Spooky premonitions were reported. People succumbed under mysterious circumstances. Buildings spontaneously combusted.
And that was just behind the scenes on “The Exorcist,” the 1973 Oscar-winner about a cherubic 12-year-old named Regan, who, seemingly possessed by the devil, starts to levitate and spit green bile.
Unduly nervous about how the adaptation of the William Peter Blatty best seller would fare in release (it earned a then-whopping $8 million its opening weekend), Warner Bros. was quick to capitalize on all the weird happenings, going so far as to proclaim the enterprise “cursed” and in need of a real priest to perform an actual exorcism.
Flash forward three decades to “Exorcist: The Beginning” (opening Friday), and–if we’re to believe the good folks in Warner publicity–the guy downstairs is still making life hell for those who would exploit his name for fun and profit.
Among the carefully documented crises that have befallen the twice-shot, now-
$85 million prequel (actually No. 4 in the series, following sequels in 1977 and 1990):
– Veteran director John Frankenheimer quits the Morgan Creek production and shortly thereafter dies of a stroke during what should have been a routine back operation. He is replaced by Paul Schrader (“Affliction,” “Auto Focus”), who says, “John’s death was a complete surprise.”
– Liam Neeson–cast as the younger Father Merrin, originally played by Max von Sydow–drops out of the project, telling Schrader, “I changed my mind.” He is replaced by Swedish actor Stellan Skarsgard.
– Schrader, who was never interested in “exploitation horror” with slamming doors and spinning heads, is fired during postproduction because his material isn’t scary or bloody enough.
– New director Renny Harlin, who insists on starting from scratch, is struck by a car while on location in Rome and hospitalized with a broken leg. He sees the film through to completion.
– Warner Bros. and Morgan Creek Productions announce there will be no critics’ screenings for the prequel. This usually means a studio is bracing for across-the-board negative reviews.
Is this all part of an ongoing “Exorcist” curse or just more bad luck tied to a franchise that really had nowhere to go?
“It’s all a crock–it was a crock when they tried to do it years ago, and it’s a crock now,” says Schrader from his New York apartment.
Scott Wilson, who played a psychiatrist in “The Exorcist III” and appeared recently in “Monster” and “The Last Samurai,” would love to report weird manifestations but can’t. “I don’t know that there’s any kind of hex on these movies,” he says. “People die and drop out of films all the time. … I think the so-called curse is a good angle for the studio.”
Though he acknowledges he hasn’t worked since being axed by Morgan Creek, Schrader isn’t blaming Lucifer: “It’s tabloid kind of promotion. Do you really think that anybody takes this seriously? Do you think it brings anybody into the theater? It’s a mutually acknowledged stack of hooey.”
As for the latest series of mishaps, Blatty shrugs them off as pure coincidence. Harlin’s traffic accident? “You know,” he says, laughing. “I didn’t know anything about that until I watched an ‘E! True Hollywood’ special on ‘The Curse of the Exorcist’ the other night.”




