*Total wimp watches THE EXORCIST (1973) FIRST TIME WATCHING! Canadian MOVIE REACTION

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  • Опубликовано: 5 авг 2024
  • My inner drama queen on full display as I watch + react to the movie THE EXORCIST (1973) for the first time! 📼 Sync up your copy with mine + we can watch together at: / exorcist-1973-72798095
    🌟 Patreon: / jenmurray Unedited full length reactions, early access to RUclips videos + polls
    ♡ Subscribe | Like | Comment | Share ♡
    #moviereaction #moviereview #scarymovie
    Canadian first time watching | Canadian react | Canadian reaction
    🍿 All my reaction playlists: / jenmurrayreacts
    📷 Instagram: @jenmurrayxo
    Behind the scenes with Botson🐕, Banjo😸,Kazooie😺& me!
    ⭐Big Thank You to Patreon Producers : MattN, Todd Preble, Ed Dunn, Incognito, John Walters, JT, Noby, SwimintheRain, Ff, John Gray, Randy Aiken, + all who wish to remain uncredited :)
    00:00 Intro
    01:24 Jen's Reaction
    28:52 Movie Review
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Комментарии • 1,4 тыс.

  • @jenmurrayxo
    @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +82

    * LIKE the video if you want more horror reactions! *
    Check out NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET www.patreon.com/posts/nightmare-on-elm-57846303 - my very first reaction ever!

    • @williamsummerson1204
      @williamsummerson1204 Год назад +4

      I remember that reaction like it was yesterday, jen was very scared of freddy Kruger, I was to when I first saw it as a kid and now he's my favorite horror villain of all time. 🥰

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +27

      Night of the Living Dead 1968 coming later in month

    • @adamlopez7947
      @adamlopez7947 Год назад +5

      That was rough, lol but you did it, I'm proud of you! Now you should be the first one to do the movie Orca , the movie about the killer whale, great movie and nobody else has done it

    • @26101976bdm
      @26101976bdm Год назад +3

      Seems to me you loved it Jen - it's exactly how it's supposed to effect you. Such a powerful film nearly 50 yrs after release.

    • @sammylane21
      @sammylane21 Год назад +3

      The scream heard in Regan's 2nd medical scene made me jump the first time.😂

  • @DeadAbeVigoda
    @DeadAbeVigoda Год назад +162

    This movie was literally programmed to break your mind. The director inserted the sound of fighting dogs and angry bees because research showed that these trigger anxiety in the human brain. Couple that with things that everybody fears such as social embarrassment (the party pee scene,) guilt over your mother, crisis of faith, painful hospital procedures, and the torture of a little girl which is the most innocent of targets and this movie becomes an endurance test.
    Your reaction of "I hated it" is exactly what Friedkin was looking to evoke.

    • @bernardotiaba7367
      @bernardotiaba7367 Год назад +13

      Brilliant assessment!!! Kudos!!

    • @jeffmendelson8039
      @jeffmendelson8039 Год назад +9

      Beautifully said!

    • @BCTMarcus
      @BCTMarcus Год назад +6

      I feel the opposite to be honest, and probably both the writer of the novel and the director don't agree with your suggestion either. For the record, both are/were very happy with the fact that so many people love(d) the story and consider it a 'classic'. Let's not forget that in this movie the innocent girl survives... besides that: 2 adults, who never have met the girl before, sacrifice their lives to save hers. To me, they are heroes. Like soldiers who had to jump on Omaha Beach to free people who they never met before from a devilish ideology called Nazism. Also heroes.
      Imho, the movie shows that, despite the fact that 'devils' want to make us believe otherwise, there is still plenty hope and love left for mankind to fight evil things and ideas.

    • @jaycarv1710
      @jaycarv1710 11 месяцев назад +7

      @@BCTMarcus The opposite of what? I don't think anybody said the opposite of what you're saying here. They just said the director incorporated a lot of elements to scare the audience.

    • @BCTMarcus
      @BCTMarcus 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@jaycarv1710 ur right, "the opposite" was a bit too... much. But this movie also gave me solace, and I know I'm not the only one. I doubt that this movie was only meant to break one's mind, and I also don't think that Friedkin was looking exactly for reactions like "I hated it!" I should have made more clear in my first response that I meant to say "not only..., but also...", i.c. not only horror and fright, but also compassion and sacrifice. The role of the mother and the priests made the movie for me no endurance test. In fact, a good movie is never an endurance test to me, but... that's another story. 😉

  • @logann7942
    @logann7942 Год назад +229

    Omg I want to put your quote on the VHS box: “I wanted to scream, but I was afraid puke would come out.” -Jen Murray 😂😂😂

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +34

      😂

    • @doreybain
      @doreybain Год назад +10

      Good idea. That's the all time greatest quote in a reaction video.

    • @lindenarden667
      @lindenarden667 Год назад +7

      🤣😂🤣😂🤢🤮🤧😅

    • @mr.a8315
      @mr.a8315 Год назад +5

      Hahaha yeah, that is a classic quote.

    • @balanchuk
      @balanchuk Год назад +5

      Yes , I aughed out loud at that one too lol

  • @hbron112
    @hbron112 Год назад +44

    You aren't supposed to "like" The Exorcist. You are supposed to experience it. And you certainly did. It amazed me how much these flickering pictures can make me feel so deeply. You reacted perfectly. Thank you.

  • @bobmessier5215
    @bobmessier5215 Год назад +58

    Your reaction Jen, is what every actor, director and writer of horror films are hoping for by audiences. I love horror films and I still think this is the best horror movie ever made.

    • @jasonkh4
      @jasonkh4 Год назад +1

      I can't wait to see what they do with the reboot

    • @bobmessier5215
      @bobmessier5215 Год назад +5

      @@jasonkh4 More often than not, the reboots aren't nearly as good as the original.

    • @jasonkh4
      @jasonkh4 Год назад +2

      @@bobmessier5215 In this case, I believe it’s the same director who rebooted the most recent Halloween movies which seemed to do pretty well, and also Ellen Burstyn is coming back for this one, the actress who played Reagan’s mom in the original so hopefully they do it justice, because that 1973 Exorcist is still the scariest film of all time imo 🫣

    • @mariacattas1814
      @mariacattas1814 Год назад +1

      The Exorcist is one of the best movies ever, regardless of horror genre, imho.

  • @AllBetsAreOff-zt7xx
    @AllBetsAreOff-zt7xx Год назад +219

    Hi Jen. Something interesting to consider in the Exorcist story is that Father Karras never meets Regan, just the demon possessing Regan's body. For me that adds to the selfless heroism of the Karras character.

    • @hak4890
      @hak4890 Год назад +18

      I love him. A true hero with a tragic ending. 😢

    • @caveman3021
      @caveman3021 Год назад +16

      Wow! As many times as Ive seen this movie that never occurred to me!
      Thanks for that insight👍

    • @caveman3021
      @caveman3021 Год назад +4

      @@stopthephilosophicalzombie9017 I didn't know until recently that Jason Miller is also the father of actor Jason Patrick
      ( The Lost Boys , Rush )😮

    • @FatherLokk
      @FatherLokk Год назад +7

      You're So Right
      I Remember Mr.Blatty Stating That In Raising Hell: The Making Of The Exorcist
      He Said A Friend Once Told Him He Finds It To Be A Beautiful Love Story Of A Priest Who Sacrificed His Life To Save A Little Girl He's Never Met. He Never Met Regan He Only Met Pazuzu The Demon And Still Faught To Save Her. I Don't Think Anyone Would Have Seen It That Way Had He Not Pointed That Out.

    • @CSC52698
      @CSC52698 Год назад +7

      Same thing with Merrin.

  • @harnois75
    @harnois75 Год назад +260

    I'll give you the MVP for the best reaction. Your response shows just how effective it is as a horror film even after nearly 50 years.

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Год назад +9

      Hell yeah! Props to Jen for sticking with it, I've seen lots of people simply bow out because even 50 years later... this movie is a LOT

    • @Kannnnn87
      @Kannnnn87 Год назад +2

      Yeah!

    • @charleysage5827
      @charleysage5827 Год назад +2

      Dammit! Don't put it like that! It means I'm getting old.

    • @dontworrybehappy8080
      @dontworrybehappy8080 Год назад +6

      Right?! And we're in 2022. It was brutal in '73. No other movie around like it at the time. Hardcore flick back in the day.

    • @dickwilliam3793
      @dickwilliam3793 Год назад +2

      shes a better actor than Ellen Burstyn.

  • @NostalgiaBrit
    @NostalgiaBrit Год назад +106

    Did anyone else want to wrap Jen up in a great big hug, to keep her safe, or was that just me?
    Great, genuine reaction, Jen; love you loads! 🙏🏻🥰❤️

    • @terrylandess6072
      @terrylandess6072 Год назад +13

      I would've told her to not watch it. Some people don't want or need certain types of entertainment and her dread from the beginning was way more intense than the movie itself. It made me uncomfortable knowing what was going to happen while she didn't.

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +14

      Thanks Brit 😊

    • @seannovack3834
      @seannovack3834 Год назад +6

      @@terrylandess6072 Yep.
      I've never been one who enjoys seeing other people get destroyed.
      "Saving Private Ryan" and "Schindler's List" and "Glory" are profoundly moving because one knows that they are real stories, or that in the case of "Ryan" it is portraying that level of combat horror accurately. I feel it's important to understand the significance of what those movies are trying to present so that we can appreciate what occurs and honor the sacrifices - and try to keep it from happening again.
      While it was done extremely well, "The Exorcist" is a film that plays with your faith and your soul. That's a level of horror that has no need other than titillation. Some may enjoy it, but for those who don't there is no redeeming quality.

    • @velinawelch7470
      @velinawelch7470 Год назад +9

      I was actually talking to her lol. I was saying 'you're OK' & 'You got this' but I cld see how uncomfortable she was. The reaction was great & genuine! But in the future I don't think she shd make herself that uncomfortable! Once seen you can't get it out of your thoughts!

    • @Powerranger-le4up
      @Powerranger-le4up Год назад +7

      I probably would’ve given her a Rosary since Father Gabriele Amorth, a priest and exorcist, has said demons and Satan are highly afraid of the Rosary.

  • @Beltzer0072
    @Beltzer0072 Год назад +45

    You're very brave for trucking through this Jen. This movie was such a shock in 1973 when it came out. People were literally fainting and becoming hysterical while watching it to the point paramedics had to be called.

  • @magicbrownie1357
    @magicbrownie1357 Год назад +56

    I was scared to death when I saw this as a teenager. After many viewings, I've come to love it as drama, not a horror movie. The arc of Damien's character is brilliantly written and portrayed. He is, after all, The Exorcist.

    • @JeffGes
      @JeffGes 3 месяца назад

      And decades later, I can confirm - this is my most-disturbing film experience ever. Well, ANDALUSIAN DOG (with the straight-edge razor) still gets Most Disturbing Scene)... but that's a second or two. The reactions here - especially towards the end for the HELP ME scene - are perfect because that film IS disturbing but nothing as bad as other scenes, yet soooo many people were TERRIFIED - like Jen - quivering, quaking, getting ready to shield themselves. Only to realize, "OMG - this could be The Worst Of All - an awareness of being trapped, hoping to etch out some message to get help." Isn't that disturbing, too?!! Yes.

    • @user-in1by8dg4q
      @user-in1by8dg4q Месяц назад

      I love that you recognize that Karras is the Exorcist and not Merrin. Most folks assume Merrin is the Exorcist because of what the monsignor discusses with the President of the University....and how Merrin's past and his expertise are clues that Merrin is the title character. However, who succeeds at driving out the demon? Also....if Merrin is the title character, as everyone else suggests, why is he only on screen for less than 20 minutes total? Clearly the title character is Karras, who struggles with his faith, mourning, medical background and all the social anxiety over a problem he can't solve. Yet, Karras is successful not only at curing the child but also in sacrificing himself for someone he's never met or loved.

  • @douglaslafreniere5707
    @douglaslafreniere5707 Год назад +43

    In 1973 this movie had a much bigger effect on people . Over the years we have been desensitize by movies and TV . In its day there was nothing like this classic . Great reaction Jen , the writer and director accomplished their mission by making us feel different emotions , fears in various ways

    • @OldRod99
      @OldRod99 Год назад +8

      As someone who was in high school in the 70s, yes, this movie had a huge effect on people back then. There just weren't that many movies like this. There were reports of people running out of the theater because they were so scared. It's a great movie, though!

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 Год назад +2

      Idk, the effect it had on Jen was pretty big. 😄

    • @markman613
      @markman613 Год назад +2

      Fun Fact: Her spider walk down the stairs was not in the original viewing it's an out take that was added later.

    • @hellomark1
      @hellomark1 Год назад +2

      Even today there's still not much like it. Most movies go too hard, or rely completely on cheap jump scares, etc. This movie is a good balance without going overboard.

    • @jjgreen5206
      @jjgreen5206 Год назад +3

      The great part about this is that it’s timeless. It aged better than any movie ever.

  • @jjgreen5206
    @jjgreen5206 Год назад +23

    Great job Jen. You choose the most psychological scary movie of all time

  • @tylerrebik7700
    @tylerrebik7700 4 месяца назад +5

    Jen is too innocent for this world. ❤
    Her reaction to this film is incredible. I was cheering for her the entire time, I was like "Aww Jen, you're too adorable for this film!"
    😊😊😊

  • @paulterrance5723
    @paulterrance5723 Год назад +17

    I first saw this at the cinema in the early 80s. Was absolutely terrified and hated every moment of it. Now I can appreciate how damn good it actually is. Its reputation as the scariest movie ever is well earned. Your reaction was brilliant, although you may not have felt like that at the time.

  • @jeremyadams1521
    @jeremyadams1521 Год назад +33

    This may be the best reaction video I’ve ever seen! It’s truly amazing to me that a 49 year old movie still has the power to absolutely destroy people, as it did back in it’s day!

  • @blacknapalm2131
    @blacknapalm2131 Год назад +13

    18:03 *This is a genuine and normal reaction to the most horrifying film ever made*
    It is a masterpiece in psychological horror, the relentless way it builds up the dread has never been matched.

  • @juancarlosgonzales993
    @juancarlosgonzales993 Год назад +9

    When this was seen in theaters, people were puking, fainting and completely freaking out. Such a great movie for it’s time.

  • @TrentRidley
    @TrentRidley Год назад +16

    Certainly a movie that stays with you, a few scenes in particular are not easily forgotten. Even by today's standards this film is confronting and 50yrs on continues to scare the crap out of people. Horror generally isn't my genre, but The Exorcist is rightly considered a classic.

  • @williamsummerson1204
    @williamsummerson1204 Год назад +138

    Gotta give jen big props for watching a movie this scary and her reaction is going to be priceless. I can't wait. 😃❤

  • @knytestorme
    @knytestorme Год назад +59

    "This isn't scary, I think you were all joking with me" - Jen
    "I hate this so much" - Also Jen
    This was even better reaction than I was expecting :D

  • @ralph1270
    @ralph1270 Год назад +15

    "I hate this movie so much!" ...LOL!!! That line made me laugh so hard🤣😂🤣😂‼ I commend you for sticking through it and finishing it. You rock!

  • @paulobrien9572
    @paulobrien9572 Год назад +53

    Jen you were a total trooper for watching this and now you have experienced the King of the slow burn, unnerving and uncomfortable movie that is the Exorcist.💚💚

  • @ridleysaria
    @ridleysaria Год назад +15

    The backwards stair crawl still gets me. That’s about the freakiest thing ever.

    • @JamesJones-zq7pc
      @JamesJones-zq7pc Год назад +4

      Unfortunately that scene wasn't shown in theaters since they didn't had the technology to hide the cables back then.

  • @zulby09
    @zulby09 Месяц назад +3

    This is a true story. My mom and my 2 elder sisters used to bring my brother and I to watch The Exorcist when I was only 5 years old in first year of kindergarten. Most of the time I felt a bit bored and bothered my mom for snacks/drink or just to gain her attention. Only 3 scenes made me stop and watch: the opening desert archaeology scene with the red blood movie title; the crucifix masturbation scene; the final exorcism scene. My sisters were annoyed and complained to mom that I don’t know how to watch a movie in a cinema. Almost 2 decades later, I gained respect for this vintage classic as a young adult who is also a movie buff. So when it was playing on tv for its 25th anniversary close to midnight, I recorded it on vhs tape but since there were commercial ads the original duration is inflated. I let the tape continue recording the show In Living Color after the Exorcist ended until the tape ran out. One fine day, my parents were out sleeping over at my sister’s house leaving me all alone at home at night. I am not insane enough to watch The Exorcist in such situation but I needed to reel the tape fast forward in order to access and watch In Living Color. I remember of fast forwarding only about 2 hours and 7 minutes then press play on the remote control. Imagine my horror and shock when the scene that exploded on tv at cranked up volume was that of Regan roaring and sticking her tongue at the 2 priests. That completely freaked me out; I turned off the tv and turned on all the lights that night while sleeping. It’s ok if I watched it from start to finish but not smack right in the middle of a scene from this movie.

  • @SteveLeicht1
    @SteveLeicht1 Год назад +3

    Just remember, it is supposed to be a triumphant ending for Karras (the young priest,) because he goes from losing his faith to saving Regan's life and soul by sacrificing his own life to defeat a powerful, ancient demon. The Catholic Church even assisted in the production of the film despite the sacrilegious parts because it shows the existence (and defeat) of true evil in the world. Now, I'm a lapsed Catholic myself but find this interesting at the least for its historical facts (the making of the story and film that is.) Plus, I'm from St. Louis where the original exorcism occurred in the 1940's.

  • @Adam33-t4p
    @Adam33-t4p Год назад +61

    The MVP goes to you for sitting through this movie. Just think no other horror you ever see will be as scary as this.

    • @lethaldose2000
      @lethaldose2000 Год назад +5

      Jen is MVP for sure. Excellent award

    • @basecode8
      @basecode8 Год назад

      Except Hereditary

    • @Adam33-t4p
      @Adam33-t4p Год назад

      @@basecode8 really?

    • @basecode8
      @basecode8 Год назад +1

      @@Adam33-t4p As per any film, it depends on who you ask, but yeah.

    • @Ladco77
      @Ladco77 Год назад +2

      And The Worst goes to all the Patrons who voted for her to watch this.

  • @deiwi
    @deiwi Год назад +93

    Whoa, you're really brave to pull through this one, Jen. It was so captivating that I forgot to get out of the train on the way home. No regrets tho. This movie is a certified banger and all time classic. Keep it up!

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +20

      Thanks! Lol hope u got home OK 😂

  • @tetsuoishiki4677
    @tetsuoishiki4677 Год назад +10

    You're so hopeful it's adorable!
    This is how horror movies were made. Not jump scares every two minutes. A slow burn is always scarier.

    • @paulinegallagher7821
      @paulinegallagher7821 Год назад +3

      Horror movies years ago were always more shocking and disturbing than relying on jump scares and loud music

  • @gregcarpenter8128
    @gregcarpenter8128 Год назад +58

    Yeah, saw this in a theater in 1973. First time I ever saw a movie that truly matched the hype surrounding it. Basically scared the shit out of most everyone. Now I get to enjoy watching reactors reacting to it. I have to say it's effects haven't really lessened over the decades, still scares the shit out of first time watchers. Thanks for putting yourself through this for us emotion vampires!

    • @josepha5885
      @josepha5885 Год назад

      My mom took me to a midnight showing. I had already seen Dracula Has Risen From The Grave, and watched Dark Shadows soap opera. So I wasn't as freaked out as I could have been

    • @johnsensebe3153
      @johnsensebe3153 Год назад +3

      This is the newer cut, with some revised effects. Most of the changes are very sutble.

    • @patticriss2238
      @patticriss2238 Год назад +3

      I saw this on my very first date. In the theater. There were protestors and picketers everywhere.
      My date made it to the stairway upside dow part and then he puked and waited in the pickup. I watched the rest of the movie and much to my surprise he was waiting for me in the parking lot. I’ll never forget that.

    • @garyglaser4998
      @garyglaser4998 Год назад +4

      @@johnsensebe3153 This version has the "spiderwalk" down the stairs, which I hate. Too much, too soon. I'm glad they took it out of the theatrical version.

    • @pvanukoff
      @pvanukoff Год назад +2

      @@johnsensebe3153 Subtle? They stick out like a sore thumb to me. I like that they added additional scenes. I abhor the digital effects they added. They're amateurish and cheesy.

  • @Drforrester31
    @Drforrester31 Год назад +52

    Great job making it through! It really is a great movie and truly unsettling. My mom has told me that when she was reading the book she had to put it out in the hallway before she went to sleep, and my dad had a friend who worked a movie theater at the time and he would ask my dad to walk him home after closing. Folks were absolutely terrified in the 70s

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +9

      I bet!!! Can't imagine seeing it in the theater 😱😱

    • @jfourm
      @jfourm Год назад +7

      @@jenmurrayxo I drove by myself after work to watch a midnight showing of this in the theater. The drive home following the movie at 2:30am was the most terrifying 30 minutes of my life, constantly checking the back seat.

    • @sjakokleiker5820
      @sjakokleiker5820 Год назад

      I even heard sories about people walking out of the theater, puking, during the movie because they where to disturbed by it.

    • @childof70s1
      @childof70s1 Год назад +1

      @@jenmurrayxo Many people left the theater back in 1973 when it was first released for theatrical distribution. People passed out in the theater people got physically very sick. Many people refused to go back in the theater and continue watching the movie the would just sit out in the theater lobby shaking. Jen, there is at least one video on RUclips from the original release where people are interviewed at the theater and even standing in line to watch the movie. Your reaction to the movie isn't unusual and is pretty much like most people react the first time seeing it. it's very disturbing movie to watch but it's said that everything that happens in the movie is what happens in real demon possession cases and there were actually things that they couldn't include that really happen but the film would have never been allowed to be released in theaters if those scenes were in the film. You made it all the way through the movie it was difficult but you did it. You should be proud because there were many people that have watched it and when things started getting really bad in the movie they said NOPE, NOT WATCHING ANYMORE I'M OUT OF HERE! Now we know why this movie holds the title of scariest movie of all time especially to Catholics and Christians that believe demon possession is a real phenomenon and that's why it's not wise to play around with Ouija or Spirit Board because if there is a demon in the area it will think you are trying to contact it and that is opening the door and giving it permission to possess you.

    • @michaelmacdonald334
      @michaelmacdonald334 Год назад +3

      I read a story about a fella who pulled an epic practical joke about the book.
      His boss was reading the book, and said that it was so evil that on her way to work, she went to the dock and trough it in the ocean.
      So on his lunch hour, he went to a nearby used bookstore and bought a copy of the book. He took it to the office, ran it under the tap, and then pit it on his bosses desk before she returned from her lunch.

  • @Flastew
    @Flastew Год назад +9

    Great job Jen, you hung in there and watched the whole thing. You earned a lot of respect from all your subs, we are proud of you.

  • @hobbievk5119
    @hobbievk5119 5 месяцев назад +2

    Jen, for making it through arguably the most horrifying movie ever made with your sense of humor intact, I salute you! You did great! ❤

  • @danhenry8163
    @danhenry8163 Год назад +8

    My older sister first showed me this movie when I was 9 back in 2002. It was late night I remember falling asleep in the beginning then being woken up halfway through the film by a jump scare part blasting really loud. It startled me awake then my sister laughed so hard at that. Fond memories.

  • @robertrouse4503
    @robertrouse4503 Год назад +7

    I saw this the Friday it came out in 1973. I was 19 and was raised in the church. When I got home, I slept in the living room with the light on and a Bible under my pillow. I've seen it a few more times now and have decided it is NOT a horror film. This is a psychological drama.

    • @joshuamcpherson007
      @joshuamcpherson007 Год назад

      Probably a good description...but however people describe it, this movie is disturbing and traumatizing on many levels.

    • @nyronfranklin5789
      @nyronfranklin5789 Год назад

      Saw this movie when I was 9. I slept cuddling the Bible like it was a teddy bear for over a week.🤣

  • @spjunkies
    @spjunkies Год назад +3

    Watching poor Jen slowly deteriorate during the movie was priceless 😂

  • @gregyear201
    @gregyear201 Год назад +8

    This movie is incredible and timeless. The iconic movie continues to shock and frighten generation after generations.
    It’s ironic that the mother who has “no religious beliefs” desperately begs for an exorcism from a priest who has guilt and has “lost” his faith.

  • @colinforsyth7828
    @colinforsyth7828 Год назад +10

    Hey jen, you are definitely brave for watching this one, but it is a true classic for a reason. It's very well made and the documentary on the making of it is well worth a look as well. Thank you. Looking forward to seeing it. ☺😎👍

  • @roman0robert
    @roman0robert 2 месяца назад +2

    "How'd it get into the kid in the first place?" Regan was playing with the Ouija board which is considered a form of divination.

  • @uNkLeRaRa4
    @uNkLeRaRa4 Год назад +4

    "It's just a movie, it's just a movie, it's just a movie". No no, The Exorcist is an EXPERIENCE! 🤣

  • @reesebn38
    @reesebn38 Год назад +6

    You should check out on RUclips footage from 1973 and people reacting to the film in the theatre. People were passing out in the theatre. It is interesting to see, at this point in time horrors movie were getting real. In the 70s too everyone was really religious, so this movie freaked people the F--- out. People just don't realize how movies really changed things in the 70s. I wasn't old enough to see this, but I was to see Jaws and that was crazy! People were jumping and down in their seats. It was the same with Star Wars, people jumping up and down in the seat. The first movie that had a profound effect on me was American Graffiti. That movie changed a lot of things too.

  • @IanFindly-iv1nl
    @IanFindly-iv1nl 7 месяцев назад +3

    "Nothing scary is happening!" .. . Yeah, just hold your horses. Movies of the SEVENTIES, in general, are pretty hard-edged because THAT was the first decade that had the R and X rating. Now those from the decades PREVIOUS to that one (60's, 50's, 40's, 30's) tend to be more censored and "tame". Oh, and she didn't kill that elderly priest, he died from over-exertion.

  • @mtank30
    @mtank30 Месяц назад +2

    Best Jen Quote of the video: "I don't know why this needs to be a movie. I don't know why anyone would enjoy it." LOL Because it's so much FUN, Jen! Seriously, I feel for you on this one. It's not a film for the faint of heart.

  • @thomasdeetlefs2162
    @thomasdeetlefs2162 13 дней назад +1

    "Maybe nothing scary happens for the rest of the movie!" Oh Jen, you sweet summer child, never change. :)

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose2000 Год назад +18

    Hey Jen, Exorcist was intense for me to watch at age 10 or so, especially as I'm more deeply religious. I saw Friday 13th first at 9 years old, and I thought Friday 13th was the peak of fear until I watched Poltergeist. at 11. I could not be in the house alone for years. As a teen male, I had to put on a brave front, but now at 50, I can let the skeletons out of the closet. HA!!

    • @JoseyWales44s
      @JoseyWales44s Год назад

      @@papalaz4444244 Funny, I was six when I saw it at the drive-in with my parents. No shit, I'm not kidding. I'm not sure what the hell they were thinking.

  • @davidanderson1639
    @davidanderson1639 Год назад +3

    I got to see The Exorcist in the cinema when it was reissued in the late 90s; it was absolutely stunning on the big screen. The juxtaposition of very bright, loud scenes & dark, quiet scenes in one of the things that helps add to the terrifying nature of this film.
    Personally I actually prefer the extended directors cut, as it adds a little bit more to the film.
    Fun Fact:
    In ancient Mesopotamia, the demon Pazuzu was the king of the demons of the wind, brother of Humbaba and son of the god Hanbi. He also represented the southwestern wind, the bearer of storms and drought.
    Pazuzu is often depicted as a combination of diverse animal and human parts. He has the body of a man, the head of a lion or dog, talons of an eagle, two pairs of wings, a scorpion's tail and a serpentine penis. He has his right hand up and left hand down.
    Pazuzu was invoked in apotropaic amulets (the charm we see falling & which Regan has). These combat the powers of his rival, the malicious goddess Lamashtu, who was believed to cause harm to mother and child during childbirth. Although Pazuzu is, himself, considered to be an evil spirit, he drives and frightens away other evil spirits, therefore protecting humans against plagues and misfortunes. So technically when Pazuzu appears in Regan’s bedroom, he was protecting her.
    Also Regarding Ouija Boards
    The Ouija board, in fact, came straight out of the American 19th century obsession with spiritualism, the belief that the dead are able to communicate with the living. Spiritualism, which had been around for years in Europe, hit America hard in 1848 with the sudden prominence of the Fox sisters of upstate New York; the Foxes claimed to receive messages from spirits who rapped on the walls in answer to questions, recreating this feat of channeling in parlors across the state. Aided by the stories about the celebrity sisters and other spiritualists in the new national press, spiritualism reached millions of adherents at its peak in the second half of the 19th century. Spiritualism worked for Americans: it was compatible with Christian dogma, meaning one could hold a séance on Saturday night and have no qualms about going to church the next day. It was an acceptable, even wholesome activity to contact spirits at séances, through automatic writing, or table turning parties, in which participants would place their hands on a small table and watch it begin shake and rattle, while they all declared that they weren’t moving it. The movement also offered solace in an era when the average lifespan was less than 50: Women died in childbirth; children died of disease; and men died in war. Even Mary Todd Lincoln, wife of the venerable president, conducted séances in the White House after their 11-year-old son died of a fever in 1862; during the Civil War, spiritualism gained adherents in droves, people desperate to connect with loved ones who’d gone away to war and never come home.
    Over the years the popularity of Ouija boards fluctuated, but following the success of The Exorcist, the fabric of popular culture surrounding them was forever changed & we’re left with what is nothing more than an irrational fear of a board game.
    Fun Fact: several of the Priests were actually practicing Priests. They were initially hired as technical advisers, but were then cast into the roles. They accepted these under the condition that the concept of possession was treated with the utmost seriousness.
    Also, when you see the actress who portrayed Regan’s mother fall & grab her back…..that reaction was genuine, due to the stage hands pulling her over with such force.
    Oh & one of the radiographer (Paul Bateson) was a real life serial killer!!

  • @deckofcards87
    @deckofcards87 Год назад +1

    Jen it's okay to not be a "fan" of this movie, a lot of people aren't. But The Exorcist is a universally accepted masterpiece because it's extremely well done. I'm always emotionally moved by how Father Karass sacrifices his life to save Regan's. He had lost faith and had nothing in his life left to love. Yet right before his death, his faith is restored. Tragic, but heroic.
    BTW, there's a thriller that came out the same year (1973) that's also a classic called 'Don't Look Now' which I think you'd prefer. It has an ending that will leave you thinking for days. Not nearly as scary as 'The Exorcist,' but fascinating.

  • @paulmenard6219
    @paulmenard6219 Год назад +2

    I love the fact that you were so terrified that you never even acknowledged it was an innocent little girl. You’re like GET RID OF IT! lol i loved this reaction

  • @chavaloworldproductions
    @chavaloworldproductions Год назад +3

    I thought your reactions were hilarious 😂. I have to say that I was 9yrs old when I first watched it. We had just arrived in Canada. My dad is a movie buff so he bought it and we watched it thinking it was just another movie. I could not sleep well for months after. I was tormented with thoughts of that face. I slept with the lights on for many months after watching the movie. I appreciate the movie now as a classic horror but it still makes an impact. Thanks!.

  • @WTR28
    @WTR28 Год назад +13

    Found this reaction pretty funny, but feeling bad for Jen at the same time. Hope you've recovered from this movie!

  • @Bamaboompa
    @Bamaboompa Год назад +2

    “I hope nothing happens “
    🤪
    FWIW I read the book
    usually at night
    while visiting my aunt in Washington DC
    😱
    When the movie came out
    I immediately recognized “the stairs”
    I used to buy gas at the station
    at the bottom of the stairs.
    😱😱

  • @rbmtn4879
    @rbmtn4879 Год назад +1

    The Exorcist had a revival in theaters here about ten or fifteen years ago. When I went, the house was packed. Mostly first-timers were laughing and joking through the opening scenes. As the possession took hold things got real quiet in the seats. There was no more laughing and joking.

  • @_nauticaldisaster_
    @_nauticaldisaster_ Год назад +7

    Fun fact about The Exorcist: There are no "fun facts". Just terrifying ones.

  • @eschiedler
    @eschiedler Год назад +5

    Max von Sydow is one of my favorite character actors ever. So iconic in character roles.

  • @shanemwood
    @shanemwood Год назад +1

    I met her (Linda Blair) a few years ago. She's super nice. She said her pain was very real in the scene where she's flopping back and forth on the bed. There was a harness around her back with a rod attached and two big guys were violently pushing her from behind the wall/bed. She was not acting and wanted them to stop. It was so crazy that they kept it in the movie.

    • @joshuah9109
      @joshuah9109 Год назад +2

      I met her too☺️ she was so nice.

  • @VictorPoncioni
    @VictorPoncioni Год назад +1

    This is the kind of movie in which is okay to change place and shoot your entire reaction with your back glued to the wall, with a panoramic view of the room and nothing behind you.

  • @davidramrut5002
    @davidramrut5002 Год назад +2

    This movie was so hyped when it came out, you had to buy your movie tickets days in advance for the showing date and time you wanted to view it. Theaters added additional screening times, even midnight showings.

  • @brettharlow7010
    @brettharlow7010 Год назад +8

    You made it through like a champ Jen!

  • @felphero
    @felphero Год назад +4

    Yay! This is actually one of my favorite movies ever! And I'm so sorry but your scared reactions were way too cute haha😊
    Congratulations for braving through it!

  • @_Tim115
    @_Tim115 Год назад +1

    Credit to Jen for sticking with it until the end. It is one of my favourite movies and it still holds it own as unsettling and scary nearly 50 years after first release. The documentary about the making of the film is worth watching. In the beginning when Merrin finds the relic off Pazuzu in Iraq, it's basically an omen/foreshadowing of things to come. Also worth noting that Karras never meet Regan, he only had contact with the demon.

  • @themidsouthcyclist8880
    @themidsouthcyclist8880 Год назад +1

    This movie indeed deserves its reputation. Thanks, Jen, for reacting to it: you never have to watch it again! Just take comfort in the knowledge that of all the horror movies you see from now on, only a very few will come close to the level this one did.

  • @Michael-id9bw
    @Michael-id9bw Год назад +21

    I've never felt so bad for someone watching a movie before. Big props for making it all the way through Jen. 👍

  • @Adam33-t4p
    @Adam33-t4p Год назад +4

    The protective blanket is definitely need for this one. I watched it far too young.

  • @PaulLoh
    @PaulLoh Год назад +1

    That "devil face" was portrayed by my friend, Eileen. I'm a huge horror fan, and horror film maker, and author. I'm one of those people you talked about who are delighted by horror films.

  • @AXSLA3
    @AXSLA3 Год назад +2

    This film was very well documented, so not a single minute of it goes at random, that's why it's still so scary, I think!

  • @paulhelberg5269
    @paulhelberg5269 Год назад +5

    Happy Halloween Jen. It is cruel to push someone toward an experience that you know will be traumatic for them. I was 12 years old in 1974 when my aunt took me and my cousins to see this film at the drive-in theater. It was the second feature and everyone in the car had fallen asleep by the time it started. Being a nice Christian boy, I sympathize with your reaction. Oddly, the medical testing scenes were among the most disturbing to me at the time. I cried when Fr. Karras sacrificed his life/soul for hers and threw himself out of the window. Remember, you survived the Exorcist Jen, one of the all-time scary films ever.

    • @bankbarcomo806
      @bankbarcomo806 Год назад +2

      and if you want to see how that goes for him, see the 3rd one. :) Also great film.

    • @paulhelberg5269
      @paulhelberg5269 Год назад +2

      @@bankbarcomo806 Ya, the Exorcist 2 with Linda Blair is horrible and to be avoided at all cost. 3 Legion is based on another W.P. Blatty book and is worth watching.

  • @e.d.2096
    @e.d.2096 Год назад +7

    Jen, I've complemented you on your bravery in the past. (Jaws,The Shining, ect.) But this is next level! I saw this when I was a teenager, and it truly messed with my head! Much respect! Have a warm cup of tea, and cuddle up with Boston. Hopefully no therapy is needed. Here for all your reactions.

    • @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.
      @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis. Год назад

      I agree, Eric, well done to, Jen! It's about the worst/best horror film out there.

    • @e.d.2096
      @e.d.2096 Год назад +1

      @@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis. Well Adam, what did you think of her reaction? Actually I think she did quite well. When I saw this in the 70s, it was in the evening. And had to walk home afterwards. I did not fair to well. This film kept creeping into my thoughts for quite some time. Now as an adult, I really don't find it scary, but more psychological in nature. What are your thoughts?

    • @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.
      @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis. Год назад

      @@e.d.2096 Yes, Eric, I thought that, Jen, did well. I saw it upon its release in the cinema, I was 13 going on 14 at the time, I had to walk home in the dark afterwards as well, it effected me very much, I was nervous and disturbed by it for quite a while afterwards, there was nothing like it at the time, I think after you've seen it once its effectiveness wears off and you get used to it, but it's interesting to see people's first time reaction to it, of all the horror films that I've seen I think that it's the one that leaves the longest lasting impression.
      I recommended some comedy horror films to, Jen, today in my comment on here, for her to have a foil against the proper horror films that she might be doing.

    • @e.d.2096
      @e.d.2096 Год назад +1

      @@Adam_Le-Roi_Davis. I really like your Mars Attacks recommendation. As you stated the 50s Sci Fi feel of that movie, would hit perfectly with Jen. Very campy comedy. When I lived in Las Vegas (Nevada) I had a roommate that was totally into horror, serial killer and torture films. I think that situation is what turned me off to that type of genre. Ever since then I've avoided those types of films. I do however love a good Sci Fi.

    • @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis.
      @Adam_Le-Roi_Davis. Год назад

      @@e.d.2096 I really like a lot of '50s and '60s Sci-Fi, I love 'Mars Attacks' campy style too.
      I'm not a fan of a lot of the horror films out there, I like good psychological horror the most, that doesn't show you much, not gore or torture etc, I just find that tasteless, it's used as an easy route for a reaction, it's much more difficult to produce something which has tension and suspense, this is one of the reasons why I like Hitchcock's work so much as he was a master of it. There was quite a good film from a couple/few years back called, 'A Quite Place' which starred, Emily Blunt and her husband, about a present day in which people have to remain silent or very quiet in order to survive from creatures that detect prey by sounds, particularly loud noises, it uses the build up of tension very well and it isn't really gory at all, I think that it might become a future classic, and I highly recommend it if you haven't seen it, Tara and Jen did a reaction to it on Tara's channel the other day.

  • @Archipelington
    @Archipelington Год назад +2

    Linda Blair who played Regan runs an animal shelter now. She sells signed Exorcist memorabilia to raise money towards it. And what an amazing part she plays in this film.

  • @jeffmendelson8039
    @jeffmendelson8039 Год назад +2

    Major Props, Kudos and respect Jen for being a trooper and sitting through this. I didn't think you would be able to do it! MVP! :)

  • @georgeheilman4243
    @georgeheilman4243 Год назад +3

    Now that you've seen both, you may agree that it makes the line in Beetlejuice that The Exorcist "keeps getting funnier every single time he sees it" even funnier to watch.

    • @over50gamer
      @over50gamer Месяц назад +1

      That's exactly what I was thinking about when watching this! 😂

  • @paulfromt.o.7384
    @paulfromt.o.7384 Год назад +4

    Aww the sheer stress you went through to watch this, but good on you.
    I saw this as a kid in the late 70's and to this day it still remains the scariest, most torturous movie I've seen.
    It's a horror masterpiece 😈

  • @billparrish4385
    @billparrish4385 Год назад +1

    FYI, the shaking hands at 2:23 aren't a sign that he's scared. Father Merrin has a heart condition, and he's opening his small metal box of nitroglycerin tablets to put one under his tongue and quiet his angina symptoms.

  • @sammylane21
    @sammylane21 Год назад +1

    The time lapse in this film is unreal because of her facial cuts she sustained were magically heal? I mean between the start of the film, looked like early October and ends with early November? Nope, not enough time to fully heal facial scars.

  • @jimperry6463
    @jimperry6463 Год назад +3

    Watching Jen watch The Exorcist is my new Halloween tradition.
    She should have watched it in the dark to simulate the movie-going experience.

  • @dougfisher1266
    @dougfisher1266 Год назад +6

    This is my new favorite reaction! Proud of you, it looked like you were gonna quit a few times. Jen, this is about as freaky as movies get really, so after this its all easy. Plus, you got a new subscriber out of it.

  • @mrbill21
    @mrbill21 Год назад +2

    Jen, know this, your honest reaction and suffering was truly genuine, you indeed love your followers. :)

  • @iflarnted
    @iflarnted Год назад +1

    At the start: this isn't scary. At the end: I stand corrected. Expertly directed and paced.

  • @cainsolo1
    @cainsolo1 Год назад +1

    Just so you know, Linda Blair (Regan) won a Golden Globe and got an Oscar nomination for this role.

  • @rickmeadows555
    @rickmeadows555 Год назад +13

    Your feeling of being nauseous is from all the adrenaline pumping through you. That proves you were into it pretty good. Kudos to you for taking this one on. 👍

    • @the.seagull.35
      @the.seagull.35 Год назад +1

      Honestly there's something just off putting about this specific movie. I don't know if it's just the adrenalin. It really does create a sick horrible feeling when watching it.

    • @rickmeadows555
      @rickmeadows555 Год назад

      @@the.seagull.35 I felt that same way about Amityville Horror, the early one. That’s the only horror movie I refuse to re-watch.

  • @logann7942
    @logann7942 Год назад +1

    Lol I love watching you watch a movie that was scary to people in the 70s with your 21st century brain. Like you’re waiting for jump-scares so hard, you’re gonna give yourself a panic attack, but the first part of the movie is more atmospheric; they’re setting the scene so the devil can f it all up later. As always, I love your videos. You get a 🎖 medal for bravery.

  • @spaceguy8000
    @spaceguy8000 Год назад +1

    Thank goodness you had the crocheted blanket for jump scare protection! Fun Fact: @ 4:04 the background music is the Intro to the album Tubular Bells. This was the first record published by owner Richard Branson of Virgin Records. With only modest sales, this scene with only this brief intro from the album, launched it to world wide success, selling 15 million albums to date. This is a song everyone should listen to at least once.

  • @joshuamcpherson007
    @joshuamcpherson007 Год назад +6

    I haven't laughed so hard at a reaction video before...Priest: "The point is to make us despair". Jen: "It's working". LOL

  • @randy7831
    @randy7831 6 месяцев назад +6

    upon watching this for a second time, Jen is the MVP of the reaction, but Boston and the cats are a close second for scaring the sh*t out of Jen! 😆

  • @Agent.Bob58
    @Agent.Bob58 Год назад +2

    Fair play to you kid, that was obviously WAYY outside of your comfort zone. But you did it and made a truly watchable horror reaction! I am a big horror fan personally and that film always makes reactors really animated when watching. Well done Jen. 👏👏

  • @burkepota
    @burkepota 3 месяца назад +2

    Always remember, Jen
    Cats know when we are watching horror movies and they make noises to freak their owners at the right moments! Its their way of laughing at the fact that we have one life and they have seven!

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  3 месяца назад +2

      This has to be true 😂

    • @burkepota
      @burkepota 3 месяца назад +1

      By the way, Jen, enjoy your love of music to films. There are marvelous box set collections at great pricing. I listen to and love soundtracks, especially when writing or painting. Highly recommend the Goldsmith and John Barry sets, and Bernard Herrmann, although you will probably need to skip the Psycho cues, remembering you reaction to Mother😂

  • @ZERXERZANZIGER
    @ZERXERZANZIGER Год назад +3

    Hope you went out and got some fresh air then ordered 🍕🍕🍕! Splurged a little relaxed and watched some buffy or something campy 😋
    No but seriously great reaction and awesome job muscling through it Jen! We love ya 😉

  • @josepha5885
    @josepha5885 Год назад +5

    Jen, you clearly deserve the MVP award for watching The Exorcist when you didn't want to.

  • @Stu-Vino
    @Stu-Vino Год назад +1

    Definitely the scariest, most unsettling film I've ever watched. There's a great documentary (if you can face it!) that has a ton of fascinating anecdotes about how they made it.

  • @slavetometal8529
    @slavetometal8529 2 месяца назад +2

    I had a wonderful time. Thank you for the cool reactions!

  • @nomiau
    @nomiau Год назад +14

    I enjoyed this reaction so much, I hope the views are worth the frights!

  • @ARWG
    @ARWG Год назад +4

    God, I must be some sort of psycho for laughing at your reaction. So great.

  • @1MahaDas
    @1MahaDas Год назад +1

    I never viewed this film when it debuted because of the fact that I had heard horror stories of the audience exiting theaters as a consequence of its content! By the time 1974 came around, there had been enough "realistic horror film productions" that casual film projects became commonplace!

  • @ShawnMcKenzie-CP
    @ShawnMcKenzie-CP 5 дней назад

    Another neat tidbit of this movie is that Jason Miller (Father Karrass) is the father of Jason Patric who starred in "The lost boys" as Michael Emerson, and who's mother (Linda Gleason) was the daughter of the great comic legend Jackie Gleason.

  • @GrimaldiJ
    @GrimaldiJ Год назад +3

    No need to be miserable for your fans! We want you to have fun with movies we love, not endure them lol. There are plenty of Halloween-season films that are great, and only a little spooky. Try the original 80s Fright Night, for example.

  • @keithgoode6313
    @keithgoode6313 Год назад +3

    Jen, your reactions cracked me up. I'm sorry for your misery but you had me smiling a lot. Thanks!

  • @johnkeenan1829
    @johnkeenan1829 Год назад +1

    Here's some fun; the bearded technician in the initial hospital scene is named Paul Bateson. A few years after this, he was convicted of murdering his lover. But he was also suspected of being a serial killer who had been murdering gay men in the New York City area.

  • @edcastillo9342
    @edcastillo9342 Год назад +1

    This is based upon a true story. William Blatty, who wrote the book, while he was at Georgetown University , came upon the journal of the priest who assisted in the actual exorcism of a teenage boy in 1949. The priest who performed the exorcism was Father William Bowdern...The exorcism was performed near the University of St. Louis...

  • @fatherburn3715
    @fatherburn3715 Год назад +3

    I give you credit, I'm a horror nut and this is the big one. Great job!

  • @randy7831
    @randy7831 Год назад +5

    Two thumbs up for Jen being so brave! 👍👍 I think she will sleep with the lights on for a week...I know I did when I first saw this, but then again I was only 13 or 14. One thing it did though...I have never eaten pea soup after I saw this.

    • @jenmurrayxo
      @jenmurrayxo  Год назад +4

      Lollll pea soup is out now 😅

  • @jacfalle27
    @jacfalle27 9 месяцев назад

    “Seriously, nothing has happened yet and I’m not doing well.”
    That’s the genius of the movie. It’s so unnerving that it makes you scare yourself. You feel the dread right down to your bones as opposed to sudden jump scares that are just surface level.

  • @robertkramer2271
    @robertkramer2271 Год назад +1

    Hey Jen, I know you'll laugh at this, but in many ways this is actually a love story. The story isn't about Regan, it's about Father Karras. He's guilt ridden about the death of his mother and he's questioning his faith. But then he's presented with something he can't explain. Even going into the exorcism he's not convinced. But he finds his strength and faith at the end after the mom asks if Regan's gonna die. He knows he can't let her die. In the end he commits the ultimate act of love because he sacrifices his life to save someone he never met. Remember, he never met Regan, he only met the demon.
    William Peter Blatty, who wrote the novel and screenplay and produced the film, described it as pilgrimage of his own. Because he felt if there's a force out there for evil, such as demons, then there's also got to be a force for good like angels and such.