El exorcista II: El hereje backdrop
El exorcista II: El hereje poster

EL EXORCISTA II: EL HEREJE

Exorcist II: The Heretic

1977 US HMDB
junio 17, 1977

El padre Lamont es el encargado de investigar la muerte del padre Merrin y la causa de la posesión diabólica de la joven Regan. Lamont viajará a África para investigar otro caso de posesión demoníaca. Cuando regresa a Nueva York, Regan está nuevamente poseida pero, en esta ocasión, por la máquina hipnótica del doctor Gene Tuskin.

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Equipo

Produccion: John Boorman (Producer)Richard Lederer (Producer)
Guion: William Goodhart (Writer)Rospo Pallenberg (Writer)
Musica: Ennio Morricone (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: William A. Fraker (Director of Photography)

RESEÑAS (1)

Marco Castellini
La joven Regan (protagonista del primer capítulo) está ahora bajo el cuidado de una doctora que le provoca un estado de hipnosis y trance. Un jesuita, encargado de hacer luz sobre los hechos ocurridos unos años antes, llega a la clínica donde la chica está ingresada, sigue las sesiones y se convence de que el diablo está aún presente. Se dirige entonces a África porque, según él, es allí donde se encuentran las raíces del mal. Después de un largo exorcismo, Regan volverá a ser liberada del demonio. Secuela del gran "El Exorcista" de Friedkin, la película no es más que una pálida imitación del primer capítulo de la saga; la posesión está siempre interpretada por Linda Blair pero con resultados absolutamente inferiores a su anterior interpretación. Era prácticamente imposible hacer una película mejor que la de Friedkin pero Boorman no se le ha acercado ni de lejos; es el peor de la trilogía.
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (2)

talisencrw

5 /10

I have all the respect in the world for John Boorman--his 'Point Blank' and 'Deliverance' are excellent--but this sequel to one of the greatest horror movies ever made simply falls listless and flat. Of course, the script is extremely talky and lifeless--as if it had been 'exorcised' of all the wonder and shock that William Friedkin's vision of the battle of good vs. evil would entail. Yes, Sir Richard Burton was a great actor--yet when shoehorned with a crappy script and with his more irritating peccadillos left unrestrained, he can be such a chore and bore to watch. Though I have not seen the two more recent 'prequels' for the 'Exorcist' franchise, I can safely say that while 'Exorcist II' is not the worst horror movie ever made (that, by the way, never seemed its intention), it's certainly the worst of the original trilogy--and by a country mile. This is a work that would probably bore the demons so much, they would decide to get out of Regan MacNeil's body, and perhaps even leave Earth's plane altogether, never even wanting a return ticket.

tmdb28039023

2 /10

One of the many things that make The Exorcist arguably the greatest horror films ever made – or simply one of the greatest films ever made, regardless of genre –, is that it has no use for the obligatory final shot suggesting that the evil will continue. On the contrary, it ends on a hopeful, optimistic note; a welcome relief following the ordeal we, characters and viewers alike, have just endured.

Exorcist II: The Heretic carries on as if that final shot had actually been there all along. It's not just that Regan MacNeil (Linda Blair) must go back to dealing with Pazuzu four years after the fact – meaning that two good men died for nothing –; it's how this reencounter comes about.

Once we accept the possibility of demonic possession, everything else in The Exorcist is perfectly plausible. The Heretic, on the other hand, comes up with a "synchronized hypnosis" device that leads to such ludicrous dialogue as "Your machine has proved that there's an ancient demon within her!"

That this line is delivered by a frantic Richard Burton – who could achieve greatness with the right material – doesn't do it any favors. All things considered, the only heresy on display here is what director John Boorman does to the source material (in fairness to writer William Goodhart, his script was apparently rewritten beyond recognition) – I did, however, really enjoy the metaphorical use of locusts, which can go from solitary and harmless grasshoppers to, well, Legion.

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