Devil's Exorcist
Devil's Exorcist
| 01 January 1975 (USA)
Devil's Exorcist Trailers

Teresita, the only daughter to a wealthy couple, begins to be troubled by loud sounds and visions of a tall man in black walking towards her menacingly. Soon she becomes plagued by strange physical symptoms, visions of arms extending from the walls to grab at her...and sometimes she gets violent. A priest is called in to try and wrench the devil from her body.

Reviews
Hellen I like the storyline of this show,it attract me so much
BroadcastChic Excellent, a Must See
Rio Hayward All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.
Erica Derrick By the time the dramatic fireworks start popping off, each one feels earned.
lazarillo I'm somewhat of a completist when it comes to European "Exorcist" knock-offs--I've seen at least a dozen of them. This Spanish film is probably closer to the original model than most of the others (but, of course, on a small fraction of the budget of the Hollywood film and nowhere near as effective). The only real thematic differences between this and the American model is that the girl doesn't seem to be possessed by a demon at all, but rather some kind of tall, evil (perhaps hanged?) priest she keeps seeing creepy visions of, and she actually murders people on screen, like her own mother (in a scene that if this movie hadn't been made a year or two earlier, I'd swear was stolen from "The Omen"--maybe "The Omen" ripped-off THIS movie?). The end also takes a pretty different turn.I saw this mainly for Jack Taylor, but he is pretty much wasted. The main strength though is the possessed girl, played by Inma DeSantis, who actually out-acts her American counterpart Linda Blair and pretty much carries the whole movie herself. The most famous Spanish "Exorcist" knock-off, "Demon Witch Child," has a very creepy pre-pubescent girl as the possess-ee, but the more typical Euro-"Exorcist" m.o. was to cast a "barely legal" teen or adult woman in the role in order to throw in lots and lots of sex (see "The Antichrist", "Malabimba", "The Sexorcist", etc.). This movie kind of tries to have it both ways by casting a pretty but nevertheless slightly underage actress, dressing her in bikinis and skimpy night-gowns, and leering at her a lot, but never actually crossing into anything too overtly sexual. DeSantis would actually have a much racier role only a year later in Eloy Inglesias's notorious "Forbidden Love Games", and she'd go on to an pretty interesting career, but one tragically cut short by a fatal car accident in 1989.I personally LOVE Euro-"Exorcist" films, even the really bad ones (this one just tends toward mediocre). I'd certainly recommend this to people like myself (hello? . . hello?), but it obviously won't appeal to everyone.
HumanoidOfFlesh Teresita is the only daughter of a rich couple.A beautiful teenage girl is troubled by an unsettling visions of a tall man clad in black.She sees arms extending from the pool and walls ala "The Sentinel".Her mother is mysteriously murdered by her own daughter.The only way to destroy the devil inside Teresita is to call a priest.But it's too late for that."Devil's Exorcist" is an obscure Spanish clone of "The Exorcist" with some striking moments of suspense.The tall man dressed in black clearly reminds me more famous Tall Man from "Phantasm" series.Director Jorge Darnell doesn't display much of a visual sense preferring to keep things in stale medium and long-shots before breaking to close-ups for the final nihilistic shots.Fairly competent and watchable "The Exorcist" rip-off.8 out of 10.