Why The Exorcist Was Banned in Several Countries—The Controversial Details Explained! (Photo Credit – Facebook)

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Horror movies are no strangers to scandal, but The Exorcist? It practically invented it. William Friedkin’s 1973 shocker set new standards for controversy, sending waves through theaters worldwide. With the story of a young girl possessed by a demonic force, the film’s shocking content stirred enough outrage to get it banned in parts of the U.K. That move only fueled its forbidden appeal, helping it rocket to box-office superstardom.

Unlike any horror film, The Exorcist played up the drama, diving into themes that religious groups considered beyond offensive. The producers knew the storm they were wading into and leaned into it. Playing off its reputation, it excited the marketing by encouraging stories of people fainting and even suffering heart attacks in the theater. Audiences were both captivated and horrified, and the film quickly amassed a cult following, grossing over $400 million—$2.4 billion if adjusted for today’s inflation.

It wasn’t just the gore and terror that made The Exorcist so divisive, though. It arrived when movies were beginning to test the limits of censorship. The Hays Code, a stringent set of content guidelines, had been abolished only five years earlier in 1968, giving films like The Godfather and A Clockwork Orange the green light to push boundaries. British audiences, in particular, felt the shock of this new wave of unrestricted content. For them, The Exorcist wasn’t just a movie—it was a full-scale cultural tremor.

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