Four years after her possession, a 16-year-old ( Linda Blair ) lives in New York, claiming to remember nothing of the events in D.C. [17]. She undergoes therapy with Dr. Gene Tuskin (Louise Fletcher), who uses a biofeedback device called "the Synchronizer" to link minds [9, 20]. Meanwhile, Father Philip Lamont (Richard Burton) is tasked by the Church to investigate the death of Father Merrin [9]. His journey takes him from New York to Africa to track down Kokumo (James Earl Jones), a man who also survived the demon Pazuzu years prior [9]. Key Characters
Unlike the first film's grounded realism, The Heretic features surreal imagery , including telepathic mind-links, swarms of locusts, and African landscapes [2, 6, 21]. Exorcist 2: The Heretic
Now a vibrant but repressed teenager whose psychic potential makes her a target for evil [17, 21]. Four years after her possession, a 16-year-old (
Prepare for many scenes involving pulsing lights and headgear used for "mind-probing" [9, 21]. Gene Tuskin (Louise Fletcher), who uses a biofeedback
Exorcist II: The Heretic (1977) is often cited as one of the most polarizing and critically panned sequels in cinematic history. Directed by John Boorman, it shifts away from the visceral horror of the original into a metaphysical, science-fiction-tinged narrative .