Skip to main content

My Best Friend’s Exorcism review: Fighting mean girls (and meaner demons)

Elsie Fisher and Amiah Miller sit on a bed in a scene from My Best Friend's Exorcism.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The teenage years can be scary, even without the threat of demonic possession. Throw a sinister supernatural element into the mix, and the experience becomes, well … only slightly more terrifying, actually.

Recommended Videos

That’s one takeaway from director Damon Thomas’ My Best Friend’s Exorcism, which delivers a scary-fun paranormal thriller filtered through a coming-of-age drama about two teenage girls in the 1980s whose lifelong friendship is threatened when one of them becomes the unwilling host of an infernal entity. That this supernatural encounter occurs while the girls are navigating young adulthood turns the typical social hellscape of high school into something more sinister, and tests their friendship in unexpected and terrifying ways.

A group of girls gathers around a Ouija board in My Best Friend's Exorcism.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Penned by screenwriter Jenna Lamia (Good Girls) and based on the novel of the same name by Grady Hendrix, My Best Friend’s Exorcism casts Elsie Fisher (Eighth Grade) and Amiah Miller (War for the Planet of the Apes) as Abby and Gretchen, respectively, best friends whose bond was already being tested by their final year of high school before a demon named Andras decided to invade Gretchen’s body. Abby’s attempts to save her friend are complicated by the surprisingly similar ways the average teenager and malevolent demons tend to act, leaving her struggling to convince anyone of Gretchen’s supernatural plight.

My Best Friend’s Exorcism works well on a few different levels. On one hand, it offers a clever, straight-up juxtaposition between the frightening ordeal of one’s teenage years and the only-a-little-more-terrifying experience of battling a demon from hell for your best friend’s soul. Below the surface, though, it explores the way our confusing thoughts and emotions and unconscious drives can make every moment of our teenage years feel like a fight for survival, and the way a close friend can be our lifeline when things seem impossibly dire.

It’s also a funny story about mean girls and even meaner imps from hell, too.

Elsie Fisher and Amiah Miller sit on a bed in a scene from My Best Friend's Exorcism.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

My Best Friend’s Exorcism can be funny, frightening, depressing, or uplifting from moment to moment, depending on which aspects of Abby and Gretchen’s experiences you connect with, but the film never dives too deeply into that pool of emotions.

While it delivers some decent scares and clever humor, My Best Friend’s Exorcism seems content to occupy the happy medium between the various genres it pulls from. Thomas makes good use of the talented young cast and Lamia’s script keeps things entertaining and compelling, without offering many surprises.

Fisher and Miller have a great chemistry as friends whose lives feel inextricably intertwined, and Miller does a great job of selling her demonic possession — particularly when it’s so easily disguised as garden-variety teenage apathy. Fisher has a knack for channeling the awkwardness of adolescence, too, and finds just the right balance between shy wallflower and scream queen as Abby’s world suddenly becomes even more surreal and scary than she ever anticipated.

In a relatively brief supporting role, GLOW actor Christopher Lowell is also fun to watch as a bumbling, overconfident, Jesus-loving meathead who Abby turns to for help, and he makes for an entertaining counterpoint to Abby’s raging insecurity.

Elsie Fisher walks through a creepy house in a scene from My Best Friend's Exorcism.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Never too scary or too dark, and never too silly or biting with its humor, My Best Friend’s Exorcism is a film that neither overreaches nor oversells its premise. Its story of two teenage friends battling a demon can be as simple as that, or it can be a narrative filled with underlying metaphors and themes that make an otherwise straightforward premise something deeper. Whatever way you choose to approach it, it’s a smart, satisfying scary story.

Directed by Damon Thomas, My Best Friend’s Exorcism will be available to stream September 30 on Prime Video.

My Best Friend's Exorcism (2022)

My Best Friend's Exorcism
96m
Genre
Horror, Comedy
Stars
Elsie Fisher, Amiah Miller, Cathy Ang
Directed by
Damon Thomas
Watch on Amazon
Movie images and data from:
Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
3 best rom-coms of 2023 so far
Two men are covered in cake in Red, White & Royal Blue.

The romantic comedy is not what it used to be. The genre used to be a regular feature at the box office, and we could almost always count on getting at least one good one a year.

While that may no longer be the case, that doesn’t mean that the genre is totally dead, as 2023 has produced a couple of well-above-average rom-coms. We highlight the three best from the year so far below: 
Rye Lane (2023)
Rye Lane | Official Trailer | Hulu

Read more
My Best Friend’s Exorcism takes horror comedy back to the 1980s
Amiah Miller in My Best Friend’s Exorcism.

For those of us who lived through the '80s, the fun times with pop culture were occasionally marred by episodes of satanic panic. Would you be surprised to hear that some people really thought that Dungeons and Dragons and Metallica were gateways to the occult? Prime Video's upcoming horror comedy, My Best Friend’s Exorcism, takes us back to those gloriously goofy days. But the possession of Gretchen Lang is all too real, and the demon within her keeps getting more and more control of her body.

My Best Friend’s Exorcism - Official Trailer | Prime Video

Read more
I Love My Dad review: Patton Oswalt in a catfish cringe comedy
Patton Oswalt looks at James Morosini in a car in I Love My Dad.

“The following actually happened,” insists the epigraph of I Love My Dad. For laughs and good measure, more words follow: “My dad asked me to tell you it didn’t.” Veracity is one major hook of this tenderly awkward cringe comedy from writer-director-star James Morosini, which tells a true story of such deeply misguided, debatably well-meaning parental deception that it being true only compounds the queasy fascination. Of course, the promise that everything you’re seeing is based on real events is also an invisible shield, isn’t it? No matter how much fictionalizing has taken place, stamping a story as true helps deflect any potential complaints about elements that ring false or might otherwise inspire skepticism. And I Love My Dad has a few of those.

To hear Morosini tell it, he was 19 years old when he fell for an elaborate internet ruse. The culprit: his father, dubbed Chuck here and played by the stand-up comic Patton Oswalt. At the start of the film, Franklin (Morosini as a younger version of himself) has grown so fed up with Chuck’s lies and excuses and general deadbeat inability to be where he promises he’ll be that he’s completely cut his divorced dad out of his life, blocking all methods of phone and social media contact.

Read more