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Exorcist 2017 -

Without spoiling: a priest gives his last confession while possessed. The demon mimics his dead mother’s voice. The priest absolves himself . Then he walks into a furnace.

Let’s be honest: when Fox announced a television adaptation of The Exorcist in 2016, most of us rolled our eyes. A network TV sequel to the most terrifying film ever made? Starring a guy from Daredevil ? It sounded like sacrilege.

The Rance family isn’t just fighting a demon named "Pazuzu’s lieutenant." They are fighting the lies they tell each other. The father hiding his sexuality. The mother drowning in guilt. The possessed daughter, Casey, who isn’t just a victim—she’s a mirror. exorcist 2017

The show earned its R-rating-on-TV moments (head-turning, spider-walking, pea-soup vomit), but the real horror happens at the dinner table. You don’t need CGI for that. Most exorcism media treats the Church as a prop. The Exorcist (2017) treats it as a battlefield.

But by the time Season 1 wrapped in early 2017, something miraculous had happened. We weren’t just watching a horror show. We were watching a genuine, bleeding-heart tragedy about faith, trauma, and the terrifying silence of God. Without spoiling: a priest gives his last confession

You can find both seasons on Amazon Prime (in the US) or AMC+.

Posted on October 14, 2024

I watched that at 2 AM. I did not sleep. Low ratings. Surprise.

And the demons? They quote Scripture. They offer mercy. They ask the priests: “Why do you think God lets this happen?” Then he walks into a furnace

Father Marcus is a trauma machine—a man who performed an exorcism as a child that killed his own mother. Father Tomas is a skeptic forced into the supernatural. Their relationship is part Lethal Weapon , part Doubt . When they pray, it sounds like they’re begging.

That’s the knife-twist. The show never gives an easy answer. Episode 5, "Through My Most Grievous Fault."