The Exorcist: Believer

Do you believe?

5.8
20231h 51m

Production

Logo for Universal Pictures
Logo for Blumhouse Productions
Logo for Morgan Creek Entertainment
Logo for Rough House Pictures

Since his wife's death, Victor has raised his daughter Angela alone. After she and her friend return from a three-day disappearance with missing memories, they begin displaying frightening behavior reminiscent of the MacNeil possession fifty years prior.

Trailers & Videos

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer 2

Official Trailer 2

Thumbnail for video: Official Trailer

Official Trailer

Thumbnail for video: Three Day Disappearance - Extended Preview

Three Day Disappearance - Extended Preview

Thumbnail for video: Yours to Own Promo

Yours to Own Promo

Thumbnail for video: Featurette - Faking Possession

Featurette - Faking Possession

Thumbnail for video: What Happened in the Woods Extended Preview

What Happened in the Woods Extended Preview

Thumbnail for video: Dare to Watch at Home NOW

Dare to Watch at Home NOW

Thumbnail for video: This Is The Exorcist: Believer

This Is The Exorcist: Believer

Thumbnail for video: In Every Religion and Every Culture

In Every Religion and Every Culture

Thumbnail for video: The Girls

The Girls

Cast

Photo of Leslie Odom Jr.

Leslie Odom Jr.

Victor Fielding

Photo of Lidya Jewett

Lidya Jewett

Angela Fielding

Photo of Olivia O'Neill

Olivia O'Neill

Katherine West

Photo of Ann Dowd

Ann Dowd

Nurse Ann Brooks

Photo of Jennifer Nettles

Jennifer Nettles

Miranda West

Photo of Raphael Sbarge

Raphael Sbarge

Pastor Don Revans

Photo of E.J. Bonilla

E.J. Bonilla

Father Maddox

Photo of Ellen Burstyn

Ellen Burstyn

Chris MacNeil

Photo of Linda Blair

Linda Blair

Regan MacNeil

Photo of Tracey Graves

Tracey Graves

Sorenne Fielding

Photo of Celeste Oliva

Celeste Oliva

Detective Konik

Photo of Antoni Corone

Antoni Corone

Father Phillips

Photo of Chloe Traicos

Chloe Traicos

Joda Maxwell

Photo of Linda Boston

Linda Boston

Principal

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Reviews

G

GenerationofSwine

1/10

Well, they made The Exorcist woke... and oddly Anti-Catholic... and it flopped.

Seriously, The Pope's Exorcist was better and EVERYONE knew that was going to flop. I'm going to tell you right now that you should go back and watch the prequel movies because they were better... BOTH of them.

You have two little girls, a strong anti-Catholic message, a strong anti-patriarchy message, you know... the usual Hollywood meh messaging (except the Anti-Catholic part, that is a dead horse that hasn't been beaten nearly as much) and, most importantly, the same sequel/reboot/franchise killer that seems to go out of it's way to insult all the fans of the original film...

... and everyone that helped make it. Which, honestly, is also a dead horse that's been beaten too much these days. In fact, insulting the original is sort of a trope these days.

People that actually like Terminator: Dark Fate are going to rave about this one... but everyone else is going to roll their eyes because at the end of the day, it has the exact same boring message as everything else.

And like everything else with that message, everything else from bookend to bookend takes a backseat to it. Bad dialogue peppered with political lectures. Bad acting (but let's be honest, they had nothing to work with) and in the end even the demon lacked the sardonic and vulgar wit of the first one.

But, hey, if you liked Dark Fate and thought The Rise of Skywalker was better than Empire, this movie is for you.

But everyone else has seen it before and is tired of it.

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

"Angela" (Lidya Jewett) and her school mate "Katherine" (Olivia O'Neill) go for a walk in the woods one day. They don't come home - and panic amongst the parents ensues. Luckily, the girls turn up in a cow-barn a few miles away but have no recollection of just what they had been doing for the three days they had been missing. Anyway, dad "Victor" (Leslie Odom Jr.) soon starts to notice some odd behaviour from his previously reasonable daughter and before we know it, she - and her friend - are showing worrying signs of a possession that resonates all too readily with events some fifty years earlier and that finds him seeking the help of "Chris MacNeil" (Ellen Burstyn) before the girls are Satanic toast. It's ten minutes shy of two hours long this, and that's about ninety minutes too long. The vast majority of this film is taken up by pointless preamble, family establishment scenarios and unfortunately the acting and writing are really lacklustre too. Burstyn only makes sparing appearances and Odom Jr. ought to just stick to singing. The last ten minutes is slightly better than standard Blumhouse fayre that concludes this completely unnecessary sequel with, admittedly, a couple of not so predicable twists, but still - with very little to make the preceding drudge worth watching. This is a poor relation to the original and should have gone straight to a streamer.

H

hamfaceman

4/10

I've seen better

D

Dean

3/10

Woke crap

You've reached the end.