When the original version of this film was first released back in the seventies, it was all about the apocalypse. For whatever reason, religious fueled end-times mania was at something of a fever pitch in America. Hal Lindsey had a best selling book, The Late Great Planet Earth, that pretty much spelled it all out. The end was near and the signs were all around us in everything from the rebirth of Israel as a nation to the music of heavy metal rock groups like Black Sabbath and Kiss.
In Lindsey's vision of the end-times (which moved enough copies to make it the best selling book of that particular decade), it was all spelled out clearly in the biblical books of Daniel and Revelation. There was a coming Antichrist who was going to bring about the worst period of tribulation ever known to man, culminating in Armageddon itself.
Hollywood, knowing a good story when it sees one, then took the juiciest elements of that story and turned it into The Omen. Although the original film played somewhat fast and loose with the more biblical elements of that story, it was still a popcorn natural and audiences gobbled it up enough to turn the film into a franchise which spanned four movies.
So what better time for a remake than now? With things like Katrina, Iraq, and the Asian tsunami (all referenced in this remake) firmly etched into our collective consciousness these days, religiously fueled end-times mania has once again hit a fever pitch — this time around reaching to the very levels of the White House itself if you buy into what some political commentators are saying.
The only real difference is that yesterday's Hal Lindsey has become today's Left Behind. The good news is that as supernatural thrillers go, this is still as good a story as it was back in the seventies. And the remake stays pretty true to the original. The only real change (spoiler alert here) is that Kate Thorn actually does die here, rather than coming back to try and save the demon child Damien from being killed by his father.







Article comments
1 - Glen Boyd
Thanx for publishing this Connie.
-Glen
2 - Net
As anyone ever figured out of there being an Omen 5? I was thinking about it. It might be made, but hopefully continue with the Delia storyline, and hopefully make a trilogy from her:
Damien Thorn Trilogy:
The Omen
Damien: Omen II
Omen III: The Final conflict
Delia Thorn Trilogy
Omen IV: The Awakening
Omen V: The Goreining
Omen VI: The Enternal