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Exorcist V: Lucifer incarnate.....

 
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cubanlord



Joined: 08 Jul 2005
Location: In Japan!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 4:40 am    Post subject: Exorcist V: Lucifer incarnate..... Reply with quote

http://thatvideosite.com/view/1166.html

Shocked Shocked Shocked
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Tiberious aka Sparkles



Joined: 23 Jan 2003
Location: I'm one cool cat!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 4:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

There's an Exorcist 4?

_*_
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cubanlord



Joined: 08 Jul 2005
Location: In Japan!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 4:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tiberious aka Sparkles wrote:
There's an Exorcist 4?

_*_


Yep. Exorcist 4: The new Beginning.

http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/exorcist_the_beginning/

It was the 4th installment.
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Tiberious aka Sparkles



Joined: 23 Jan 2003
Location: I'm one cool cat!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 4:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I think you mean Exorcist: The Beginning (and its doppelganger Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist ).

_*_
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cubanlord



Joined: 08 Jul 2005
Location: In Japan!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 5:03 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Tiberious aka Sparkles wrote:
I think you mean Exorcist: The Beginning (and its doppelganger Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist ).

_*_


Still...number 4 made.
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Tiberious aka Sparkles



Joined: 23 Jan 2003
Location: I'm one cool cat!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 5:59 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

cubanlord wrote:
Tiberious aka Sparkles wrote:
I think you mean Exorcist: The Beginning (and its doppelganger Dominion: Prequel to the Exorcist ).

_*_


Still...number 4 made.


Fine; if you want to play that game, there have technically been 5 Exorcist films, so the post should read Exorcist VI: Lucifer incarnate.....

_ Razz _
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own_king



Joined: 17 Apr 2004
Location: here

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 10:40 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

OK, I'll clear it up. There were three originals and two prequels. That's where some are getting confused. The first prequel and most famous tells the story leading up to the orginal Exorcist 1 (and still the best). The second prequel goes all the way back to WWII. It tells the whole story of "God is not here today," in real time where the first prequel has it only in flashback. These or also not to be confused with the Exorcism of Emily Rose and The Exorcism of Gail Bowers. They are totally different films and as far as I know not related to each other or the original series.
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cubanlord



Joined: 08 Jul 2005
Location: In Japan!

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 2:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

own_king wrote:
OK, I'll clear it up. There were three originals and two prequels. That's where some are getting confused. The first prequel and most famous tells the story leading up to the orginal Exorcist 1 (and still the best). The second prequel goes all the way back to WWII. It tells the whole story of "God is not here today," in real time where the first prequel has it only in flashback. These or also not to be confused with the Exorcism of Emily Rose and The Exorcism of Gail Bowers. They are totally different films and as far as I know not related to each other or the original series.


there were two prequels? What was the other?
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Thunndarr



Joined: 30 Sep 2003

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 3:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

own_king wrote:
OK, I'll clear it up. There were three originals and two prequels. That's where some are getting confused. The first prequel and most famous tells the story leading up to the orginal Exorcist 1 (and still the best). The second prequel goes all the way back to WWII. It tells the whole story of "God is not here today," in real time where the first prequel has it only in flashback. These or also not to be confused with the Exorcism of Emily Rose and The Exorcism of Gail Bowers. They are totally different films and as far as I know not related to each other or the original series.


Emm...I think you are a bit off base here. Anyway, here's the story of the two movies as explained by Roger Ebert aka, 'the fat one.'

Quote:
After Schrader delivered his version, a scenario developed that is, I think, unprecedented in modern movie history. The studio, having spent millions on the Schrader version, hired the director Renny Harlin to spend more millions remaking it in a presumably more commercial fashion.

Harlin kept some of the actors, including Skarsgard, and substituted others (Gabriel Mann was replaced by James D'Arcy, Clara Bellar by Izabella Scorupco). The same cinematographer, the great Vittorio Storaro, filmed for both directors. After Harlin's version did a break-even $82 million at the box office but drew negative reviews, Schrader succeeded in getting his version screened at a film festival in Brussels, where the positive reception inspired this theatrical release, a resurrection fully in keeping with the film's theme.

I've seen both versions and much prefer Schrader's, and yet it must be said that Harlin did not prostitute himself in his version. Indeed, oddly, it opens with more talk and less excitement than the Schrader version (Harlin dissipates the power of the Nazi sequence by fragmenting it into flashbacks). What is fascinating from a movie buff's point of view is that the movie has been filmed twice in different ways by different directors. Maybe this is what Gus Van Sant was getting at when he inexplicably did his (almost) shot-by-shot remake of Hitchcock's "Psycho." Film students are often given a series of shots and assigned to edit them to tell a story. They can fit together in countless ways, to greater or less effect.

Here we have the experiment conducted with $80 million. It's eerie, to see the same locations occupied by different actors speaking similar dialogue. Odd to see the young priest and the doctor occupying the same rooms but played by different people. Strange to see Skarsgard in both versions, some shots and dialogue exactly the same, others not. Curious how the subplot about the British shrinks in the Harlin version, while the horror is ramped up. I prefer the Schrader version, certainly, but you know what? Now that two versions exist and are available, each one makes the other more interesting.


Anyway, they are essentially the same movie.
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own_king



Joined: 17 Apr 2004
Location: here

PostPosted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 6:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thunndarr wrote:
own_king wrote:
OK, I'll clear it up. There were three originals and two prequels. That's where some are getting confused. The first prequel and most famous tells the story leading up to the orginal Exorcist 1 (and still the best). The second prequel goes all the way back to WWII. It tells the whole story of "God is not here today," in real time where the first prequel has it only in flashback. These or also not to be confused with the Exorcism of Emily Rose and The Exorcism of Gail Bowers. They are totally different films and as far as I know not related to each other or the original series.


Emm...I think you are a bit off base here. Anyway, here's the story of the two movies as explained by Roger Ebert aka, 'the fat one.'

Quote:
After Schrader delivered his version, a scenario developed that is, I think, unprecedented in modern movie history. The studio, having spent millions on the Schrader version, hired the director Renny Harlin to spend more millions remaking it in a presumably more commercial fashion.

Harlin kept some of the actors, including Skarsgard, and substituted others (Gabriel Mann was replaced by James D'Arcy, Clara Bellar by Izabella Scorupco). The same cinematographer, the great Vittorio Storaro, filmed for both directors. After Harlin's version did a break-even $82 million at the box office but drew negative reviews, Schrader succeeded in getting his version screened at a film festival in Brussels, where the positive reception inspired this theatrical release, a resurrection fully in keeping with the film's theme.

I've seen both versions and much prefer Schrader's, and yet it must be said that Harlin did not prostitute himself in his version. Indeed, oddly, it opens with more talk and less excitement than the Schrader version (Harlin dissipates the power of the Nazi sequence by fragmenting it into flashbacks). What is fascinating from a movie buff's point of view is that the movie has been filmed twice in different ways by different directors. Maybe this is what Gus Van Sant was getting at when he inexplicably did his (almost) shot-by-shot remake of Hitchcock's "Psycho." Film students are often given a series of shots and assigned to edit them to tell a story. They can fit together in countless ways, to greater or less effect.

Here we have the experiment conducted with $80 million. It's eerie, to see the same locations occupied by different actors speaking similar dialogue. Odd to see the young priest and the doctor occupying the same rooms but played by different people. Strange to see Skarsgard in both versions, some shots and dialogue exactly the same, others not. Curious how the subplot about the British shrinks in the Harlin version, while the horror is ramped up. I prefer the Schrader version, certainly, but you know what? Now that two versions exist and are available, each one makes the other more interesting.


Anyway, they are essentially the same movie.


Right, but still two prequels and three orginals - five movies.
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