Leave it to televangelist Pat Robertson to answer the questions everyone’s asking. Or one crazy person, anyway.
During today’s episode of The 700 Club, a viewer asked whether babies could be demon-possessed.
The correct answer is “No.”
Robertson’s answer was… not that. (follow link for video)
Oh, is this Religious Zombie still alive and kicking?
Someone, anyone PLEASE euthanise this dribbling Horror asap for the sake of ALL Human kind.
How is he still alive? That piece of garbage has to be 200 years old
Seems like the evil live forever.
I hope Pat gets covid and goes to meet his god.
And the sooner the better imo.
Cancer would be better.
I just have this vision of Pat wandering around in the dark for all of eternity alone calling "God. God. Where are you?"
I remember Patty McCormack as the "Bad Seed"
That is STILL one creepy movie!
@The-Krzyz I enjoyed both movies. They were different and each had their own good points. However "The Bad Seed" was definitely the better of the two. However, I think if people had never seen "The Bad Seed", then "The Good Son" would have had a better reception. It was a good movie, but just not as good as the original, and it took the child actor from "Home Alone" to play a very dark and evil character, and people tend to like their actors to play similar characters. "The Good Son" wasn't the cute shild from Home Alone, and viewers felt betrayed.
However, I think it shows a range for Macaulay Culkin, and shows he isn't just a cute kid but a good actor.
@snytiger6 It’s been a few years since my last viewing of “Bad Seed,” but I found the most memorable — and tragically complex — character, and the best performance, was that delivered by Nancy Kelley as the mother. Won her a Tony on stage an an Oscar nod from the Academy for the film. Hauntingly intense!
The Bad Seed was and still is a masterpiece.
Although it worked well for the time, today, people generally understand that psychopathy is not really a inherited trait. For the same reason, the comedy "Arsenic and Old Lace" wouldn't be as well received today either, because of the same faulty premise of insanity being inherited.