Very interesting film. Was caught on the premise when seeing the trailer but unsure as to what the outcome would be for the showing. As it turns out, it was a very good film.
View Moreif their story seems completely bonkers, almost like a feverish work of fiction, you ain't heard nothing yet.
View MoreThis is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.
View MoreAfter playing with our expectations, this turns out to be a very different sort of film.
View MoreHappy to find it on RED BOX, Hoped to watch a very scary movie.........was a documentary. OK Nothing against documentaries but anyway , What is this?!? E V E R Y T H I N G seems UNREAL..... is like knowing all the time that everything wasn't truth, even if maybe it was!! interviews, documents pictures, records, people..... ForGdSk. Needs more to be spooky/scary is not enough with just metallic sounds, screams, and dark backgrounds stages...... Could be scary if done 5 decades ago. And then, why on earth those "MATRIX film" letters??? Omg and that DVD menu?!? A disaster, needs to be exorcised. No, no, I ... need an exorcist right now because of how I feel watching thisPoor us, exorcisms lovers.. Disappointed 101%
View MoreI saw the lower rating on this one, and I've already seen one other project by the same directors which I did not particularly enjoy a whole lot, so I didn't expect much going in. However, I got a big surprise. This was a really good documentary. It isn't very stylish, there's nothing too exciting visually going on, and I'm not a fan of re-enactments or anything like that. What it does have here is a lot of neat information about the true case that influenced William Peter Blatty's The Exorcist. A lot of people go in assuming they're going to almost see a step-by-step of how the story influenced Blatty, but it's not about him, or the movie- it's about the true case behind it all.I'm non-religious, completely. Yet there is something terribly creepy about the real case here. There is some terrifying stuff here when you sit and listen to it. They go into a lot of the backstory, including St. Vincent's hospital, et cetera, and you get a real sense of the history in all this. Things have been wrong a long time, it seems. I don't really believe in demons, ghosts, none of it- I'm sceptical (yes, I speak and write in true English, as I'm a Canadian), though I want to believe. I just need to see it to believe it. That being said, I didn't go into this documentary hoping to see evidence of ghosts or demons, I went into it wanting to know more about "The Haunted Boy", and where it all started.I gave this 8 out of 10. There is no style to this, it's not exciting to look at, but there's more to it than the look, it's all about the real story that's being investigated. At a few points we get to hear some of the audio from the exorcism of "The Haunted Boy", performed by Father William Bowdern, who himself suffered greatly after the event as well, and what we are able to hear is horrifying. The screams and the sounds which, presumably, come out of the young boy are blood curdling, and absolutely amazing in a horrifying sense. I'm not saying he was "possessed", but something was clearly not right, and the audio really put this over the top for me. A nice look at the real case. I could have done without the dramatizations and such, we've already seen William Friedkin's fantastic adaptation of Blatty's novel and countless other exorcism-based film. However, there was enough to really keep me interested, and I feel it's the best of the Booth Brothers I've seen yet, as opposed to the very lackluster Children of the Grave. I can't see how anybody could rate that awful 'documentary' any higher than this one. I recommend anyone interested in the real events behind Blatty's fictional novel check this out because despite what others say, there are some excellent things in here!
View More"SUCKS," it spoke back to me in its hauntingly, monotone electronic voice. Then, from within my room, I heard laughter. It was my own. This "documentary" was hilarious! Grown men playing with their ghost hunting toys, while trying to act serious, is funny to me. Who do they really think they are kidding? What was the need for all those silly electronic devices to tell a story they never really told? Go, go gadget thermal image camera! It found a hot spot around the one guy's head because he's full of hot air.Seriously, this was horrible. These guys don't know how to tell a story. They jumped from one place to another. From one person to another. Showed scenes and talked to people that had nothing at all to do with the original story. Constantly putting words on the screen. Showing type-written pages that we are to believe was a secret old diary. The same newspaper headlines over and over again. This was nothing but a bunch of people claiming to be "Paranormal Investigators" and "Ghost Hunters" walking around with their gadgets, filming hot, cold, black masses, orbs, and whatever else they could come up with to try and make us believe they were actually in direct contact with demons while filming this "documentary." This turned out to be more about themselves and Father Bowdern than it did about The Haunted Boy. All I got from this was that the boy was moved from his home to a hospital and then to an asylum. A couple of priests eventually exercised him somewhere. Oh, and his bed was really heavy and it levitated. I gave this a 2 out of 10 for the couple of things that actually had to do with the boy.I just asked OVILUS another question. "What lies ahead for these brothers?" "Brothers." "Booth." "No." "Future." "In." "Film-making." "Losers." OVILUS has spoken...
View MoreThis is a documentary that dives right into the most infamous demonic case of our generation .... the 1949 St. Louis Exorcism which was partially the basis (along with the 1928 Iowa Exorcism) for the movie "The Exorcist".However, in this movie you learn more about the "truths" of the 1949 St. Louis case and of the real hero Father Bowdern (the assigned exorcist) in the epic battle of good vs. evil. This was a real case documented by the Catholic Church itself.This documentary brilliantly and artistically brings many hidden truths concerning this case to life and it is done superbly in a way that the new generation can understand and relate to.In this documentary you get to learn about the real character of the assigned exorcist, Father William Bowdern, from his niece. You also learn of never before locations involved in this infamous case and get to witness firsthand the paranormal exploration of such. You actually get to go inside the bedroom of the actual house where it all started and where the Devil slept in 1949. You even get to hear accounts from actual close family and friends of the boy who was possessed in 1949 and even get facts about the furniture from the hospital room where the demons were cast out, why is it still in cold storage today? This is a must see film for any fan of The Exorcist, paranormal enthusiast, horror buff, those local to the St. Louis area and everyone who wishes the historical aspects of not just this specific case, but possessions and exorcisms in general. The demonologist interviewed in this movie was Dr. William Bradshaw one of the last true degreed demonologist left in the world who received his Masters from Yale and Doctorate from St. Andrews University in Scotland. When you are done watching this movie you feel like you have gained a wealth of knowledge within several areas. It will leave you wanting to watch it again!
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