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Mike Flanagan Confirmed To Direct "Radical New" Exorcist Movie - Not Believer Sequel

Summary

  • Mike Flanagan confirms there will be no extended monologues about religion in his Exorcist movie, focusing on scares for younger audiences.
  • Flanagan's plan promises a fresh direction for The Exorcist franchise, prioritizing outright horror over familiar reflections on the meaning of evil and demonic possessions.
  • Flanagan's monologue promise stems from critiques made about Midnight Mass, which focused heavily on conversations regarding religion and its connection to modern society.

With the acclaimed filmmaker now confirmed to be working on the studio's second attempt to revive the franchise, Mike Flanagan confirms Blumhouse's next Flanagan to write and direct a new Exorcist installment.

During a recent appearance at the ATX TV Festival (per IndieWire), Flanagan offered some brief teases of what to expect from his take on the Exorcist franchise. While not sharing specifics regarding the movie's story, he did confirm that it will not include his trademark of extended character monologues about religion, jokingly sharing with Blumhouse executives that he "got it out of my system", while also expressing that it doesn't hold the same potential to scare audiences as it did with the original movie. See what Flanagan shared below:

Part of what I said to Blumhouse and Universal when we were discussing this was I don’t think this is a monologue project. The ritual itself is something of a monologue, but we’ve seen that. We’ve seen somebody shout prayers at somebody. That was scary 50 years ago, I don’t see that working here. [Paraphrasing unnamed executive] We just think it’s theatrical, and younger audiences drive horror. That’s a fact. A lot of the audiences who will come see this likely haven’t seen the original, and aren’t going to be impressed by any allusions to that.

So this isn’t really where you want to do the long monologues about religion. And I said, "I completely agree with you, and if it makes you feel any better, I made that show. I already got it out of my system. This should just be really scary." That means with the character work, it’s still on me to make them real and emotionally relevant. But this isn’t the project where we should be monologuing.

Flanagan's Exorcist Plan Is A Great New Direction For The Franchise

Flanagan's joke regarding his propensity for extensive monologues about religion is sure to ring true to those who watched Netflix's Midnight Mass. Despite the show's large acclaim from critics and audiences alike, there was some division over the monologue-heavy script, with some lamenting that it slowed the pace of the miniseries down, even if it carried some powerful commentary regarding religion as a whole. This isn't the first time Flanagan has acknowledged these critiques, either, having assured that his immediate miniseries follow-up, The Midnight Club, would focus more on scares for its teen and young adult viewers.

Related
Mike Flanagan's Forgotten 2016 Horror Movie Shows How He Can Save The Exorcist Franchise

Mike Flanagan's in talks to helm the next Exorcist movie, and his work on a forgotten 2016 horror prequel shows just how he can save the franchise.

While his promise of wanting to make something more directly scary is already a promising sign for the film, Flanagan's overall plan for the next Exorcist movie looks to bring a great new direction for the franchise as a whole. To his point, the original William Friedkin-helmed classic did largely relish in the conflict between faith and skepticism, and how the latter could make things even worse for those dealing with the possessed. In his efforts to stay true to the original movie, Green's Exorcist: Believer similarly explored these themes, but was deemed to have done so in a generally straightforward and predictable fashion.

Given many of the other poorly received sequels in the franchise failed to find the right balance between outright scares and deeper themes, Flanagan's plans for The Exorcist sound on track to deliver something new and fresh for the series. While he may not utilize monologues to tackle these deeper layers, his work on his other acclaimed projects shows he's just as capable at delivering outright horror as he is something meaningful. Additionally, with a wealth of lore to pull from beyond Pazuzu and the MacNeil family's history of demonic encounters, it will be interesting to see how Flanagan establishes his story amid the decades-spanning Exorcist timeline.

Source: IndieWire

The Exorcist Believer Movie Poster

Your Rating

The Exorcist: Believer
R
Horror
Supernatural
Release Date
October 6, 2023
Runtime
121 Minutes
Director
David Gordon Green
  • Headshot Of Leslie Odom Jr.
    Leslie Odom Jr.
  • Headshot Of Ellen Burstyn
    Ellen Burstyn

WHERE TO WATCH

The Exorcist: Believer is a direct sequel to the original 1973 supernatural horror film by director David Gordon Green and follows Victor Fielding, a father who was forced to raise his daughter alone after his wife died twelve years prior. When Victor's daughter and her friend go missing, the supernatural events that surround their disappearance force him to seek out the only person to have dealt with these horrors before - Chris MacNeil.

Writers
Peter Sattler, David Gordon Green
Franchise(s)
The Exorcist
Studio(s)
Blumhouse Productions, Morgan Creek Entertainment
Distributor(s)
Universal Pictures
Budget
$30 Million