Untitled The Exorcist film
Upcoming film by Mike Flanagan
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The untitled The Exorcist film is an upcoming American supernatural horror film written and directed by Mike Flanagan. It is the seventh film in The Exorcist franchise. Jason Blum serves as a producer on the film through his Blumhouse Productions banner, alongside Atomic Monster, David Robinson through his Morgan Creek Entertainment banner, and Flanagan through his Red Room Pictures banner. It stars Scarlett Johansson, Diane Lane, Jacobi Jupe, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Laurence Fishburne, Sasha Calle, John Leguizamo, Hamish Linklater, Carl Lumbly, John Gallagher Jr., Benjamin Pajak, and Carla Gugino.
by William Peter Blatty
- Jason Blum
- David Robinson
- Mike Flanagan
| Untitled The Exorcist film | |
|---|---|
| Directed by | Mike Flanagan |
| Written by | Mike Flanagan |
| Based on | Characters by William Peter Blatty |
| Produced by |
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| Starring | |
| Cinematography | Michael Fimognari |
Production companies |
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| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
Release date |
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| Country | United States |
| Language | English |
Prior to the project's announcement, a sequel was planned for The Exorcist: Believer (2023) entitled The Exorcist: Deceiver, with David Gordon Green originally set to return as director, but left the project following the critical failure and box office disappointment of Believer. In May 2024, Deceiver and its sequel were officially canceled when the new film was announced.
The film is scheduled to be released on March 12, 2027, by Universal Pictures.
Premise
A rookie detective, trying to prove her worth, finds herself immersed in an unimaginable evil that shakes everything she believes in.
Cast
Production
Development
Initial work as Deceiver
In July 2021, two sequels to The Exorcist: Believer (2023) were confirmed to be in development with the same creative team of David Gordon Green, Danny McBride, Peter Sattler, and Scott Teems on board.[1][2][3] Two years later, Universal Pictures announced that the first sequel would be titled The Exorcist: Deceiver.[4] After the poor reception of Believer, sources from The Hollywood Reporter claimed there would almost certainly be some degree of creative re-think for the next two films and that Green recently expressed some doubt about his participation.[5] In January 2024, Green stepped down from Deceiver and the film was removed from the release schedule shortly after.[6]
New work as franchise reboot

In May 2024, it was announced that Mike Flanagan was in talks to direct the next The Exorcist film.[7] Later that month, Flanagan was confirmed to be directing a new Exorcist film as a reboot with plans for Deceiver and its sequel being scrapped following Believer's critical and commercial failure.[8][9][10] While promoting The Life of Chuck (2024) months later, Flanagan described that he was only going into the franchise due to feeling there was something new he could bring to the franchise, noting he had been "very agressively" chasing the job due to being convinced he had something to add, seeing an opportunity to do something that had never been done within the franchise, honoring what had come before but without building it on nostalgia. He thus saw a chance to make the scariest film he had ever made despite knowing how high the expectations would be and no one but him being more intimidated with such prospect.[11]
In June 2025, Flanagan revealed in a Tumblr post that the film was not going to begin production until after he finished work on the 2026 miniseries adaptation of Carrie (1974) and that there was "no way it's coming out next March."[12][13] In November 2025, Scarlett Johansson joined the film in the lead role, as well as Atomic Monster joining the production team.[14] In December 2025, Jeff Sneider reported that Johansson's commitments to the film had been adjusted to accommodate the schedule of The Batman: Part II (2027), for which she had entered negotiations to discuss an undisclosed role she was "aggressively" pursuing.[15] That same month, Jacobi Jupe joined the cast.[16] In January 2026, Diane Lane joined the cast.[17] In February 2026, Chiwetel Ejiofor and Laurence Fishburne joined the cast,[18][19] with sources indicating Ejiofor would play an "ex-con turned priest" whereas Johansson would play the mother of Jupe's character.[11] Sasha Calle and John Leguizamo would be added to the cast in March,[20][21] alongside Rahul Kohli, Hamish Linklater, Gil Bellows, Carl Lumbly, John Gallagher Jr., Benjamin Pajak, Carla Gugino, Robert Longstreet, Matt Biedel, Samantha Sloyan and Kate Siegel, all eleven frequent collaborators of Flanagan.[22]
Filming
Principal photography began in New York City on March 13, 2026, with Michael Fimognari serving as the cinematographer.[23]
Release
The film is scheduled to be released in the United States on March 12, 2027 by Universal Pictures.[24] It was previously scheduled to be released on April 18, 2025,[4] and March 13, 2026,[25] before being removed from Universal's release schedule in June 2025.[13]