Release
Date: 7 Oct 2004
Synopsis
(Courtesy from Warner Bros) :
Father Lankester Merrin thinks that he has glimpsed the face
of Evil. In the years following World War II, Merrin (STELLAN
SKARSGÅRD) is relentlessly haunted by memories of the
unspeakable brutality perpetrated against the innocent people
of his parish. In the wake of all he has seen, both his faith
in his fellow man and his faith in the Almighty have deserted
him. He can no longer, honestly, call himself a man of God.
Merrin has traveled far from his native Holland in a desperate
attempt to escape the horrors that he witnessed there. While
drifting through Cairo, he is approached by a collector of
rare antiquities to join a British archeological excavation
in the remote Turkana region of Kenya. They have unearthed
a Christian Byzantine church in inexplicably pristine condition
- as if it had been buried on the day it was completed. The
collector wants Merrin, an Oxford-educated archeologist, to
find an ancient relic hidden within the church before the
British discover it. But beneath the church, something much
older sleeps, waiting to be awoken. Madness descends upon
the local villagers and the contingent of British soldiers
sent to guard the excavation. Merrin watches helplessly as
the atrocities of war are repeated against another innocent
village - atrocities he had prayed never to see again. The
blood of innocents flows freely on the East African plain,
and the horror has only just begun. In the place where Evil
was born, Merrin will finally see its true face.
Review:
After plaguing with endless production matters from re-shoot
to re-casting and changing of Directors. The prequel will
be terrifying audiences comes October 7. Helmed by Director
Renny Harlin who gave us non-stop action movies liked "Die
Hard 2" and "Cliffhanger" (amazingly, he started
his directing career in one of the "Nightmare on Elm
Street" sequel), the prequel deals with the younger Father
Merrin, a man who has lost all faith in God after witnessing
and haunted by massacres during the Nazi era. Merrin is then
invited to Kenya to find an ancient relic but strange happenings
start to descend on the villagers as the excavation goes deeper.
Stellan
Skarsgård performance as Father Merrin is faultless
and engaging. (There was a stage whereby Liam Neeson was attached
to take on the role). Similarily so does the rest of the relatively
unknown cast. Although the whole reshoot process lasted less
than 45 days, it never shows in the movie except for some
special effects and matte paintings which were poorly rendered
in today's technological standards. Sequences involving CG
hyenas and crows are apparently too cheesily done too.
Aided
by tremendously loud superb digital sound, the scares are
generous in proportions as compared to popular Japanese horror
thrillers liked "The Ring" or "Ju-On".
The squemish might be discomfort at some of the more bloody
sequences. Well, the whole concept of evil awaiting in the
dark is ominous and freakishly frightening. Men is forever
tempted by lust and weak by faith even in the case of Father
Merrin, a man of God. Evil subdued you when you are at your
weakest which is the basic underlying message of this movie.
"Exorcist: The Beginning" will not go down in history
as a wonderful prequel to the original classic but it's still
feel good to watch the father brandishing evil with his cross
and bible.
Movie
Rating: B-
Review by Linus.T.