The Last Exorcism
Directed by: Daniel Stamm
Written by: Huck Botko, Andrew Gurland
Starring: Patrick Fabian, Ashley Bell, Caleb Landry Jones
Release Date: August 27, 2010
The Last Exorcism (2010) is one of the smartest and most terrifying found footage horror films ever made. Directed by Daniel Stamm and produced by Eli Roth, it blends skepticism, faith, and genuine fear into a masterclass of suspense.
A Found Footage Exorcism That Actually Works
Daniel Stamm’s The Last Exorcism is a phenomenal achievement in horror filmmaking — a rare movie that finds genuine terror through character, psychology, and belief rather than cheap shocks. This faux-documentary throwback to The Blair Witch Project mixes horror and suspense with supreme skill.
The film is smart, funny, unnerving, and unexpectedly emotional, anchored by Patrick Fabian’s remarkable lead performance as a preacher who’s lost his faith but not his showmanship.
The Faithless Preacher and the Filmmakers Who Follow Him
Reverend Cotton Marcus (Fabian) has been a preacher since childhood. Having performed exorcisms alongside his father from a young age, he now faces a crisis of belief. When a documentary crew led by Iris (Iris Bahr) asks to film him debunking exorcisms, Cotton agrees — confident he can expose possession as nothing more than theater and psychology.
Cotton’s method is part faith healing, part stage magic. He creates the illusion of demonic possession and then “casts out” the demon through tricks and suggestion, giving believers a sense of relief and control.
This time, though, the crew follows him deep into rural Louisiana to help 16-year-old Nell Sweetzer (Ashley Bell). Her father Louis (Louis Herthum) believes she’s possessed — livestock are being slaughtered, and Nell wakes up covered in blood. Her brother Caleb (Caleb Landry Jones) warns the outsiders to leave. The deeper they go, the more the lines between hoax and horror begin to blur.
Building Real Suspense in the Age of Jump Scares
The Last Exorcism is masterful in its restraint. Stamm and screenwriters Huck Botko and Andrew Gurland understand that the best horror lives in anticipation — not just in the payoff. The faux-documentary style grounds everything in realism, with the shaky-cam aesthetic pulling us closer to the action without feeling exploitative.
Instead of cheap tricks, the film earns its scares through timing and tone. When something truly frightening happens, it lands with double the force because the movie has earned our belief.
Patrick Fabian Delivers a Career-Defining Performance
Patrick Fabian’s Reverend Cotton Marcus might be the most compelling horror protagonist of the 2010s. His charm, skepticism, and gradual unraveling make him both a skeptic’s hero and a believer’s worst nightmare.
His performance is the perfect misdirection — a confident con man slowly discovering he might be wrong. Fabian carries the film with charisma and sincerity, while Ashley Bell’s physical performance as Nell is nothing short of astonishing. She makes you question everything you think you’re seeing.
Character Before Carnage
Producer Eli Roth may be known for gore-heavy horror, but The Last Exorcism takes a different path. There’s no “Piranha 3D” chaos here — just believable, sympathetic characters placed in real danger. Daniel Stamm’s direction never prioritizes spectacle over empathy.
The horror works because we care about these people. Their confusion, their faith, and their fear feel authentic. When the terror comes, it isn’t about body count — it’s about conviction.
Final Verdict
I could go on for pages about how clever, scary, and deeply human The Last Exorcism is. With its grounded performances, ingenious storytelling, and masterful tone, this isn’t just one of the best horror films of 2010 — it was one of the best films of 2010, period.
It’s smart, chilling, and unforgettable — the kind of horror that lingers not because of what you see, but because of what you believe.
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 — A Found Footage Classic That Still Possesses Power.