Tania, an asylum patient, is under the doctor's care while suffering raging behavioral effects that follow the death of her exorcised mother.Tania, an asylum patient, is under the doctor's care while suffering raging behavioral effects that follow the death of her exorcised mother.Tania, an asylum patient, is under the doctor's care while suffering raging behavioral effects that follow the death of her exorcised mother.
- Awards
- 2 wins total
Inma de Santis
- Tania de niña
- (as Inma de Santi)
Featured review
I've been duped. With a title like Exorcism's Daughter, I was expecting another Euro rip-off of The Exorcist, complete with a foul-mouthed possessed woman spewing green vomit. That's not what I got.
This film was retitled to cash in on the success of William Friedkin's 1973 horror blockbuster, but the original title, Las Melancólicas (The Melancholic), is far more apt: it's a dreary, depressing tale about a liberal doctor (Rafael Alba, played by Espartaco Santoni) at a rural asylum trying to cure a woman (Analía Gadé) of her madness via progressive methods, and it's incredibly boring to boot.
I have my suspicions that the film is allegorical, with the untrusting townsfolk and brutal asylum guard Fuso (Francisco Rabal) representing Franco's military dictatorship, the insane women representing the oppressed Spanish people, and Alba representing the voice of reason. Or something like that. I'm no expert in the history of Spanish politics-I wanted spinning heads, not hysterical women screaming for almost two hours about wanting freedom.
This film was retitled to cash in on the success of William Friedkin's 1973 horror blockbuster, but the original title, Las Melancólicas (The Melancholic), is far more apt: it's a dreary, depressing tale about a liberal doctor (Rafael Alba, played by Espartaco Santoni) at a rural asylum trying to cure a woman (Analía Gadé) of her madness via progressive methods, and it's incredibly boring to boot.
I have my suspicions that the film is allegorical, with the untrusting townsfolk and brutal asylum guard Fuso (Francisco Rabal) representing Franco's military dictatorship, the insane women representing the oppressed Spanish people, and Alba representing the voice of reason. Or something like that. I'm no expert in the history of Spanish politics-I wanted spinning heads, not hysterical women screaming for almost two hours about wanting freedom.
- BA_Harrison
- Oct 13, 2021
- Permalink
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaEspartaco Santoni and Analía Gadé were married at the time of filming, but Gadé divorced him shortly afterwards when she found out about him having an affair with co-star Yelena Samarina.
- GoofsIt appears that over the years of re-releasing the film, the scenes in the early part of movie are out of proper arrangement. The head doctor is being introduced to the "inmates" in one scene, then followed by his arrival at the institution in the next scene, and Fuso should pour liquor on his hand to sanitize a wound after receiving it from a patient's bite, but the shots are reversed, so you first see him douse his hand with alcohol, then stick it in a patient's mouth.
- Quotes
Rafael Alba: [Repeated and last line, to Tanya] You'll be free.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinemacabre TV Trailers (1993)
- How long is Exorcism's Daughter?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Exorcism's Daughter
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 36 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was La fille de l'exorciste (1971) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer