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9:10 PM November 5, 2009
| Captain Howdy
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|  Administrator | posts 871 |  
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Whiel re-building the site I had all of The Exorcist films on in the background over time. As bad as The Heretic is, I couldn't take my eyes away… Wonderfully disasterous.
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2:59 AM November 8, 2009
| ekm
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|  Partner | posts 29 | |
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Don't get me started on THE HERETIC. You know what happens when I talk about THE HERETIC…
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12:29 PM November 8, 2009
| horror2
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|  New Member | posts 26 | |
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"Exorcist II: The Heretic" is and always will be one of my favorite films of all time. Everything about it is great. The acting, the story, the scenery, the special effects and the beautiful musical score make this one of the best film experiences I have ever had. I don't care what anyone says, this film is excellent.
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1:23 PM November 8, 2009
| Ryan
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|  Partner | posts 510 | |
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I hadn't read this before:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E…..he_Heretic
In a 2005 interview, John Boorman remarked:
"it all comes down to audience expectations. The film that I made, I saw as a kind of riposte to the ugliness and darkness of The Exorcist – I wanted a film about journeys that was positive, about good, essentially. And I think that audiences, in hindsight, were right. I denied them what they wanted and they were pissed off about it – quite rightly, I knew I wasn't giving them what they wanted and it was a really foolish choice. The film itself, I think, is an interesting one – there's some good work in it – but when they came to me with it I told John Calley, who was running Warners then, that I didn't want it. "Look," I said, "I have daughters, I don't want to make a film about torturing a child," which is how I saw the original film. But then I read a three-page treatment for a sequel written by a man named William Goodhart and I was really intrigued by it because it was about goodness. I saw it then as a chance to film a riposte to the first picture. But it had one of the most disastrous openings ever – there were riots! And we recut the actual prints in the theatres, about six a day, but it didn't help of course and I couldn't bear to talk about it, or look at it, for years."
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11:55 AM November 19, 2009
| Iron Fist
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|  New Member | posts 21 | |
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horror2 said:
\"Exorcist II: The Heretic\" is and always will be one of my favorite films of all time. Everything about it is great. The acting, the story, the scenery, the special effects and the beautiful musical score make this one of the best film experiences I have ever had. I don't care what anyone says, this film is excellent.
Don\'t forget the absolutely beautiful teenage Linda Blair.
I don\'t know about it being one of the best film experiences but it is better than people make it out to be. I do feel that Heretic has gotten a lot of unjustified hate directed against it. Approached with an open mind the film is not that bad and for a mystical thriller it is quite good. The problem most people had was that it was not pure in your face horror.
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3:55 PM November 19, 2009
| Captain Howdy
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|  Administrator | posts 871 |  
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Linda Blair in Heretic is the BEST! :D
![]() 
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4:11 AM November 21, 2009
| Iron Fist
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|  New Member | posts 21 | |
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Yes Cap, Linda Blair was the one of the most beautiful girls of the 1970s
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8:43 PM October 28, 2010
| Steve Dunlap
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|  Bronze Member | posts 288 | |
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As a kid, Exorcist II: The Heretic was almost as jarring an experience for me as the unparalleled original film. (I think largely due to the revisits of the demonic makeup for Regan…for years, that face just haunted me. I could not look at it straight on like I can now.)
But I say almost. Part of what lightened the film up (aside from the nice score in the soundtrack) was some of the (as TV guide put it years ago) unintentional humor.
One thing I noticed, between watching the DVD version of E2:TH and a televised version many years ago, was that some of the scenes played out differently….most noticably, when the teenage Regan returns to her bedroom on Prospect street, and she opens the door.
In the televised version of the movie, we see a quick flash of the younger possessed Regan shouting out her name at the older Regan, using stock footage from the original film, with "Regan" being overdubbed. Apparently, this did not appear in the theatrical release, as I noticed it was missing on DVD.
Nothing, however, beats the original film. I've seen all the sequels/prequels (and while they are entertaining, they just don't hold a candle to The Exorcist.) I've also seen other movies about demonic possession….and one film that surprisingly does give me a chill, despite it being a cheap knock-off, is "Beyond the Door". But it still doesn't measure up to The Exorcist.
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Your mother….
Sews socks that smell!
Throws rocks in wells!
Knows stocks that sell!
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4:51 AM November 18, 2010
| mego73
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|  New Member | posts 14 | |
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Post edited 4:53 AM – November 18, 2010 by mego73
Steve Dunlap said:
As a kid, Exorcist II: The Heretic was almost as jarring an experience for me as the unparalleled original film. (I think largely due to the revisits of the demonic makeup for Regan…for years, that face just haunted me. I could not look at it straight on like I can now.)
But I say almost. Part of what lightened the film up (aside from the nice score in the soundtrack) was some of the (as TV guide put it years ago) unintentional humor.
One thing I noticed, between watching the DVD version of E2:TH and a televised version many years ago, was that some of the scenes played out differently….most noticably, when the teenage Regan returns to her bedroom on Prospect street, and she opens the door.
In the televised version of the movie, we see a quick flash of the younger possessed Regan shouting out her name at the older Regan, using stock footage from the original film, with "Regan" being overdubbed. Apparently, this did not appear in the theatrical release, as I noticed it was missing on DVD.
Nothing, however, beats the original film. I've seen all the sequels/prequels (and while they are entertaining, they just don't hold a candle to The Exorcist.) I've also seen other movies about demonic possession….and one film that surprisingly does give me a chill, despite it being a cheap knock-off, is "Beyond the Door". But it still doesn't measure up to The Exorcist.
The DVD represents the original theatrical version. That version was quickly widthdrawn and re-edited when the film began to tank. It came back to most theaters in this second theatrical version. The Network TV version derives from that second theatrical version as does the early cable and video releases. So you can still find this version on older VHS and Beta tapes if you look around.
Some of the key differences between the first and second version include a recap of the events of the original movie at the beginning using voiceover and stills, the adding of 2 stock scenes of possessed Regan from the original movie to the climatic bedroom scene and Father Lamount dies at the end.
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10:00 AM November 20, 2010
| Steve Dunlap
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|  Bronze Member | posts 288 | |
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Aye, I remember those scenes, and the revamped opening. I kinda missed them in the DVD release. 
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Your mother….
Sews socks that smell!
Throws rocks in wells!
Knows stocks that sell!
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7:31 AM March 25, 2011
| RatBoy
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|  Member | posts 116 | 
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This movie does not fall into the Exorcist and Legion continuity/canon.
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8:31 PM May 7, 2011
| kokumo
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|  Member | posts 133 | |
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continuity-schmontinuity. It is what it is; a sequel to "The Exorcist". That's canon.
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3:31 AM May 10, 2011
| DamienKarras
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|  Bronze Member | posts 154 | |
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Captain Howdy said:
Linda Blair in Heretic is the BEST! :D
 http://captainhowdy.com/images…..ic_120.jpg\"" />
YES!
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As long as I gaze on Waterloo Sunset, I am in paradise.
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