Their FacesEverybody's HobbyThe Old MaidNancy Drew and the Hidden StaircaseDust Be My DestinyNo Place to GoEspionage AgentPride of the Blue GrassOn Your ToesSmashing the Money RingThe Roaring TwentiesKid NightingaleThe Private Lives of Elizabeth and EssexOn Dress ParadeWe Are Not AloneThe Return of Doctor XPrivate DetectiveThe Mad EmpressSons of the SeaFour WivesInvisible Stripes

1940s
1940: A Child Is BornBrother Rat and a BabyThe Fighting 69thBritish IntelligenceCalling Philo VanceGranny Get Your GunCastle on the HudsonDr. Ehrlich's Magic BulletThree Cheers for the IrishVirginia CityIt All Came TrueKing of the Lumberjacks'Til We Meet AgainAn Angel from TexasTear Gas SquadSaturday's ChildrenFlight AngelsTorrid ZoneMurder in the AirBrother OrchidA Fugitive from JusticeGambling on the High SeasThe Sea HawkAll This, and Heaven TooMy Love Came BackThe Man Who Talked Too MuchLadies Must LiveThey Drive by NightRiver's EndMoney and the WomanFlowing GoldCalling All HusbandsNo Time for ComedyCity for ConquestKnute Rockne, All AmericanA Dispatch from Reuter'sTugboat Annie Sails AgainAlways a BrideEast of the RiverSouth of SuezFather Is a PrinceThe LetterLady with Red HairShe Couldn't Say NoSanta Fe Trail

1941: Four MothersThe Case of the Black ParrotHoneymoon for ThreeHigh SierraFlight from DestinyFather's SonThe Great Mr. NobodyThe Strawberry BlondeShadows on the StairsFootsteps in the DarkHere Comes HappinessThe Sea WolfKnockoutA Shot in the DarkThe Great LieStrange AlibiThe Wagons Roll at NightThieves Fall OutMeet John DoeAffectionately YoursSingapore WomanThe Nurse's SecretMillion Dollar BabyShining VictoryOut of the FogUndergroundKisses for BreakfastThe Bride Came C.O.D.Bullets for O'HaraBad Men of MissouriThree Sons o' GunsHighway WestManpowerInternational SquadronDive BomberThe Smiling GhostNavy BluesNine Lives Are Not EnoughSergeant YorkPassage from Hong KongLaw of the TropicsTarget for TonightThe Maltese FalconOne Foot in HeavenBlues in the NightThey Died with Their Boots OnAll Through the NightThe Body DisappearsSteel Against the SkyDangerously They LiveYou're in the Army Now
1942: The Man Who Came to DinnerWild Bill Hickok RidesThe Prime MinisterAtlantic FerryCaptains of the CloudsBullet ScarsAlways in My HeartThis Was ParisLady GangsterI Was FramedThe Male AnimalMurder in the Big HouseKings RowLarceny, Inc.In This Our LifeJuke GirlSpy ShipYankee Doodle DandyThe Big ShotWings for the EagleEscape from CrimeThe Gay SistersAcross the PacificSecret EnemiesBusses RoarDesperate JourneyYou Can't Escape ForeverNow, VoyagerThe Hidden HandGentleman JimCasablancaGeorge Washington Slept HereFlying Fortress
1943: The Gorilla ManTruck BustersThe Hard WayThe Mysterious DoctorAir ForceEdge of DarknessMission to MoscowAction in the North AtlanticThe Constant NymphPledge to BataanBackground to DangerThis Is the ArmyWatch on the RhineMurder on the WaterfrontThank Your Lucky StarsAdventure in IraqPrincess O'RourkeFind the BlackmailerNorthern PursuitOld AcquaintanceThe Desert SongDestination Tokyo
1944: In Our TimePassage to MarseilleShine On, Harvest MoonUncertain GloryBetween Two WorldsMr. SkeffingtonMake Your Own BedThe Mask of DimitriosThe Adventures of Mark TwainJanieCrime by NightArsenic and Old LaceThe Last RideTo Have and Have NotThe Very Thought of YouThe ConspiratorsThe DoughgirlsHollywood Canteen
1945: Roughly SpeakingObjective, Burma!Hotel BerlinGod Is My Co-PilotThe Horn Blows at MidnightEscape in the DesertPillow to PostConflictThe Corn Is GreenChristmas in ConnecticutPride of the MarinesRhapsody in BlueMildred PierceConfidential AgentDanger SignalToo Young to KnowAppointment in TokyoSan Antonio
1946: My ReputationThree StrangersCinderella JonesSaratoga TrunkDevotionHer Kind of ManOne More TomorrowJanie Gets MarriedA Stolen LifeOf Human BondageTwo Guys from MilwaukeeNight and DayThe Big SleepShadow of a WomanCloak and DaggerDeceptionNobody Lives ForeverNever Say GoodbyeThe VerdictThe Beast with Five FingersHumoresqueThe Time, the Place and the Girl
1947: The Man I LoveNora PrentissThe Two Mrs. CarrollsPursuedThat Way with WomenStallion RoadLove and LearnThe UnfaithfulCheyennePossessedDeep ValleyLife with FatherCry WolfDark PassageThe UnsuspectedThat Hagen GirlEscape Me NeverAlways TogetherThe Voice of the TurtleMy Wild Irish Rose
1948: The Treasure of the Sierra MadreMy Girl TisaThey Made Me a FugitiveApril ShowersWinter MeetingTo the VictorThe Woman in WhiteSilver RiverWallflowerThe Big PunchRomance on the High SeasKey LargoEmbraceable YouRopeTwo Guys from TexasJohnny BelindaSmart Girls Don't TalkJune BrideFighter SquadronAdventures of Don JuanThe Decision of Christopher BlakeWhiplash
1949: One Sunday AfternoonJohn Loves MaryFlaxy MartinSouth of St. LouisA Kiss in the DarkBurma VictoryHomicideMy Dream Is YoursThe Younger BrothersFlamingo RoadNight Unto NightColorado TerritoryOne Last FlingThe FountainheadThe Girl from Jones BeachLook for the Silver LiningIt's a Great FeelingWhite HeatThe House Across the StreetGolden MadonnaTask ForceUnder CapricornBeyond the ForestThe Story of SeabiscuitAlways Leave Them LaughingThe Hasty HeartThe Lady Takes a SailorThe Inspector General

1950s
1950: MontanaBackfireChain LightningYoung Man with a HornPerfect StrangerBarricadeStage FrightThe Daughter of Rosie O'GradyThe Damned Don't CryCagedColt .45This Side of the LawReturn of the FrontiersmanFifty Years Before Your EyesBright LeafThe Flame and the ArrowThe Great Jewel RobberKiss Tomorrow GoodbyeTea for TwoPretty BabyThe Glass MenagerieThe Breaking PointThree SecretsRocky MountainBreakthroughThe West Point StoryHighway 301Dallas

1951: Operation PacificStorm WarningSugarfootThe EnforcerLullaby of BroadwayRaton PassLightning Strikes TwiceOnly the ValiantI Was a Communist for the FBIInside the Walls of Folsom PrisonGoodbye, My FancyAlong the Great DivideStrangers on a TrainFort WorthOn Moonlight BayForce of ArmsJim Thorpe – All-AmericanCaptain Horatio HornblowerA Streetcar Named DesireTomorrow Is Another DayPainting the Clouds with SunshineCome Fill the CupThe Tanks Are ComingClose to My HeartI'll See You in My DreamsStarliftDistant Drums
1952: Room for One MoreThe Big TreesThis Woman Is DangerousRetreat, Hell!Bugles in the AfternoonJack and the BeanstalkMara MaruThe Lion and the HorseThe San Francisco StoryAbout FaceCarson CityThe Winning TeamWhere's Charley?3 for Bedroom CShe's Working Her Way Through CollegeThe Story of Will RogersThe Miracle of Our Lady of FatimaBig Jim McLainCattle TownThe Crimson PirateSpringfield RifleOperation SecretThe Iron MistressStop, You're Killing MeApril in ParisAbbott and Costello Meet Captain KiddThe Jazz Singer
1953: The Man Behind the GunShe's Back on BroadwayI ConfessBy the Light of the Silvery MoonThe Blue GardeniaSo You Want to Learn to DanceTrouble Along the WayThe SystemHouse of WaxThe Desert SongThe Beast from 20,000 FathomsSouth Sea WomanElizabeth Is QueenThe Charge at Feather RiverSo This Is LoveThe Master of BallantraeThe Beggar's OperaPlunder of the SunIsland in the SkyThe MoonlighterA Lion Is in the StreetsBlowing WildThunder Over the PlainsSo BigCalamity JaneThree Sailors and a GirlHondoThe Diamond QueenThe Eddie Cantor Story
1954: His Majesty O'KeefeThe CommandThe Boy from OklahomaCrime WaveDuffy of San QuentinPhantom of the Rue MorgueRiding ShotgunLucky MeDial M for MurderThem!The High and the MightyRing of FearKing Richard and the CrusadersDuel in the JungleDragnetThe Bounty HunterA Star Is BornDrum BeatTrack of the CatThe Silver Chalice
1955: UnchainedYoung at HeartBattle CryNew York ConfidentialMurder Is My BeatEast of EdenStrange Lady in TownThe Sea ChaseTall Man RidingLand of the PharaohsMister RobertsThe Dam BustersPete Kelly's BluesJump into HellThe McConnell StoryBlood AlleyRebel Without a CauseIllegalSincerely YoursI Died a Thousand TimesTarget ZeroThe Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell
1956: Helen of TroyHell on Frisco BayThe Lone RangerThe River ChangesThe Steel JungleSerenadeMiracle in the RainOur Miss BrooksGood-bye, My LadyThe SearchersThe Animal WorldMoby DickSantiagoSatellite in the SkySeven Men from NowA Cry in the NightThe Bad SeedThe Burning HillsThe Girl He Left BehindToward the UnknownGiantBaby DollThe Wrong Man
1957: Top Secret AffairThe Spirit of St. LouisThe Big LandElena and Her MenDeep AdventureX the UnknownShoot-Out at Medicine BendUntamed YouthThe Counterfeit PlanA Face in the CrowdThe D.I.The Prince and the ShowgirlThe Curse of FrankensteinBand of AngelsThe Rising of the MoonThe Pajama GameWoman in a Dressing GownBlack PatchJohnny TroubleThe Abominable SnowmanThe Helen Morgan StoryThe Black ScorpionThe James Dean StoryThe Story of MankindBombers B-52SayonaraThe Green-Eyed Blonde
1958: The Deep SixDarby's RangersLafayette EscadrilleChase a Crooked ShadowManhunt in the JungleToo Much, Too SoonFort DobbsMarjorie MorningstarStakeout on Dope StreetThe Left Handed GunViolent RoadNo Time for SergeantsDangerous YouthBadman's CountryIndiscreetThe Naked and the DeadWind Across the EvergladesDamn YankeesGirl on the RunThe Old Man and the SeaOnionheadEnchanted IslandHome Before DarkFrom the Earth to the MoonBorn RecklessAuntie Mame
1959: The Hanging TreeUp PeriscopeRio BravoWestboundIsland of Lost WomenGigantis the Fire MonsterThe Young PhiladelphiansTeenagers from Outer SpaceJohn Paul JonesThe Nun's StoryHerculesLook Back in AngerThe FBI Story-30-Yellowstone KellyThe MiracleA Summer Place

1960s
1960: Ice PalaceCash McCallGuns of the TimberlandThe Rise and Fall of Legs DiamondThe Bramble BushThe ThreatThis Rebel BreedThe Cranes Are FlyingTall StorySergeant RutledgeHannibalHercules UnchainedOcean's 11The Crowded SkySunrise at CampobelloThe Dark at the Top of the StairsGirl of the NightThe Sundowners

1961: A Fever in the BloodGold of the Seven SaintsThe Sins of Rachel CadePortrait of a MobsterParrishFannyThe Fabulous World of Jules VerneThe Steel ClawClaudelle InglishSplendor in the GrassThe MaskSusan SladeA Majority of OneThe Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone
1962: The CouchSamar House of WomenRome AdventureThe Singer Not the SongLad, A DogMerrill's MaraudersThe Music ManGuns of DarknessThe Chapman ReportGay Purr-eeWhat Ever Happened to Baby Jane?GypsyThe Story of the Count of Monte CristoMalagaDays of Wine and Roses
1963: Term of TrialBlack GoldCritic's ChoiceSpencer's MountainIsland of LovePT-109Wall of NoiseThe CastilianRampageMary, MaryPalm Springs WeekendAmerica AmericaThe Man from Galveston4 for TexasAct One
1964: Dr. CrippenDead RingerThe Incredible Mr. LimpetFBI Code 98A Distant TrumpetRobin and the 7 HoodsEnsign PulverKisses for My PresidentRichard Burton's HamletCheyenne AutumnYoungblood HawkeDear HeartMy Fair LadySex and the Single Girl
1965: Two on a GuillotineNone but the BraveMy Blood Runs ColdBrainstormThe Battle of the Villa FioritaThe Woman Who Wouldn't DieThe Great RaceThe Third DayCatch Us If You CanMurietaMarriage on the RocksLa BohèmeNever Too LateOthelloBattle of the Bulge
1966: Inside Daisy CloverHarperStop the World - I Want to Get OffA Big Hand for the Little LadyWho's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?A Fine MadnessAn American Dream'KaleidoscopeAny WednesdayChamber of HorrorsNot with My Wife, You Don't!Once Before I DieYou're a Big Boy Now
1967: HotelFirst to FightThe Corrupt OnesA Covenant with DeathThe MikadoThe Cool OnesThe Family WayUp the Down StaircaseTriple CrossThe Naked RunnerBonnie and ClydeThe BoboReflections in a Golden EyeCamelotWait Until DarkCool Hand LukeIt!The Frozen Dead
1968: The Vengeance of Fu ManchuFirecreekFlaming FrontierCountdownThe FoxSweet NovemberThe Shuttered RoomBye Bye BravermanThe Young Girls of RochefortKona CoastThe Double ManChubascoPetuliaThe Devil in LoveThe Green BeretsThe Heart Is a Lonely HunterRachel, RachelHugo and JosephineFinian's RainbowBullittI Love You, Alice B. Toklas!Assignment to KillThe Sea GullThe Sergeant
1969: They Came to Rob Las VegasDracula Has Risen from the GraveThe Trygon FactorThe Big Bounce2000 Years LaterThe Illustrated ManThe Sweet Body of DeborahThe Big CubeThe Wild BunchThe Learning TreeThe Rain PeopleOn My Way to the Crusades, I Met a Girl Who...The Valley of GwangiThe Great Bank RobberyThe Good Guys and the Bad GuysThe Madwoman of ChaillotOnce You Kiss a StrangerThe ArrangementThe Damned80 Steps to Jonah

1970s
1970: Last of the Mobile Hot ShotsStart the Revolution Without MeFrankenstein Must Be DestroyedMoon Zero TwoWoodstockThe PhynxThe Ballad of Cable HogueTaste the Blood of DraculaChisumPerformanceWhich Way to the Front?Rabbit, RunTrogThe Rise and Rise of Michael RimmerFlapThere Was a Crooked Man...

1971: The Priest's WifeTHX 1138When Dinosaurs Ruled the EarthSummer of '42Billy JackDeath in VeniceMcCabe & Mrs. MillerKluteDusty and Sweets McGeeThe DevilsThe Omega ManAnd the Crows Will Dig Your GraveMedicine Ball CaravanSkin GameZeppelinMan in the WildernessA Clockwork OrangeDirty Harry
1972: The CowboysSnow JobDealing: Or the Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag BluesWhat's Up, Doc?Malcolm XAdam's WomanGet to Know Your RabbitPortnoy's ComplaintThe CandidateCome Back, Charleston BlueA Fan's NotesDeliveranceCry for Me, BillySuper FlyCancel My ReservationThe EmigrantsDracula A.D. 1972RageCrescendoJeremiah Johnson
1973: Steelyard BluesThe Train RobbersThe Thief Who Came to DinnerKing BoxerClass of '44ScarecrowThe Last of SheilaBlume in LoveO Lucky Man!Cahill U.S. MarshalCleopatra JonesThe Mackintosh ManEnter the DragonDay for NightMean StreetsBadlandsThe All-American BoyThe New LandJimi HendrixThe Deadly TrackersAmarcordMagnum ForceThe ExorcistTreasure Island
1974: Sacred Knives of VengeanceBlack Belt JonesMcQBlazing SaddlesMameOur TimeWelcome to Arrow BeachBlack EyeZandy's BrideCrazeThe Terminal ManOliver TwistUptown Saturday NightBlack SamsonIt's AliveHangupThe AbdicationAnimals Are Beautiful PeopleThe Towering InfernoBlack ChristmasFreebie and the Bean
1975: Alice Doesn't Live Here AnymoreRafferty and the Gold Dust TwinsThe Prisoner of Second AvenueThe YakuzaLepkeDoc Savage: The Man of BronzeThe Wicker ManNight MovesThe Drowning PoolCleopatra Jones and the Casino of GoldDog Day AfternoonLisztomaniaLet's Do It AgainOperation DaybreakThe Ultimate WarriorFrom Beyond the GraveBarry Lyndon
1976: Inside OutCatherine & Co.Hot PotatoSparkleAll the President's MenOde to Billy JoeThe Outlaw Josey WalesThe Gumball RallyThe RitzSt. IvesThe Killer Inside MeLed Zeppelin: The Song Remains the SameA Star Is BornThe Enforcer
1977: The Late ShowBrothersViva Knievel!Exorcist II: The HereticGreased LightningOutlaw BluesOne on OneBobby DeerfieldOh, God!A Piece of the ActionStarship InvasionsThe PackThe Goodbye GirlThe Gauntlet
1978: A Night Full of RainAn Enemy of the PeopleCrossed SwordsStraight TimeThe Medusa TouchIt Lives AgainThe Sea GypsiesBig WednesdayCapricorn OneThe SwarmHooperGirlfriendsWho Is Killing the Great Chefs of Europe?BloodbrothersThe Great Bank HoaxMovie MovieSupermanEvery Which Way but Loose
1979: AgathaBoulevard NightsAshantiTiltA Little RomanceOver the EdgeBeyond the Poseidon AdventureThe In-LawsThe Main EventThe WanderersThe Frisco KidLife of BrianTime After TimeThe Bugs Bunny/Road Runner Movie10JesusThe Great SantiniPromises in the DarkGoing in Style

1980s
1980: Just Tell Me What You WantSimonThe Ninth ConfigurationWhen Time Ran OutTom HornGilda LiveDie LaughingHeart BeatFriday the 13thThe ShiningUp the AcademyBronco BillyNo NukesHoneysuckle RoseCaddyshackThe Fiendish Plot of Dr. Fu ManchuThe Big BrawlAC/DC: Let There Be RockDivine MadnessThe First Deadly SinOne-Trick PonyOh, God! Book IIPrivate BenjaminThe AwakeningAny Which Way You CanFirst FamilyAltered States

1981: The Man Who Saw TomorrowSphinxBack RoadsEyes of a StrangerThis Is ElvisExcaliburThe HandOutlandSuperman IIArthurWolfenUnder the RainbowPrince of the CityBody HeatSo FineLookerThe Looney Looney Looney Bugs Bunny MovieRolloverSharky's Machine
1982: Personal BestTragedy of a Ridiculous ManDeathtrapChariots of FireSoup for OneMad Max 2The Escape ArtistFirefoxBlade RunnerA Midsummer Night's Sex ComedyThe World According to GarpNight ShiftHammettHey Good Lookin'Love ChildCreepshowFive Days One SummerBugs Bunny's Third Movie: 1001 Rabbit TalesHonkytonk ManBest Friends
1983: Independence DayLocal HeroTable for FiveLovesickHigh Road to ChinaThe OutsidersDeadly EyesBetter Late Than NeverBlue Skies AgainThe Man with Two BrainsSuperman IIITwilight Zone: The MovieStroker Ace (International) • ZeligNational Lampoon's VacationTwice Upon a TimeDaffy Duck's Fantastic IslandRisky BusinessCujoNever Say Never AgainThe Right StuffDeal of the CenturyStar 80Of Unknown OriginSudden Impact
1984: LassiterMike's MurderPolice AcademyPurple HeartsGreystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the ApesSwing ShiftFinders KeepersOnce Upon a Time in AmericaGremlinsCannonball Run IIThe NeverEnding StoryPurple RainGrandview, U.S.A.TightropeCalWindy CityIrreconcilable DifferencesThe Little Drummer GirlAmerican DreamerThe Killing FieldsOh, God! You DevilRazorbackCity HeatProtocol
1985: FandangoVision QuestBeyond the WallsLost in AmericaPolice Academy 2: Their First AssignmentLadyhawkeSeven Minutes in HeavenCracking UpDoin' TimeThe GooniesPale RiderMad Max: Beyond ThunderdomeNational Lampoon's European VacationSesame Street Presents Follow That BirdPee-wee's Big AdventureAmerican FlyersThe ProtectorMishima: A Life in Four ChaptersBetter Off DeadAfter HoursKrush GrooveEleniTargetRainbow Brite and the Star StealerSpies Like UsThe Color PurpleRevolution
1986: The Clan of the Cave BearWildcatsThe Frog PrincePolice Academy 3: Back in TrainingThe Flight of DragonsMr. LoveCobraUnder the Cherry MoonClub ParadiseOne Crazy SummerA Man and a Woman: 20 Years LaterKnights & EmeraldsRound MidnightTrue StoriesDeadly FriendRatboyThe MissionThe Mosquito CoastHeartbreak RidgeLittle Shop of Horrors
1987: Instant JusticeOver the TopLethal WeaponBurglarPolice Academy 4: Citizens on PatrolCreepshow 2It's Alive III: Island of the AliveA Return to Salem's LotThe Witches of EastwickFull Metal JacketInnerspaceSuperman IV: The Quest for PeaceThe Lost BoysWho's That GirlDisorderliesSurrenderNutsEmpire of the Sun
1988: FranticMovingStand and DeliverPolice Academy 5: Assignment Miami BeachBeetlejuiceAbove the LawFunny FarmArthur 2: On the RocksThe Dead PoolCaddyshack IIClean and SoberStealing HomeHot to TrotRunning on EmptyCrossing DelanceyGorillas in the MistDaffy Duck's QuackbustersBirdImagine: John LennonClara's HeartThelonious Monk: Straight, No ChaserFedsMoonwalkerEverybody's All-AmericanA Cry in the DarkTequila SunriseDangerous LiaisonsThe Accidental Tourist
1989: Her AlibiBert Rigby, You're a FoolLean on MePolice Academy 6: City Under SiegeDead BangDead CalmSee You in the MorningChecking OutHow to Get Ahead in AdvertisingPink CadillacBatmanLethal Weapon 2Young EinsteinCookiePenn & Teller Get KilledIn CountryNext of KinSecond SightNational Lampoon's Christmas VacationDriving Miss DaisyRoger & MeThe DelinquentsTango & Cash

1990s
1990: Men Don't LeaveHard to KillJoe Versus the VolcanoLambadaImpulseGremlins 2: The New BatchQuick ChangePresumed InnocentMy Blue HeavenDreamsThe WitchesWhite Hunter, Black HeartGoodfellasListen Up: The Lives of Quincy JonesMemphis BelleReversal of FortuneGraffiti BridgeThe Nutcracker PrinceThe RookieThe Sheltering SkyThe Bonfire of the Vanities

1991: HamletThe NeverEnding Story II: The Next ChapterNothing but TroubleNew Jack CityIf Looks Could KillGuilty by SuspicionDefending Your LifeOut for JusticeBorn to RideSwitchDon't Tell Mom the Babysitter's DeadRobin Hood: Prince of ThievesDoc HollywoodRover DangerfieldGoing UnderShowdown in Little TokyoDogfightRicochetOther People's MoneyCurly SueStrictly BusinessMeeting VenusThe Last Boy ScoutJFKUntil the End of the World
1992: FreejackHurricane SmithFinal AnalysisThe Mambo KingsMemoirs of an Invisible ManThe Power of OneLadybugsCity of JoyWhite SandsTurtle BeachLethal Weapon 3Class ActBatman ReturnsMom and Dad Save the WorldUnforgivenStay TunedChristopher Columbus: The DiscoverySouth CentralSinglesInnocent BloodUnder SiegePure CountryPassenger 57The Last of the MohicansMalcolm XThe BodyguardForever Young
1993: SommersbyFalling DownPoint of No ReturnThe CrushThis Boy's LifeBoiling PointDaveMade in AmericaDennis the MenaceFree WillyThat NightThe FugitiveThe Secret GardenThe Man Without a FaceTrue RomanceAirborneM. ButterflyDemolition ManFearlessMr. WonderfulKikaThe Saint of Fort WashingtonA Perfect WorldThe NutcrackerThe Pelican BriefWrestling Ernest HemingwayBatman: Mask of the PhantasmGrumpy Old MenHeaven & Earth
1994: Body SnatchersThe Legend of Drunken MasterAce Ventura: Pet DetectiveOn Deadly GroundThe Hudsucker ProxyMajor League IIThumbelinaChasersWith HonorsBeing HumanReckless KellyMaverickWyatt EarpThe ClientBlack BeautyWar of the ButtonsPolice Academy: Mission to Moscow Natural Born KillersArizona DreamRapa NuiTrial by JuryThe New AgeSecond BestThe SpecialistA Troll in Central ParkLittle GiantsImaginary CrimesLove AffairSilent FallInterview with the VampireCobbDisclosureRichie Rich
1995: Murder in the FirstBoys on the SideJust CauseOutbreakBorn to Be WildThe Pebble and the PenguinA Little PrincessThe Bridges of Madison CountyBatman ForeverUnder Siege 2: Dark TerritoryFree Willy 2: The Adventure HomeSomething to Talk AboutThe Amazing Panda AdventureThe Stars Fell on HenriettaAssassinsEmpire RecordsCopycatLes MisérablesFair GameAce Ventura: When Nature CallsIt Takes TwoThe Snow QueenHeatGrumpier Old Men
1996: Two If by SeaBig BullyThe NeverEnding Story III: Escape from FantasiaExecutive DecisionDiaboliqueTwisterEraserA Time to KillJoe's ApartmentTin CupCarpoolSweet NothingBogusSurviving PicassoThe Glimmer ManThe ProprietorMichael CollinsSleepersNorth StarSunchaserBad MoonSpace JamMars Attacks!My Fellow AmericansThe Snow Queen's Revenge
1997: Vegas VacationRosewoodSelenaCats Don't DanceAnna KareninaMurder at 1600ShilohFathers' DayAddicted to LoveBatman & RobinWild AmericaContactThe Swan Princess: Escape from Castle MountainOne Eight SevenFree Willy 3: The RescueConspiracy TheorySteelFire Down BelowL.A. ConfidentialTrojan WarThe Fearless FourLive FleshThe Devil's AdvocateBreaking UpFairyTale: A True StoryMad CityThe Man Who Knew Too LittleMidnight in the Garden of Good and EvilThe Postman
1998: FallenSphereDangerous BeautyU.S. MarshalsIncognitoThe Butcher BoyCity of AngelsMajor League: Back to the MinorsTarzan and the Lost CityQuest for CamelotAlmost HeroesA Perfect MurderLethal Weapon 4The NegotiatorThe AvengersWrongfully AccusedWhy Do Fools Fall in LoveWithout LimitsPractical MagicSoldierHome FriesJack FrostYou've Got Mail
1999: PaybackMessage in a BottleAnalyze ThisThe King and ITrue CrimeThe MatrixGoodbye LoverAll About My MotherLost & FoundWild Wild WestSouth Park: Bigger, Longer & UncutShiloh 2: Shiloh SeasonEyes Wide ShutDeep Blue SeaThe Iron GiantMickey Blue EyesA Dog of FlandersChill FactorButterfly's TongueThree KingsThe Story of UsThree to TangoHouse on Haunted HillPokémon: The First MovieLiberty HeightsThe Green MileAny Given SundayMan on the MoonThe Big Tease

2000s
2000: My Dog SkipThe Whole Nine YardsRomeo Must DieReady to RumbleGossipBattlefield EarthThe Perfect StormThe In CrowdPokémon: The Movie 2000Space CowboysThe ReplacementsThe Art of WarBaitInto the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the KindertransportBest in ShowGet CarterPay It ForwardRed PlanetProof of LifeMiss Congeniality

2001: The PledgeValentineSweet November3000 Miles to GracelandSee Spot RunExit WoundsPokémon 3: The MovieDrivenThe DishAngel EyesSwordfishProximityA.I. Artificial IntelligenceCats & DogsOsmosis JonesAmerican OutlawsSummer CatchRock StarHearts in AtlantisTraining DayThirteen GhostsHeistHarry Potter and the Sorcerer's StoneThe Affair of the NecklaceMinoesOcean's ElevenThe MajesticCharlotte Gray
2002: A Walk to RememberCollateral DamageQueen of the DamnedThe Time MachineShowtimeTalk to HerDeath to SmoochyMy Big Fat Greek WeddingMurder by NumbersThe Salton SeaInsomniaDivine Secrets of the Ya-Ya SisterhoodScooby-DooJuwanna MannThe Powerpuff Girls MovieEight Legged FreaksBlood WorkThe Adventures of Pluto NashFeardotComCity by the SeaBallistic: Ecks vs. SeverMondays in the SunWhite OleanderWelcome to CollinwoodGhost ShipFemme FataleHarry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsAnalyze ThatTwo Weeks Notice
2003: It Can't Be All Our FaultKangaroo JackGods and GeneralsCradle 2 the GraveDreamcatcherBlue Collar Comedy Tour: The MovieWhat a Girl WantsA Mighty WindMalibu's Most WantedThe Matrix ReloadedThe In-LawsThe AnimatrixAlex and EmmaTerminator 3: Rise of the MachinesI'll Be ThereGrindMatchstick MenSmall VoicesMystic RiverThe Matrix RevolutionsLooney Tunes: Back in ActionGothikaThe Last SamuraiSomething's Gotta GiveLove Don't Cost a Thing
2004: Chasing LibertyTorqueThe Big BounceClifford's Really Big MovieStarsky & HutchSpartanTaking LivesBad EducationScooby-Doo 2: Monsters UnleashedThe Whole Ten YardsNew York MinuteTroyHarry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanHouse of Flying DaggersA Cinderella StoryCatwomanYu-Gi-Oh! The Movie: Pyramid of LightExorcist: The BeginningLaura's StarThe Polar ExpressAlexanderOcean's TwelveMillion Dollar BabyThe Aviator
2005: Racing StripesThe Phantom of the OperaConstantineMiss Congeniality 2: Armed and FabulousHouse of WaxDominion: Prequel to the ExorcistThe Sisterhood of the Traveling PantsBatman BeginsCharlie and the Chocolate FactoryThe IslandMust Love DogsThe Dukes of HazzardA Sound of ThunderCorpse BrideThe Little Polar Bear 2: The Mysterious IslandDumaKiss Kiss Bang BangNorth CountryHarry Potter and the Goblet of FireSyrianaRumor Has ItThe Thief LordFirewall
2006: The Thief LordFirewallDeep Sea 3D16 BlocksV for VendettaVolverATLPoseidonSaving ShilohThe Lake HouseDeath NoteSuperman ReturnsLady in the WaterThe Ant BullyBeerfestThe Wicker ManThe DepartedPan's LabyrinthThe PrestigeFlags of Our FathersDeath Note 2: The Last NameGoya's GhostsHappy FeetThe FountainBlood DiamondUnaccompanied MinorsLetters from Iwo JimaWe Are Marshall
2007: The ReefMusic and LyricsThe Astronaut FarmerZodiac300TMNTThe ReapingAqua Teen Hunger Force Colon Movie Film for TheatersIn the Land of WomenLucky YouOcean's ThirteenNancy DrewLicense to WedHarry Potter and the Order of the PhoenixNo ReservationsThe InvasionThe OrphanageThe Brave OneThe Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert FordMichael ClaytonReturn to House on Haunted HillFred ClausBeowulfAugust RushBen 10: Race Against TimeI Am LegendP.S. I Love YouSweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet StreetThe Bucket List
2008: One Missed CallFool's GoldL: Change the World10,000 BCBroken AngelThe Red BaronHarold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo BaySpeed RacerSex and the CityGet SmartKit Kittredge: An American GirlJourney to the Center of the EarthThe Dark KnightThe Sky CrawlersThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2Star Wars: The Clone WarsThe WomenNights in RodantheAppaloosaRocknRollaBody of LiesPride and GloryIchiSlumdog MillionaireFour ChristmasesGran Torino ½ Knights: In Search of the Ravishing Princess HerzelindeYes Man The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
2009: The Ramen GirlInkheartThe Secret of MoonacreHe's Just Not That Into YouFriday the 13thMord ist mein Geschäft, LieblingWatchmenObserve and Report17 AgainCoco Before ChanelGhosts of Girlfriends PastGoemonChériTerminator SalvationThe HangoverThe Cell 2My Sister's KeeperHarry Potter and the Half-Blood PrinceOrphanThe Time Traveler's WifeSummer WarsShortsThe Final DestinationWhiteoutThe Informant!The FirmThe Hills Run RedThe Invention of LyingTrick 'r TreatWhere the Wild Things AreMicmacsThe BoxBen 10: Alien SwarmThe Blind SideNinja AssassinThe Descent Part 212 Paces Without a HeadInvictusSherlock Holmes

2010s
2010: The Book of EliEdge of DarknessValentine's DayCop OutAtithi Tum Kab Jaoge?HubbleLahoreTekkenTurk's HeadClash of the TitansJaane Kahan Se Aayi HaiThe LosersBird IdolCenturionA Nightmare on Elm StreetSex and the City 2SpliceOutrageJonah HexInceptionCats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty GaloreFlippedLottery TicketThe IllusionistNo eres tú, soy yoGoing the DistanceThe TownLegend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'HooleLife as We Know ItYoung Goethe in LoveRamayana: The EpicMahpeyker: Kösem SultanThe Incite MillDus TolaHereafterDue DateTi presento un amicoHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1Phas Gaye Re ObamaThree Steps Above HeavenHunting SeasonVater MorganaLa bellezza del somaroYogi BearThe Last Circus

2011: 127 HoursCousinhoodThe RiteKokowäähHow to Get Rid of CelluliteUtt PataangHall PassAnd Then What?IroncladRed Riding HoodKolpaçino: BombaSucker PunchArthurBorn to Be WildSomething BorrowedTürkanThe Hangover Part IIGreen LanternNicostratos the PelicanHorrible BossesHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2Crazy, Stupid, LoveFinal Destination 5The Skin I Live InContagionTop Cat: The MovieDolphin TaleDream HouseThe ArtistThe Worst Week of My LifeA Very Harold & Kumar ChristmasJ. EdgarHappy Feet TwoBlack GoldMy Grandfather's PeopleDam 999New Year's EveSherlock Holmes: A Game of ShadowsExtremely Loud and Incredibly Close
2012: Joyful NoiseJourney 2: The Mysterious IslandLoveGhost Rider: Spirit of VengeanceProject XWrath of the TitansThe Lucky OneTo the Arctic 3DDark ShadowsChernobyl DiariesRock of AgesMagic MikeThe Dark Knight RisesThe CampaignThe ApparitionRurouni KenshinNow Is GoodTrouble with the CurveÇanakkale ÇocuklarıGuardiansArgoOğlum Bak GitMeasuring the WorldCloud AtlasDance with the Jackals 2 (Çakallarla Dans 2: Hastasıyız Dede)The Hobbit: An Unexpected JourneyLudwig II
2013: Gangster SquadMiffy the MovieBullet to the HeadBeautiful CreaturesA Certain Magical Index: The Movie – The Miracle of EndymionJack the Giant SlayerHititya: Madalyonun SırrıI'm So Excited!Gallipoli: End of the RoadThe Incredible Burt WonderstoneThe Last DaysSelam42Shield of StrawThe Great GatsbyThe Hangover Part IIIMan of SteelGintama: The Movie: The Final Chapter: Be Forever YorozuyaPacific RimThe ConjuringWe're the MillersFamily UnitedUnforgivenPrisonersGravityVay Başıma GelenlerR100MindscapeFrau EllaIt All Began When I Met YouThe Hobbit: The Desolation of SmaugHerKedi ÖzlediGrudge MatchSenin Hikayen - Your Story
2014: Kadın İşi: Banka SoygunuBlack ButlerJoy of FatherhoodThe LEGO MovieWinter's TaleA Small September AffairRecep İvedik 4300: Rise of an EmpireVeronica MarsZaman Makinesi 1973Island of Lemurs: MadagascarHayat Sana GüzelTranscendencePanzehir - The AntidoteGodzillaBlendedEdge of TomorrowJersey BoysTammyInto the StormWild TalesIf I StayDolphin Tale 2Dabbe: Zehr-i CinThis Is Where I Leave YouMarshlandThe MissionariesComing SoonAnnabelleThe Good LieThe JudgeComing InInterstellarHorrible Bosses 2Mortadelo and Filemon: Mission ImplausibleHadi İnşallah - Let's Hope SoGet SantaInherent ViceKırımlıHead Full of HoneyThe Hobbit: The Battle of the Five ArmiesAmerican SniperYusuf Yusuf
2015: Mazlum KuzeyKöstebekgiller: Perili OrmanSevimli TehlikeliJupiter AscendingTraumfrauenFocus8 SaniyeOff CourseRun All NightThe MannyGet HardGhosthunters: On Icy TrailsLost RiverPolis Akademisi: AlaturkaThe Water DivinerHot PursuitNothing in ReturnMad Max: Fury RoadSan AndreasEntourageBatkid BeginsMaxMagic Mike XXLThe GallowsVacationThe Man from U.N.C.L.E.We Are Your FriendsSpy TimeThe HiddenBlack MassThe InternRetributionPanGit BaşımdanTop Cat BeginsOur Brand Is CrisisThe 33CreedIn the Heart of the SeaI'm Off ThenPoint BreakPalm Trees in the SnowDelibal
2016: Köstebekgiller 2: Gölgenin TılsımıHer Şey AşktanHow to Be SingleOsman PazarlamaMidnight SpecialSeytan TüyüBatman v Superman: Dawn of JusticeJulietaThe Man Who Knew InfinityBarbershop: The Next CutAt the End of the TunnelKeanuTerra FormarsThe Nice GuysMe Before YouThe Conjuring 2Central IntelligenceThe Legend of TarzanLights OutSuicide SquadWar DogsThe Age of ShadowsSullySMS für DichStorksThe Girl with All the GiftsCanım Kardeşim BenimThe AccountantWithinMay God Save UsRus'un OyunuMuseumFantastic Beasts and Where to Find ThemVillaviciosa de al ladoMonster Strike The MovieCollateral BeautyLive by NightVier gegen die Bank
2017: The Invisible GuestThe LEGO Batman MovieFist FightA Single RiderKanavu VariyamKong: Skull IslandCHiPsGoing in StyleKırık Kalpler BankasıWolves at the DoorUnforgettableBlade of the ImmortalMax 2: White House HeroKing Arthur: Legend of the SwordEverything, EverythingThe SummitWonder WomanMemoirs of a MurdererThe HouseGintamaDunkirkJoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable Chapter IAnnabelle: CreationThe Nut Job 2: Nutty by NatureMonster FamilyBingo: O Rei das ManhãsItThe LEGO Ninjago MovieBlade Runner 2049Toc TocComo se tornar o pior aluno da escolaGeostormAyla: The Daughter of WarMy TeacherJustice LeagueIn the FadeThe Disaster ArtistWonder WheelForget About NickFather FiguresNaples in Veils
2018: Paddington 212 StrongThe 15:17 to ParisGame NightTomb RaiderReady Player OneRampageLife of the PartyRainbow DaysOcean's 8Maybe a Love StoryTagBleachTeen Titans Go! To the MoviesKabir AzabıThe MegCrazy Rich AsiansThe NunThe AccusedReal GirlSmallfootA Star Is BornFantastic Beasts: The Crimes of GrindelwaldCreed IIMowgli: Legend of the JungleExterminadores do Além Contra a Loira do BanheiroHead Full of HoneyThey Shall Not Grow OldThe MuleAquaman
2019: White SnakeThe LEGO Movie 2: The Second PartIsn't It RomanticThe Golden GloveNancy Drew and the Hidden StaircaseShazam!The Curse of La LloronaThe WonderlandDetective PikachuThe Sun Is Also a StarGodzilla: King of the MonstersShaftAnnabelle Comes HomeThe KitchenBlinded by the LightThe InformerIt Chapter TwoThe GoldfinchThe Battle of JangsariJokerWestern StarsMotherless BrooklynDoctor SleepMy ZoeThe Good LiarRichard JewellJust MercyWhen Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit

2020s
2020: Birds of PreyThe Way BackScoob!An American PickleBill & Ted Face the MusicTenetUnpregnantCharm City KingsThe WitchesSuperintelligenceLet Them All TalkWonder Woman 1984

2021: Locked DownThe Little ThingsJudas and the Black MessiahTom & JerryZack Snyder's Justice LeagueGodzilla vs. KongMortal KombatRurouni Kenshin: The FinalThose Who Wish Me DeadThe Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do ItDream HorseRurouni Kenshin: The BeginningIn the HeightsNo Sudden MoveTokyo RevengersSpace Jam: A New LegacyThe Suicide SquadReminiscenceMalignantCry MachoThe Many Saints of NewarkDuneKing Richard8-Bit ChristmasBoxing DayThe Matrix Resurrections
2022: The FalloutParallel MothersKimiThe DukeThe BatmanThe Nan MovieMoonshotNavalnyFantastic Beasts: The Secrets of DumbledoreOperation MincemeatBubbleFullmetal Alchemist: Final Chapter – The Avenger ScarFather of the BrideElvisFullmetal Alchemist: Final Chapter – The Last TransmutationNotre-Dame on FireDC League of Super-PetsDon't Worry DarlingThe Lost KingEmilyBlack AdamA Christmas Story ChristmasBones and AllHoliday HarmonyA Christmas MysteryA Hollywood Christmas
2023: House PartyMagic Mike's Last DanceMummiesCreed IIIShazam! Fury of the GodsAirEvil Dead RiseThe FlashBarbieMeg 2: The TrenchBlue BeetleThe Nun 2WonkaAquaman and the Lost KingdomThe Color Purple

Upcoming
Dune: Part TwoMickey 17Godzilla x Kong: The New EmpireChallengersFuriosa: A Mad Max SagaThe WatchersHorizon: An American Saga – Chapter 1TwistersTrapHorizon: An American Saga – Chapter 2Beetlejuice 2Joker: Folie à DeuxAlto KnightsThe Lord of the Rings: The War of the RohirrimMortal Kombat 2MinecraftSuperman: LegacyThe Batman – Part IIThe AuthorityThe Brave and the BoldSupergirl: Woman of TomorrowSwamp ThingFunko
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