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Col. Vincent Kane (Stacy Keach) is a military psychiatrist who takes charge of an army mental hospital situated in a secluded castle. There he attempts to rehabilitate them by allowing them to live out their crazy fantasies while combating his own long-suppressed insanity.
















6 August 1936, Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA

12 February 1940, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA

2 October 1929, St. Louis, Missouri, USA

22 April 1939, Long Island City, New York, USA

29 December 1934, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA


10 July 1930, Calgary, Alberta, Canada




2 June 1941, Savannah, Georgia, USA


17 June 1941, Vicksburg, Michigan, USA

13 August 1920, Griswold, Iowa, USA

15 May 1929, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA

21 October 1950, Metairie, Louisiana, USA

8 February 1930, Buenos Aires, Argentina


13 November 1935, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

1939

28 October 1936, New York City, New York, USA

3 January 1930, Staten Island, New York, USA

27 October 1937, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

29 March 1942, Atlanta, Georgia, USA

21 April 1940, New Haven, Connecticut, USA




December 29, 2002
Brilliant, funny, moving examination of faith from Blatty.
February 09, 2015
Obtuse thriller.
January 24, 2005
unusual dark comedy, with stacy keach at his best.
April 26, 2016
A resolutely offbeat film which offers a richly rewarding and affecting viewing experience if you're willing to embrace it's esoteric flourishes.
June 30, 2003
At its worst, it is supposed to be profound; at its best it's amusing
July 15, 2002
An allegory that's so impossibly overstuffed that it can't help but explode
April 25, 2016
Like the Gothic castle (festooned with gargoyles, crucifixes and posters of Bela Lugosi) in which The Ninth Configuration is predominantly set, Blatty's film is something of a grand folly, by turns uproariously funny and deadly serious....
March 18, 2003
Should be the centerpiece of a Stacy Keach shrine somewhere . . . should one ever be erected.