The Exorcist: Believer is a ‘retcon’ film
- Written by Alexander Howard, Senior Lecturer, Discipline of English, University of Sydney
Halloween season is here, bringing with it the promise of new horrors at the box office. This year it’s all about renewed cinematic horrors.
Alongside the tenth Saw[1] film, there is The Exorcist: Believer, directed by David Gordon Green, the sixth[2] Exorcist film and the first instalment of a new trilogy which cost US$400 million[3] in worldwide rights alone.
Believer follows certain rules and conventions with roots in William Peter Blatty’s bestselling 1971 novel: think demonic possession, projectile vomiting and spinning heads. Aficionados expect these things from works bearing The Exorcist imprimatur.
Green’s film manages to hit these markers – albeit with a twist.
Believer is a “retcon[4]”, an example of retroactive continuity: a movie which ignores or re-imagines events in previous films.
Believer follows directly on from the plot of William Friedkin’s masterly adaptation 1973 of Blatty’s book, while disregarding all other films (and the underrated television series) in the franchise.
However, what seems at first blush to be an innovative approach to franchise movie-making is, in truth, nothing more than a creative dead end – a futile exercise in cinematic nostalgia.
Read more: The incredible creativity of William Friedkin: Oscars, box-office hits – and arthouse, experimental genre cinema[5]
Retconning the classics
The retcon is not a new phenomenon (Arthur Conan Doyle’s resurrection[6] of Sherlock Holmes being a case in point), but the concept has become ubiquitous in recent years.
Green has form with the genre. He was also behind the Halloween trilogy (2018–22), drawing on the 1978 film of the same name.
The 2018 Halloween made over US$250 million[7] at the global box office and breathed new commercial life into a desiccated corpse of a franchise.
There were nine Halloween films between the first in 1978 and Green’s in 2018, but Green simply disregards the sequels while subtly tweaking the ending of the original.
Green’s slasher picks up after the first Halloween left off, with scream queen[8] Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role as Laurie Strode.
This is where things take a discernibly revisionist turn. For those who haven’t seen it: the original Halloween climaxes with a confrontation between the teenage babysitter Laurie and the franchise’s unstoppable antagonist, Michael Myers (Nick Castle).
After a seemingly deadly struggle, Michael disappears into thin air. Having evaded capture, Michael then returns in the 1981 sequel to wreak further havoc.
In Green’s revisionary sequel, set 40 years after the original, the story presupposes Michael was captured and imprisoned immediately after his brutal killing spree. Disregarding the sequels, the 2018 iteration begins with Michael still incarcerated.
Suffice it to say, once things get going, it doesn’t take him long to break out.
By pretending there is only one Halloween, Green gives himself space to spruce up the original mythology, while re-imagining it for a modern audience.
(The 2018 film was a financial and critical[9] success. The same, sadly, cannot be said of the two cinematic[10] bombs[11] that followed.)
A pale rehash
This brings us to The Exorcist: Believer.
Green clearly thinks he has found a winning recipe with legacy sequels and retcons.
In keeping with other legacy sequels, both Halloween and Believer rely on hefty doses of celluloid gravitas and pre-existing star power.
Where the 2018 Halloween had Curtis as a damaged, alcoholic Laurie, the 2023 Exorcist has the 90-year-old Ellen Burstyn returning[12] as Chris MacNeil.
In the original, Chris’s daughter Regan (Linda Blair) falls victim to demonic possession. In Believer, Chris, who has written a bestselling memoir about Regan’s possession, is now a leading authority on demonology. She somehow ends up attempting an impromptu exorcism.
It does not go well.
As with the 2018 Halloween, Believer also assumes there is only one Exorcist film in existence. This approach has benefits: it means Green doesn’t have to worry about the notorious 1977 sequel, the worst film of all time[13].
Believer’s plot focuses on two friends, Katherine (Olivia O'Neill) and Angela (Lidya Jewett), who head into the woods to commune with the dead. They vanish. Once reunited with their families, it becomes clear something is amiss. Things go from awful to catastrophic, and various personages and priests try to help. Cue the pea soup[14].
If this sounds more or less like a pale rehash of Friedkin’s Exorcist, that is because it pretty much is. The only difference is the crushingly dull (and not scary) Believer features not one but two possessed girls.
Read more: The Exorcist at 50: a terrifying film that symbolises the decline of America's faith and optimism[15]
‘Microwave-reheated comfort food’
In the lead up to the film’s release, Green claimed[16] he wanted to leave his directorial mark on the world of the Exorcist, while simultaneously breaking the rules of what he considers the Holy Grail[17] of horror franchises.
Ultimately, the film fails on all fronts. From the opening shot of two dogs fighting in a Haitian street (a callback to the dramatic prologue of Friedkin’s box-office smash) to the entirely predictable final act, it is clear what we have here is an empty exercise in brand recognition. It is hard not to feel short-changed.
Green’s execrable new Exorcist is not only one the most breathtakingly cynical movies of recent memory - it serves as an indictment of what cultural theorist Mark Fisher once condemned[18] as the creative paucity of retcon culture in general.
It is very difficult to care about films of this sort, the cinematic equivalent of, in Fisher’s memorable phrase, “microwave-reheated comfort food”.
Had he lived long enough, I imagine Friedkin’s head would have been left swivelling at the horror of it all.
And to think: there are two retconned Exorcist sequels still to come. This is truly the stuff of filmic nightmares.
Read more: The Exorcist Believer: a real priest on why the film is 'potentially dangerous'[19]
References
- ^ Saw (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ sixth (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ US$400 million (www.hollywoodreporter.com)
- ^ retcon (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ The incredible creativity of William Friedkin: Oscars, box-office hits – and arthouse, experimental genre cinema (theconversation.com)
- ^ resurrection (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ US$250 million (www.boxofficemojo.com)
- ^ scream queen (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ critical (variety.com)
- ^ cinematic (www.empireonline.com)
- ^ bombs (www.rogerebert.com)
- ^ Ellen Burstyn returning (www.indiewire.com)
- ^ the worst film of all time (en.wikipedia.org)
- ^ Cue the pea soup (www.youtube.com)
- ^ The Exorcist at 50: a terrifying film that symbolises the decline of America's faith and optimism (theconversation.com)
- ^ claimed (www.joblo.com)
- ^ Holy Grail (www.forbes.com)
- ^ condemned (www2.bfi.org.uk)
- ^ The Exorcist Believer: a real priest on why the film is 'potentially dangerous' (theconversation.com)