
Exorcist II: The Heretic
It's Four Years Later... What Does She Remember?
Bizarre nightmares plague Regan MacNeil four years after her possession and exorcism. Has the demon returned? And if so, can the combined faith and knowledge of a Vatican investigator and a research specialist free her from its grasp?
- 4.5
- 1977
- Released
- 1h 58m

Richard Burton
Father Philip Lamont
Linda Blair
Regan MacNeil
Louise Fletcher
Dr. Gene Tuskin
Max von Sydow
Father Lankester Merrin
Kitty Winn
Sharon Spencer
Paul Henreid
The Cardinal
James Earl Jones
Older Kokumo
Ned Beatty
Edwards
Belinda Beatty
Liz
Rose Portillo
Spanish Girl
Barbara Cason
Mrs. Phalor
Tiffany Kinney
Deaf Girl
Joey Green
Young Kokumo
Fiseha Dimetros
Young Monk
Ken Renard
Abbot
Hank Garrett
Conductor
Lorry Goldman
Accident Victim
Bill Grant
Taxi Driver
Shane Butterworth
Gary Tuskin
Joely Adams
Linda Tuskin
Robert Lussier

Charles Parks

Richard Paul
Man on the Plane
George Skaff

Marianne Muellerleile
Patient (uncredited)
Dana Plato
Sandra Phalor (uncredited)
Kelley Karel
Singer (uncredited)
Karen Knapp
Pazuzu (uncredited)

Released
en
$14,000,000.00
$30,749,142.00
- #1970s
- #religion and supernatural
- #exorcism
- #possession
- #hypnosis
- #pact with the devil
- #sequel
- #examination
- #priest
- #devil
- #roman catholic church
- #demonic possession
- #locust
- #faith healing
- #supernatural horror
- #playful
- #absurd
- #audacious
Reviews
One of the many things that make The Exorcist arguably the greatest horror films ever made – or simply one of the greatest films ever made, regardless of genre –, is that it has no use for the obligatory final shot suggesting that the evil will continue. On the contrary, it ends on a hopeful, optimistic note; a welcome relief following the ordeal we, characters and viewers alike, have just endured
I have all the respect in the world for John Boorman--his 'Point Blank' and 'Deliverance' are excellent--but this sequel to one of the greatest horror movies ever made simply falls listless and flat. Of course, the script is extremely talky and lifeless--as if it had been 'exorcised' of all the wonder and shock that William Friedkin's vision of the battle of good vs. evil would entail. Yes, Sir Ri











