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IMDbPro

L'Exorciste II : L'Hérétique

Titre original : Exorcist II: The Heretic
  • 1977
  • 12
  • 1h 57min
NOTE IMDb
3,8/10
30 k
MA NOTE
Linda Blair in L'Exorciste II : L'Hérétique (1977)
Official Trailer
Lire trailer1:46
1 Video
99+ photos
Horreur surnaturelleHorreur

Une adolescente autrefois possédée par un démon découvre qu'il se cache toujours en elle. Pendant ce temps, un prêtre enquête sur la mort de l'exorciste de la jeune fille.Une adolescente autrefois possédée par un démon découvre qu'il se cache toujours en elle. Pendant ce temps, un prêtre enquête sur la mort de l'exorciste de la jeune fille.Une adolescente autrefois possédée par un démon découvre qu'il se cache toujours en elle. Pendant ce temps, un prêtre enquête sur la mort de l'exorciste de la jeune fille.

  • Réalisation
    • John Boorman
    • Rospo Pallenberg
  • Scénario
    • William Goodhart
    • Rospo Pallenberg
  • Casting principal
    • Richard Burton
    • Linda Blair
    • Louise Fletcher
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    3,8/10
    30 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • John Boorman
      • Rospo Pallenberg
    • Scénario
      • William Goodhart
      • Rospo Pallenberg
    • Casting principal
      • Richard Burton
      • Linda Blair
      • Louise Fletcher
    • 355avis d'utilisateurs
    • 107avis des critiques
    • 39Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 3 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Exorcist II: The Heretic
    Trailer 1:46
    Exorcist II: The Heretic

    Photos151

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    + 144
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    Rôles principaux30

    Modifier
    Richard Burton
    Richard Burton
    • Father Lamont
    Linda Blair
    Linda Blair
    • Regan
    Louise Fletcher
    Louise Fletcher
    • Dr. Gene Tuskin
    Max von Sydow
    Max von Sydow
    • Father Merrin
    Kitty Winn
    Kitty Winn
    • Sharon
    Paul Henreid
    Paul Henreid
    • The Cardinal
    James Earl Jones
    James Earl Jones
    • Older Kokumo
    Ned Beatty
    Ned Beatty
    • Edwards
    Belinda Beatty
    Belinda Beatty
    • Liz
    • (as Belinha Beatty)
    Rose Portillo
    Rose Portillo
    • Spanish Girl
    Barbara Cason
    Barbara Cason
    • Mrs. Phalor
    Tiffany Kinney
    • Deaf Girl
    Joey Green
    • Young Kokumo
    Fiseha Dimetros
    • Young Monk
    Ken Renard
    Ken Renard
    • Abbot
    Hank Garrett
    Hank Garrett
    • Conductor
    Lorry Goldman
    • Accident Victim
    Bill Grant
    • Taxi Driver
    • Réalisation
      • John Boorman
      • Rospo Pallenberg
    • Scénario
      • William Goodhart
      • Rospo Pallenberg
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs355

    3,829.8K
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    Avis à la une

    6CuriosityKilledShawn

    A troubled film that's not without it's merits

    I don't consider the original Exorcist to be "scary", but I do like it thanks to the terse editing and restrained direction. Though I've never really warmed to John Boorman I did find Exorcist II to be his most interesting film.

    As a sequel it's thematically detached from the first and creates it's own new mythology and imagery. The events from Exorcist are referenced extensively and Regan, now 17, has multiple flashbacks to her bedroom. Father Lamont, a rogue priest played by Richard Burton, investigates the case in an effort to find out what really happened to Father Merrin by involving himself in Regan's therapy sessions. A muddled plot about curbing the spread of evil and the divinity of our teenage heroine fills up the rest of the film with regular cutaways to Africa where Lamont researches the recent history of Pazuzu (not the Devil, as most believe).

    Nothing, repeat NOTHING in this film is even remotely intelligible. Towards the end there are dozens of unexplained elements. On top that there is some hilariously stupid dialogue. How did some of this stuff get approval? I would flat out refuse to say "Oh, I was possessed by a demon. But it's okay, he's gone now," upon meeting a new friend. When the credits finally roll you'll be scratching your head, unable to make head nor tail of what you've just witnessed.

    What it does have going for it however is absolutely stunning photography. Only a few 70s set designs date this film aesthetically. The shots of African sunsets and the rock churches are amazing and the general dark, silhouetted appearance of the dialogue scenes create a wonderful, moody atmosphere.

    It's a shame that Linda Blair's career collapsed after this. After getting involved in several bad relationships her acting career went down the toilet and she's never starred in anything as up-market as this ever since. She's such a cutie in Exorcist II and, as a bonus, hardly ever wears a bra.

    As a sequel to a classic it's a bit of a let down, but as a stand-alone weirdo melodrama it's nothing if not interesting. Do check it out, but keep in mind everything I just said.
    1Tyrantc

    The worst sequel...ever.

    Wow. What can one say? Boorman went from Deliverance to this? Okay, in addition to being completely hilarious, this is also the most pretentious movie ever made, (aside from The Matrix Reloaded). Good thing Burstyn sat out for this turkey. Please tell me that I didn't see James Earl Jones in a big locust suit. Please tell me that I didn't see Oscar Winner Louise Fletcher being groped by a matted Linda Blair stand in and moaning (I am not making this up) in such a way that would make Ron Jeremy take notice. And what in the name of all things good and holy is a "Synchronizer" and what does it have to do with anything at all? Why is Africa made of fiber-glass? Why is Richard Burton made of stone? Oh, God. They couldn't have made this worse if they had scripted it so. Oh, wait...they did. Well, for all its faults at least it's not a desperate attempt by a major studio to milk whatever money they can out of a pre-existing hit by combining a-list actors, and a controversial visualist director, with a hastily prepared screenplay that shares little of the spirit and intelligence of its predecessor, producing a boring, although often laughably pious bastardization of something far, far greater. Oh wait....it is. If you're a fan of bad movies, you have reached Zen here. If you're a fan of the original Exorcist, run, just run and don't look back. Run with your arms flailing into the night as the preview audiences surely did in 1977.
    7Chromium_5

    Highly underrated, but not great, either

    Poor John Boorman. He has all these great ideas, but whenever he tries to put them to the screen, the result is so damn goofy you can't tell whether you're watching a metaphysical drama or a slapstick comedy (for more on this, see "Zardoz"). His "Exorcist" sequel is miles below the original if you're looking for scares, but miles above it in terms of actual storytelling, plot, character development, etc. It's full of interesting ideas (the most interesting being the idea of pure goodness as a magnet for evil), and Regan turns into an angelic heroine out to stop the demon that once possessed her. But Boorman's wacko imagery, while fascinating in places (the doves, the locusts), tends to get a little TOO wacko, to the point where you can't help laughing (the hypnosis machine, Richard Burton putting out a fire with a wooden crutch, James Earl Jones spitting up a tomato).

    If you can accept the fact that this is a completely different movie than the original, you might find that it's a pretty good movie on its own. Fantastic acting from Burton, a wonderful score, and some truly gorgeous visuals, especially the climactic scene in the house, make it one of the most underrated movies of all time. Even if some scenes leave you falling over with laughter.
    Doctor_Mabuse1

    10/10 ***** "Does great goodness draw evil upon itself?"

    William Peter Blatty, author of THE EXORCIST, based the character of Father Lankester Merrin on the Jesuit scholar Teilhard de Chardin. In books such as "The Phenomenon of Man", de Chardin theorized a metaphysical concept he called the World Mind, an interpretation of Christian mysticism which sees all minds as joined and gradually evolving into a full awareness of Being as a single consciousness akin to the New Thought idea of Christ Consciousness--the "only begotten" extension of Universal Consciousness, or God. This idea, a synthesis of Christian and Asian religious concepts, is resonant with many unorthodox spiritual teachings from Theosophy to the psychology of Carl Jung. After de Chardin's death his papers were suppressed by the Vatican and his work was investigated on charges of heresy (his ideas being heretical by the standards of the Catholic Church.)

    When Blatty declined to write Warner Bros.' sequel, John Boorman and his creative associate Rospo Pallenberg developed an original script from a treatment by playwright William Goodhart, the credited screenwriter. Boorman accepted the project as a means to artistically express metaphysical ideas in which he was absorbed. The link to Teilhard De Chardin provided an ideal venue. The story of Father Lamont's spiritual odyssey is specifically a meditation on the Grail Quest theme, derived from Celtic mysticism and Arthurian legend, which underlie a thematically-related sequence in Boorman's early work: DELIVERANCE, ZARDOZ, EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC, Excalibur and THE EMERALD FOREST, comprising an important cinematic exploration of the Quest as Initiatory path.

    In EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC, the late Father Merrin's reputation has fallen into disrepute and Father Lamont (Richard Burton), suffering a crisis of faith, is ordered by the Cardinal to investigate "the circumstances surrounding the death of Father Merrin" and the legitimacy of the exorcism before Merrin's papers (his life's work) can be released.

    The title character of THE EXORCIST was that of Father Merrin (Max Von Sydow); this role then passed to the younger priest, Father Karras (Jason Miller). Just so, the heretic in EXORCIST II is initially Merrin until, through young Regan (Linda Blair), Father Lamont makes contact with the mind of Merrin and in that psychic joining shares his vision. Thus Lamont's descent into (and beyond) heresy is an initiatory quest which deepens as he goes against the Church's orders and ultimately calls upon the demon for guidance to the "evil heart" of the mystery.

    In the scene at the Natural History Museum, the attentively listening viewer will discover (in the full 117-minute version) that Father Lamont tells Regan about Teilhard de Chardin and briefly explains the World Mind theory. The science-fictional device called the Synchronizer allows the World Mind concept to be expressed in cinematic images. (Among the many differences between this film and THE HERETIC is that the original's emphasis is strongly verbal whereas THE HERETIC expresses its complex ideas almost entirely in visual and symbolic terms.) A distinction is drawn between the peace and unity of the World Mind and the insanity ("evil") and corruption of its opposite, the ego: a state of separation from consciousness which mimics the One-Mindedness of God or the Universe. In THE HERETIC, this imitation or false Christ is symbolized by Pazuzu, the Babylonian genie and locust god--one of many "heathen" idols demonized in the Judeo-Christian tradition. (The demon was named in Blatty's novel but not in the original film.) Its activity of separation masked as joining is symbolized by the locust swarm which forms a single-mindlessness ("a Locust Mind, if you will") in mockery of Whole (Holy) Consciousness (Spirit). The resulting psychic fragmentation is reflected in the mirror images which permeate the film. Regan represents an evolutionary step toward the "Omega Point", the healing of the separation; a forerunner of Kubrick's Star Child.

    John Boorman's film doesn't spell itself out for the viewer any more than does Kubrick's 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY and there is no Arthur C. Clarke novel to "explain it all for us". Boorman intends THE HERETIC to stimulate intelligent and imaginative thought and speculation. Where Kubrick and Clarke's ideas (initially met with great perplexity) have long been sanctioned as worthy of consideration, Boorman's somehow flew over the heads of a viewer-ship which, threatened by the film's non-dualistic subversion of the original's simplistic "good vs. evil" formula, has for thirty years ridiculed a misunderstood artwork. The original mass audience which condemned the film on first release was fresh from making the relatively ghastly Italian EXORCIST imitation Beyond the Door a huge box office success because it gave them what they wanted and only what they wanted: puke, puke and more puke. And so like the swarming locusts, the mundane Philistine mentality endlessly repeats the hypnotic chant: "worst sequel, worst sequel, worst..." There is no actual "Director's Cut" of EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC. The 117-minute Theatrical Version is John Boorman's official cut.

    During the disastrous initial release, Warner Bros. hastily issued instructions to theaters to remove specified sections of the film which had drawn audience hostility, without consulting the director. Under extreme pressure, Boorman subsequently prepared a third, more carefully edited version for the international release. The re-editing rendered a difficult and highly symbolic film incomprehensible to the horror-show expectations of the audience. The most significant deletion was the discussion of Teilhard de Chardin's World Mind theory, the central focus of the film.

    This bastardized version debuted on cable in the United States and for a decade the film was available exclusively in this distorted form. The full-length version, unseen since the early weeks of the initial release, was restored in the late 1980's for home video and is currently available on DVD. Mercifully, the Butcher's Cut has been permanently withdrawn.

    Given his experience with the film, it is unlikely that Boorman would involve himself in a new Director's Cut edition. Given the mindless disrespect shown the film, he seems to have washed his hands of it and its detractors.

    Rating: EXTRAORDINARY.
    7little_drama_queen_1990

    Not as Bad as Everyone Says It is

    OK so maybe this movie wasn't as good as the original, but honestly ask yourself Is it possible to create a movie as good as The Exorcist without recreating it? I think not. It had in my opinion a very good plot. I thought it was very cool how they went into detail about the past of Father Merrin while still focusing on what Regan is going through, and I'm glad they didn't do the same monster. I really liked how they set Father Lemont up to have to choose between the angelic Regan and the sinful Regan,and speaking of Regan Linda Blair was awesome. Going back to the end, I love how even though they looked the same and were dressed the same she managed to make the costume work, and make it look like an innocent sort of dress for one, yet at the same time the evil Regan looked sexy in the same dress!All in all I thought it was a darn good sequel and give it a 7/10!

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      The original cast and crew of L'Exorciste (1973) were very much opposed to a sequel. William Friedkin and William Peter Blatty actually met to discuss ideas at one point, but when they failed to develop a suitable premise, they abandoned the project. Both Linda Blair and Ellen Burstyn turned down repeated offers by the studio, though Blair eventually agreed to return when presented with what she considered a good script. However, according to Blair, due to various rewrites the script ended up a total mess. By that point, however, she was contractually bound to a sequel, and unable to drop out of the project.
    • Gaffes
      The institution where Regan receives treatment has glass offices in which you can see the patients and their counselors with the only privacy being offered is by audio. Glass rooms in actual institutions usually have blinds/ curtains to provide visual privacy.
    • Citations

      Regan MacNeil: What's the matter with you?

      Sandra Phalor: [hesitant, stuttering] I'm autistic.

      Regan MacNeil: How do you mean?

      Sandra Phalor: I'm withdrawn. I can't talk.

      Regan MacNeil: But you're talking now.

      Sandra Phalor: [shakes head no]

      Regan MacNeil: Yes, you are. I can hear you.

      Sandra Phalor: You can hear me?

      Regan MacNeil: Sure!

      Sandra Phalor: [pause] What's the matter with you?

      Regan MacNeil: I was possessed by a demon. Oh, it's okay. He's gone!

    • Crédits fous
      Tap Dance Routine Choreographed by Daniel Joseph Giaghi
    • Versions alternatives
      Exorcist 2 exists in at least three versions. The original version was 117 minutes long and was recut by director John Boorman the day after the premiere into a 110 minutes version, the one released theatrically. Major differences include the addition of a recap of the events of the first film through narration and freeze frame. Using stock shots of Linda Blair from the first film for the climax (all new shots of Regan possessed were done by a double because Linda Blair refused to have the possession makeup done on her again) and an alternate ending where Richard Burton's character is killed (In the original version, he runs off with Regan to help her be a force of good). The European version is also purported to be different. For a long time, only the recut version of Exorcist 2 was available for TV, cable and on video. Recently, the original 117-minutes cut has found its way to video and recent TNT airings.
    • Connexions
      Edited into Exorcist II: The Heretic: Alternate Opening (1977)
    • Bandes originales
      Lullaby of Broadway
      (uncredited)

      Music by Harry Warren

      Played on the saxophone while Regan is tap dancing

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    FAQ27

    • How long is Exorcist II: The Heretic?Alimenté par Alexa
    • In the scene with the Autistic girl, who helped her? Regan or Pazuzu?
    • What is 'Exorcist II: The Heretic' about?
    • Is "Exorcist II: The Heretic" based on a book?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 25 janvier 1978 (France)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langues
      • Anglais
      • Français
      • Espagnol
      • Latin
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • L'hérétique (L'exorciste II)
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Kayenta, Arizona, États-Unis
    • Société de production
      • Warner Bros.
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Budget
      • 14 000 000 $US (estimé)
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 30 749 142 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 6 735 000 $US
      • 19 juin 1977
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 30 749 142 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      • 1h 57min(117 min)
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Mono
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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