Omen IV: The Awakening

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Omen IV: The Awakening

Omen IV: The Awakening DVD cover
Directed by Jorge Montesi
Dominique Othenin-Girard
Produced by Harvey Bernhard
Mace Neufeld
Written by David Seltzer (characters)
Harvey Bernhard
Brian Taggert
Starring Faye Grant
Michael Woods
Asia Vieira
Music by Jonathan Sheffer
Jerry Goldsmith
Cinematography Martin Fuhrer
Editing by Bruce Giesbrecht
Frank Irvine
Distributed by Fox Video
20th Century Fox
Release date(s) May 20, 1991
Running time 97 min.
Country United States
Language English
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Omen IV: The Awakening is a 1991 TV-movie, straight-to-home video release, and sequel to the Omen franchise, directed by Jorge Montesi and Dominique Othenin-Girard. It is not considered to be canon with the Omen series.[citation needed]

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The story centres around a young girl of mysterious origins called Delia (Asia Vieira), who is adopted by two attorneys, Gene (Michael Woods) and Karen York (Faye Grant). At first, nothing seems wrong. But Jo, their nanny with remarkable psychic powers, begins to reveal aspects of Delia's personality that become very, very suspicious. Jo reveals part of her worries to Karen, as well as to Noah, Jo's partner. When meditating with Delia to help her discover why Delia has such trouble, bringing negative energy everywhere she goes, Jo is murdered. Alarmed and suspicious of her adoptive daughter's mysterious birth, Karen hires a private investigator to seek out the identities of Delia's real parents. What follows is a string of bizarre accidents, resulting in Karen falling into a paranoid state as she fears people are conspiring against her as she tries to reveal her daughter's true identity. It is eventually revealed that Delia is the daughter of Damien Thorn, the Anti-Christ, thus the granddaughter of Satan. What's worse, Karen's pregnancy increases her feelings of paranoia around Delia. After delivering her son Karen finally sets out for the truth about Delia, and finds out that the Anti-Christ is not Delia but her step brother, whose embryo was implanted into Karen; she has just given birth to Delia's biological brother, the son of Damien. After killing the doctor, she heads home and tries to kill Delia and her baby, the 666 symbol shown directly on his palm. At first we can't tell who was shot because the camera pans out into view of the house. At the end it shows that Karen shot herself instead.

Spoilers end here.

The movie has been considered a flop by both Omen fans and movie goers alike. A significant continuity problem is that, in Omen III: The Final Conflict, Jesus Christ is reborn and the final scene of the film appears to show the beginning of the Revelation, where Christ will judge mankind. However, in Omen IV (set 10 years later) there is no evidence of this Second Coming. The film was also judged by many to have gone wrong, because it is claimed in the first film and novel that the antichrist would be born of a jackal but in this film the antichrist was born of Karen.

This was intentinally to be the first of many TV sequels to Twentieth Century Fox's film history of popular titles. Producer Harvey Bernhard, who produced the last three films, felt there could be more done to the series as many fans thought the third film's climax was anticlimatic. This was the last film he has produced. This was also his first and only time he co-wrote a film.


The Omen Series

Original Films
The Omen | Damien: Omen II | Omen III: The Final Conflict
Remakes
The Omen (2006)
Other films
Omen IV: The Awakening
Characters
Damien Thorn

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