The Exorcist is Real in Trailer for William Friedkin’s The Devil and Father Amorth

Known as the “Dean of Exorcists,” Father Amorth (who was 91 at the time of his death in September 2016) has performed thousands of exorcism rituals to rid evil from the human body.

About two months back we shared the poster for William Friedkin’s new documentary The Devil and Father Amorth with you guys, and today we have the film’s trailer.

The trailer doesn’t give us much to go on, but that’s just how I like it. Tease and intrigue us; don’t give us the entire film in 2-3 minutes. I’m there once this film hits, for sure.

You can give the film’s poster a peek to the right and the trailer below. Then let us know how excited you are about this new doc!

The Orchard will release The Devil and Father Amorth theatrically in New York and Los Angeles on April 20th.

Synopsis:
Years after he changed the landscape of American filmmaking with 1973’s THE EXORCIST, director, co-writer and legendary storyteller William Friedkin moves from fiction to fact with his new documentary, THE DEVIL AND FATHER AMORTH. What began as a brief conversation between Friedkin and Father Gabrielle Amorth – the head Exorcist for the Diocese of Rome for over 30 years – as two professionals who knew of each other’s work soon transformed into a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, as Amorth agreed Friedkin could film an exorcism ceremony. It would be the ninth exorcism for a painfully afflicted woman, Cristina (a pseudonym), who had already been under Father Amorth’s care – and it would be filmed by Friedkin alone, with no other crew allowed, no light other than the natural light in the room and a small digital camera-and-mic unit that could capture the ritual and its revelations.

Combining the startling and singular footage from Cristina’s exorcism with interviews from priests and psychologists, neurosurgeons and non-believers, Friedkin guides us on a journey into the twilight world between the boundaries of what we know and what we don’t with a singular and startling guide in the form of the urbane, charming and self-deprecatingly funny Father Amorth, a man who laughs in the face of the Devil both figuratively and literally. Combining Friedkin’s past memories and present observations with archival footage and new interviews – as well as also presenting what may be the only real exorcism ceremony captured on film – THE DEVIL AND FATHER AMORTH is a startling and surprising story of the religion, the ritual and the real-world victims involved in possession and exorcism.

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