The Omen (2006 film)

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The Omen

"The Omen" film poster
Directed by John Moore
Produced by John Moore
Glenn Williamson
Written by David Seltzer (1976 screenplay)
Starring Liev Schreiber
Julia Stiles
Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick
Pete Postlethwaite
Mia Farrow
David Thewlis
Music by Marco Beltrami
Jerry Goldsmith (themes)
Cinematography Jonathan Sela
Editing by Dan Zimmerman
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) June 6, 2006
Running time 110 Minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $25 million
Preceded by Omen IV: The Awakening
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile
Ratings
Argentina:  16
Australia:  MA
Brazil:  16
Canada (BC/SK):  18A
Denmark:  15
Finland:  K-15
France:  -12
Germany:  16
Hong Kong:  IIB
Hungary:  18
Iceland:  16
Ireland:  15A
Italy:  VM14
Malaysia:  18PL
Netherlands:  16
New Zealand:  R16
Norway:  15
Philippines:  R-13
Portugal:  M/16
Singapore:  nc16
South Korea:  18
Sweden:  15
Switzerland:  16
United Kingdom:  15
United States:  R

The Omen (also known as The Omen: 666) is a 2006 American remake of the 1976 horror film The Omen. The film is directed by John Moore and is written by David Seltzer. Principal photography began on October 3, 2005 at Barrandov Studios in Prague, Czech Republic. The film is part of the Omen series.

The Omen was released on June 6, 2006 (6/6/06), at 06:06:06 in the morning. This symbolically represents the number 666, which, traditionally is regarded as the "Number of the Beast," according to the New Testament (this is disputed by several theologians, however).

The MPAA rated this film as R for disturbingly violent content, graphic images, and disturbing sequences.

The Omen opened on a Tuesday in order to be released on June 6, and recorded the highest opening Tuesday box office gross in domestic box office history in the United States, by earning more than $12 million. The film earned $12,633,666 on its first day, with the last three digits ending in the number 666. However, Bruce Snyder, Fox's president of distribution, said, "We were having a little fun" when referring to his studio's manipulation of the box office number's last three digits.[1] The film ended up grossing $119,498,909 worldwide.

The film was released in the US on Region 1 DVD on October 17, 2006.[2] It was released in the UK, on a Region 2 DVD on October 23, 2006.[3] It was released in Australia, on a Region 4 DVD on March 7, 2007.

Contents

Robert Thorn is a senior diplomat in the United States federal government, stationed in Italy. His wife, Katherine, gives birth to their first child, a baby boy who turns out to be a stillbirth. Katherine does not know that her child has died, and Robert is acutely aware that this news would devastate her.

However, the hospital's Catholic priest, Father Spiletto, presents Robert with a way to spare his wife the anguish: another boy was born that night whose mother died during childbirth. Robert is convinced to take the baby as his own and never tell Katherine. They name the boy Damien.

Robert's career ascends over the course of the next five years. He is initially named Deputy Ambassador to the United Kingdom, and when the ambassador dies at 6:06:06 in a bizarre accident where an oil truck is spilled into his limousine and then is ignited when it reaches a cigarette, Robert thus becomes ambassador and the family settles into a large estate just outside London. But disturbing events, all seeming to revolve around Damien, later occur. The most prominent of these is the hanging suicide of Damien's nanny at his birthday party. Soon afterwords, Robert is in his office when his assistant informs him a priest named Father Brennan wishes to speak with him. The priest says a rather eerie warning dealing with his sons birth, at which point Robert has security escort him out. Soon thereafter, a new nanny, Mrs. Baylock, is hired and tells Damien that she's been sent to protect him. Tension between Mrs. Baylock and the Thornes rises when the nanny starts to make decisions against their wishes, including trying to keep Damien from going to church and adopting a large dog without their consent. A trip to the city zoo ends with primates going wild at the sight of the child. Damien himself goes crazy, screaming and screeching during a drive to church. Meanwhile, a series of photographs taken by photographer Keith Jennings foreshadow a number of shocking deaths.

Father Brennan again speaks to Robert, and gives a prophecy saying Damien will kill anyone in his way. Father Brennan is soon killed in a bizzare accident. Katherine discovers she is pregnant but wants to have an abortion because she is afraid to have another child. Shortly after this, Damien is riding his scooter around the second floor of their enormous mansion. He knocks Katherine off the stool she is standing on to water a plant, and she falls off it and over the ledge. She is still barely holding on and begs Damien to help her. He does not and she falls two stories to the rock hard floor, breaking her collar bone and suffering from internal bleeding. Robert rushes to the hospital and is informed that she has lost the baby. Katherine awakens and tearfully begs her husband, "Don't let him kill me." Robert finally becomes suspicious that something is amiss with his son. Fueled by the warnings given to him by Father Brennan and further information from Keith Jennings, Robert and Jennings go in search of Damien's real mother. After meeting a nun in Rome, he discovers that the hospital has burned down. Robert and Jennings go to a monastery and meet Father Spilleto, who tells them where to find Damiens mother. He finds the grave of Maria Avedici Santoya, Damien's real mother, in Chervet, an old cemetery 50 km north of Rome. When they both open the tomb, they discover a carcass of a jackal-like canine. In the neighboring tomb, Robert discovers a corpse of a human infant with a cracked skull. He realizes his real son was not stillborn but was, in fact, murdered that night.

Mrs. Baylock visits Katherine in the hospital under the pretense of delivering flowers. The nanny injects Katherine's IV line with an air bubble, and while struggling, Katherine dies of an embolism. Robert is convinced that Damien is the root of these incidents, and decides to follow Brennans advice and go to Megiddo and meet Bugenhagen. Bugenhagen tells him what Robert has feared all along: Damien is the long-prophesied Antichrist, and therefore must die. Robert Thorn refuses to kill his son at first, but sees a change of mind after Jennings is decapitated by a falling sign after saying that if Robert doesn't kill his son then he will. Robert flies back to his home, finds Damien and cuts off a lock of Damiens hair, and sees a 666 birthmark, and is about to kill Damien by means of stabbing him with the seven Daggers of Megiddo, in the shape of a cross—the only weapons in the world able to harm the Antichrist. Suddenly, he is attacked by Mrs. Baylock. After a fight, he goes to a church to kill him. Unfortunately, just as he is about to strike the blow, Robert is killed by an officer of the Diplomatic Protection Group, attached to and trained by a Specialist Firearms Command team at the instant at which he is reciting the Lord's Prayer with his son struggling beneath him. Damien survives. Damien watches his father's funeral while holding the hand of the President of the United States, who is Robert's Godfather. The last shot of the film shows Damien turning around and smiling in the incredibly evil way which made the initial version of this film famous.

Actor Role
Liev Schreiber Ambassador Robert Thorn
Julia Stiles Katherine Thorn
Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick Damien Thorn
David Thewlis Keith Jennings
Pete Postlethwaite Father Brennan
Mia Farrow Mrs. Baylock

The film currently has received mixed reviews. Andrea Chase from Killer Movie Reviews wrote that the film "lacks the energy of discovery or, you'll pardon the word, revelation. Rather, it feels like a RE-telling just going through the motions and hitting the motifs that we all loved in the original[4]." Joe Utichi from FilmFocus wrote that "Moore's approach fails entirely to capitalise on Damien's creepiness and he might have best been left out entirely; the only adrenaline-pumping moments in the film come from the jump-scares throughout[5]." It received a "two thumbs up" rating from Ebert and Roeper. Empire Magazine gave the movie 3 out of 5 stars and said "Competently made, and enjoyably played. But you do really end up wondering what the point was. Cinematic déjà vu is the most likely response." The film currently stands at 27% rotten on Rotten Tomatoes (85 out of 121 reviews are counted rotten)[6]. It scores a 43 on Metacritic.com meaning it has garnered mixed or average reviews from the critics. Rolling Stone magazine gave it one out of four stars commenting, "Not since Gus Van Sant inexplicably directed a shot-by-shot remake of Hitchcock's Psycho has a thriller been copied with so little point or impact." It has also been nominated for a Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actor (2007) (David Thewlis who has also been nominated for his role in Basic Instinct 2: Risk Addiction (2006)) [7]

  • In a strange event, Pete Postlethwaite (Father Brennan) not only lost his brother while he was filming the movie, but before he passed, his brother was in a card game in which he drew three sixes. Postlethwaite is reluctant to put together a connection, but adds "I think things like that do happen and it's just sometimes we're not sensitised enough to see the problem."[8]
  • It's also reported that during the production a large reel of film negative was destroyed in very suspicious and unusual circumstances. John Moore says on the DVD that the film is certainly cursed, he puts it that there where "way beyond normal film fuck ups"

In the original Damien knocked Katherine over the railings by bumping his tricycle into the chair she was standing on at the time. In this version Damien used his scooter instead.

In the remake, recent events were purported to fulfill Biblical end-time prophesies, such as the crash of the Space Shuttle Columbia, the Indian Ocean tsunami, and the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Before the nanny commits suicide during Damien's birthday party the first dog that the Thorn family encounter is an evil possessed black Alsatian instead of a Rottweiler. Later in the film Robert Thorn then sees a Rottweiler next to where Damien's sleeping as either a stray animal or Mrs. Baylock's pet. What happened to the Alsatian is a mystery.

Two differences in particular involve the deaths of Jennings (David Thewlis) and Katherine Thorn (Julia Stiles). Katherine's death in the original film and book involves her being thrown out of the window by Mrs. Baylock. In the remake, Mrs. Baylock inserts air into her blood tube which blocks the flow of blood to her heart thereby killing her via an air embolism. This very slow and agonizing death could be considered more realistic than that of the original as it causes less suspicion, although this is disputed[9]. The book also states that when Katherine fell from the balcony, Mrs. Baylock lied and said that Katherine had tried to commit suicide and therefore, Katherine's death in the original film and book looks more like suicide.

Jenning's death is interesting for it does not follow Seltzer's novel nor the original film. In the original book, Jennings is killed by a pane of glass dangling from a crane above his head. When he bent down to pick up the knives, the glass would drop and decapitate him "like a guillotine". For the original film, special effects supervisor John Richardson tried several times to achieve the effect, but each time the glass leveled and landed horizontally. Richardson suggested the glass could fly off the back of a truck instead.

In the remake, he is bending down to pick up the knives and the camera shows that on the top of the roof of the house next to Jennings, there are builders working. A hammer slides down the roof, hits a sign fastened to the wall. This sign loosens and falls backwards. As Jennings is standing up, the sign decapitates him from behind. Although it can be argued that this death is similar to Seltzer's original vision, it is still unlike the book and 1976 film version.



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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