The Exorcist: Believer | Official Trailer

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Published 2023-07-25
The Exorcist: Believer
Only in Theaters October 13

Exactly 50 years ago this fall, the most terrifying horror film in history landed on screens, shocking audiences around the world. Now, on Friday, October 13, a new chapter begins. From Blumhouse and director David Gordon Green, who shattered the status quo with their resurrection of the Halloween franchise, comes The Exorcist: Believer.

Since the death of his pregnant wife in a Haitian earthquake 12 years ago, Victor Fielding (Tony winner and Oscar® nominee Leslie Odom, Jr.; One Night in Miami, Hamilton) has raised their daughter, Angela (Lidya Jewett, Good Girls) on his own.

But when Angela and her friend Katherine (newcomer Olivia Marcum), disappear in the woods, only to return three days later with no memory of what happened to them, it unleashes a chain of events that will force Victor to confront the nadir of evil and, in his terror and desperation, seek out the only person alive who has witnessed anything like it before: Chris MacNeil.

For the first time since the 1973 film, Oscar® winner Ellen Burstyn reprises her iconic role as Chris MacNeil, an actress who has been forever altered by what happened to her daughter Regan five decades before.

The film also stars Emmy winner Ann Dowd (The Handmaid’s Tale, Hereditary) as Victor and Angela’s neighbor, and Grammy winner Jennifer Nettles (Harriet, The Righteous Gemstones) and two-time Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz (Fosse/Verdon, Bloodline) as the parents of Katherine, Angela’s friend.

When The Exorcist, based on the best-selling book by William Peter Blatty, was released, it changed the culture forever, obliterating box office records and earning 10 Academy Award® nominations, becoming the first horror film ever nominated for Best Picture.

The Exorcist: Believer is directed by David Gordon Green from a screenplay by Peter Sattler (Camp X-Ray) and David Gordon Green, from a story by Scott Teems (Halloween Kills), Danny McBride (Halloween trilogy) and David Gordon Green, based on characters created by William Peter Blatty.

The film is produced by Jason Blum for Blumhouse and by David Robinson and James G. Robinson for Morgan Creek Entertainment.

The executive producers are Danny McBride, David Gordon Green, Stephanie Allain, Ryan Turek and Atilla Yücer. Universal Pictures presents a Blumhouse/Morgan Creek Entertainment production in association with Rough House Pictures.

Official Website: theexorcistbeliever.movie/

Facebook: www.facebook.com/TheExorcistBeliever/

Instagram: www.instagram.com/theexorcistbeliever/

Twitter: twitter.com/TheExorcistBlvr

TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@universalpics

Threads: www.threads.net/@theexorcistbeliever

#TheExorcistBeliever

All Comments (21)
  • @leokimvideo
    The Exorcist was the greatest horror film ever made, it's going to be incredibly difficult to match it's raw power and shock value no matter how many jump scares are are added to the edit
  • @gwaggie5657
    i don’t think people realize what made the original movie so scary was the lack of media like it at the time. people had never seen something like that presented on screen, leading to a huge cultural impact, that today we just don’t find shocking.
  • @darlenesavoy7406
    The Exorcist is still and will always be the best movie. Just watched The Believer doesn't even come close. Glad to see Chris and Regan through.
  • @xiaodhanan1
    You have no idea how stoked I am that they actually brought Chris back and the old theme song! This trailer is epic.
  • @nitinbhakta4787
    RIP William Friedkin, the legendary director of The Exorcist, single-handedly the most iconic and terrifying film ever made.
  • @lay10vids
    To have Ellen Burnstyn return to her role as Chris MacNeil 50 years later at 90 years old is incredible. So glad she signed on to this project.
  • @lastone8040
    Watched the original with my sister and my mom when i was around 9 year's old and that movie got me into horror films Hands down the best horror film i've seen to this day and nothing is even close.
  • @apollosun2913
    The original Exorcist is my all time favourite movie (competing for top spot with Die Hard). What made the Exorcist awesome wasn't just the movie but the era in which it was released. The 70's was a whole lot different than the world we live in today. Back then there were no mobile phones or internet. If a home had a colour TV that was a luxury. Many people still had no electricity etc etc etc. What happened to Regan in the movie was considered a real and present danger, it was believed that could happen to anyone. Just as people got scared that the sun might not come up, thousands of years ago, in the 1970's people were truly scared about possession. The Exorcist was almost considered a documentary. I didn't think much of any of the Exorcist sequels but quite liked season 1 of the tv reboot (apart from the last episode of season 1). I hope they've done justice to the original movie.
  • @TimeBucks
    The Exorcist was the greatest horror film ever made
  • Lifelong horror fan here. I watched The original Exorcist in 1975 when I was in my early teens and I still consider it one of the scariest films ever, if not the scariest. What made it so powerful IMO was the slow buildup with a gradual incursion of evil into very real, gritty lives of people who seemed absolutely credible. The tension was rising, the setting and characters were 100% believable, so that by the time the pea soup was flying, you were all in. The problem with a lot of Hollywood horror now is that they don't take the time to build up that tension or develop the characters, and just go overboard with over-the-top, all-out explosions of supernatural phenonema in your face 15 minutes in, so that you're just numb to it.
  • @icekn5653
    The girl who played Katherine was so good you can definitely tell the parallels with the original movie. I wish they could have invested more into developing her character
  • @vaettra1589
    Excorcist III, one of the most underrated movies ever.
  • @yvie914
    For those who are commenting that the original Exorcist was not that scary or "Saw" or other horror movies were much scarier, either did not experience this movie in the 70's or watched it on television. Watching this movie in a theater back in the day was the most horrifying experience for almost all and no amount of convincing those who just didn't have that experience will never understand, period!
  • @Uzernahme
    I wish that I was able to experience the same thing audiences experienced when the original first came out. It literally scared people into church, people were fainting in movie theaters. The original is truly the best horror movie ever made
  • @danid3533
    Man I got chills when the demon was mimicking Reagan’s scream for her mum 😅
  • 'Drip,drop,drip,drop" "God played a trick on you" "The body and the blood" Goosebumps,chills and shiver down my spine
  • @ataberkyegen458
    Hearing the main theme in the theatre gave me prolonged goosebumps
  • @Catscalligraphy
    My mother saw the original Exorcist in the theatre, someone actually had a seizure while watching it. That’s how crazy it was. There are documentaries which explain the sheer pandemonium around the original. Nothing will ever come close.
  • @maxgonzalez214
    Just finished watching the movie, it's pretty bad and everyone involved should be ashamed. It's so bad, Pazuzu issued a statement saying that he was not associated to the production of this film in any way, shape, or form. There's nothing in this movie that resembles the dread, the opressive atmosphere of the original, which is the greatest horror movie ever made; the performances are flat and the plot is pretty unimaginative. It's as if Disney had decided to have a go at exorcism films. Save yourself the time and disappointment and don't watch this, go watch the original film from 1973 or the excellent sequel The Exorcist 3.