MIỄN PHÍ VẬN CHUYỂN
Free ship cho đơn hàng trên 2 triệu
Today, the "exorcist" remains a powerful archetype—a figure standing at the border of the seen and unseen, representing the human struggle to find meaning in the face of suffering and the inexplicable [1, 17, 19].
The 1973 film created a feedback loop known as "The Exorcist Effect," where religious beliefs inspire horror films, which then influence the public's religious experiences [22]. It also introduced several iconic, though medically impossible, tropes: exorcist
: The formal prayers and rites used by priests to combat the demon (in the film, Pazuzu) [5, 23]. In the modern Catholic tradition, an exorcist is
In the modern Catholic tradition, an exorcist is a priest who has been granted specific permission by their bishop to perform the [12, 14]. Perhaps the most famous real-world exorcist of the modern era was Father Gabriele Amorth (1925–2016), who claimed to have performed over 60,000 exorcisms during his career [31]. The Exorcist (1973): A Cultural Phenomenon Based on the novel by William Peter Blatty,
The keyword "exorcist" is most frequently associated with William Friedkin’s 1973 horror masterpiece. Based on the novel by William Peter Blatty, the film chronicles a mother's desperate struggle to save her daughter, , from a mysterious ailment that medical science cannot explain—but which two priests identify as demonic possession [12, 13]. Director William Friedkin [16] Key Themes
Banned in parts of the UK due to its graphic and "desecrating" content [26, 34] The Intersection of Science and Religion