Leslie Odom Jr. Sipa USA

Universal Pictures shells out $400 million for 'Exorcist' trilogy starring Ellen Burstyn, Leslie Odom Jr.

We can't escape The Exorcist.

The New York Times' Brooks Barnes reported Monday (July 26) that Universal Studios partnered with Peacock to purchase a brand new Exorcist trilogy for over $400 million, citing anonymous sources who described the deal as "in the vicinity of the $465 million that Netflix paid in March for two sequels" to Knives Out.

Barnes provided more context:

"Universal is not remaking The Exorcist, which was directed by William Friedkin from a screenplay that William Peter Blatty adapted from his own novel. But the studio will, for the first time, return the Oscar-winning Ms. [Ellen] Burstyn to the franchise. (Two forgettable Exorcist sequels and a prequel were made without her between 1977 and 2004.) Joining her will be Leslie Odom Jr., a Tony winner for Hamilton on Broadway and a double Oscar nominee for One Night in Miami. He will play the father of a possessed child. Desperate for help, he tracks down Ms. Burstyn’s character.

[...]

"The first film in the trilogy is expected to arrive in theaters in late 2023. Under the terms of the deal, the second and third films could debut on Peacock, according to one of the people briefed on the matter."

The Exorcist debuted in 1973 and became an R-rated phenomenon. People couldn't get enough, as evidenced at the box office, when 12-year-old Regan (Linda Blair) was possessed by a demonic force and her actress mother, Chris MacNeil (Burstyn), becomes desperate to help her. 

The supernatural horror thriller earned 10 nominations at the 46th Academy Awards, including best actress for Burstyn and best picture, and won the Oscars for best writing (screenplay based on material from another medium) and best sound.

Exorcist II: The Heretic premiered in 1977, for which Blair reprised her role, followed by Exorcist III (1990) and Exorcist: The Beginning (2004). 

The Exorcist was also reinvented as a television series by the same name. Created by Jeremy Slater, it aired on Fox for two seasons from 2016-18 before it was canceled

More must-reads:

TODAY'S BEST
The most influential movies ever made
20 period pieces you should watch
Longtime ‘SportsCenter’ anchor announces he is leaving ESPN
Second chances: Notable bands and musicians who experienced a career resurgence
The 25 most entertaining horror movies
The 20 concert tours you can't miss in 2024
20 albums turning 50 in 2024
The 20 greatest heist movies
20 movies that should be adapted into musicals
Super Bowl LVIII halftime show takeaways
Brad Pitt shades Eagles while praising Philly superfan Bradley Cooper
The 20 best modern rom-coms
20 performances that thwarted audience expectations
Comedy gold: 20 funny films that won an Oscar
23 actors that need to have a renaissance
The best karaoke songs from the 2020s
20 great movies that didn’t get nominated at the 2024 Oscars
The 25 best movies about high-school sports
The 23 best films of 2023
The 50 best albums of 2023

Want more sports news?

Join the hundreds of thousands of fans who start their day with Yardbarker's Morning Bark, the best newsletter in sports.