It's a cultural curiousity that, despite the much-ballyhooed presence of Jewish voices in American cinema; you don't actually see many mainstream movies mining the religious arcana of Judaism the way Catholicism or even Paganism are used by, for example, supernatural films. In fact, most non-Jewish U.S. audience probably couldn't tell you much about the actual faith beyond kosher diets and a lack of Jesus.
You can probably chalk most of this up to history - many Jewish-American families descend from immigrants who escaped persecution in Europe and elsewhere, and "blending in" to a mainstream culture by downplaying the more pronounced differences between their own culture and Christianity was likely an old survival-habit that died hard.
In any case, what this means is that even though there are traditions of dealing with supernatural forces and even exorcism that are unique to Judaism; they're rarely used as movie-fodder like the by-now humdrum Christian variety is. "The Possession" (formerly "The Dybbuk Box",) is a pickup by Sam Raimi's Ghosthouse production label that aims to change this with the story of a young girl whose parents seek out a Rabbinical exorcist to rid her of a possessing demon called a Dybbuk:
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