Film Review
The extraordinary success of Roman Polanski's
Rosemary's
Baby (1968) and William Friedkin's
The
Exorcist (1973) gave rise to a new sub-genre of horror in
the mid-seventies involving the unholy triumvirate of Satanism,
diabolical possession and really freaky children who just can't help
killing people. Thankfully, many of these cinematic abominations
have been forgotten but a few have stood the test of time, and the
first film in the original
Omen trilogy
is probably the best of the bunch.
Whilst it is nowhere near as frightening as
The Exorcist,
The Omen offers a satisfying blend
of creepiness and thriller suspense, even if it does veer towards the
blatantly ridiculous at times. The supreme silliness of the
plot is trumped by the unintentionally hilarious dialogue which
includes such gems as the Treaty of Rome (i.e. the creation of the
European Union) being interpreted as the fulfilment of the prophecy in
the Book of Revelations (the Euro-sceptics will enjoy that one).
The more times you watch the film, the sillier it becomes, and that's
probably the main reason for its enduring popularity.
For a film that is marred by such a daft plot and even dafter dialogue,
The Omen is surprisingly
compelling. This is almost entirely down to the performances of
its two star actors, Gregory Peck and Lee Remick, and some magnificent
support from the likes of Billie Whitelaw (the scariest nanny since
Bette Davis) and Patrick Troughton (funnier than he ever was as Dr
Who). There is very little explicit horror in the film, although
the few shocks it does offer (such as a nasty impaling and an even
nastier decapitation) are very effective, without resorting to the gore
splattered let's-hack-of-every-limb excesses which today's
filmmakers reckon to be so essential to their art.
Following the success of
The Omen
there came two inferior sequels,
Damien: Omen II (1978) and
The Final
Conflict (1981), which fail spectacularly to fulfil the promise
of the first film. Originally, the series was to consist of
four films, but after the disappointing second entry, the producers got
cold feet and hastened Damien's inevitable demise (and a good thing
too). John More directed a rather pointless remake of
The Omen, which was cheekily
released on 6th June 2006 and is nowhere near as much fun as the
original.
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
When his son dies in childbirth, the wealthy American politician Robert
Thorn agrees to adopt another child in its place, to spare his wife
Katherine grief. With Thorn newly appointed ambassador to Great
Britain, the couple settle in England with their adopted son, Damien
and lead a perfectly happy life. Then, on Damien's fifth birthday
the problems begin. Not long after the child's nanny has hanged
herself, Thorn is visited by a strange Catholic priest, Father Brennanm
who insists that Damien is the Antichrist and must be destroyed.
Thorn dismisses this as the fantasy of a madman but has second thoughts
when Brennan accurately predicts that Katherine is pregnant and will
lose her child through Damien's intervention. Teaming up with a
photographer, Thorn returns to Rome, where Damien was born, to try to
uncover the true identity of his adopted child. He soon has no
doubt that Damien is indeed the child of Satan, but will he be able to
bring himself to kill him?
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.