The Omen follows a fairly simple plot. The story begins when father-to-be, Mr. Thorn, receives an emergency phone call about "complications during childbirth." After rushing to the hospital he learns that the child didn’t make it and young Mrs. Thorn was injured during labor and will not be able to have another child. Mrs. Thorn has not been informed and the Mr. Thorn is presented with a choice. Tell his wife the truth, crush her hopes of raising a family, and remain a childless couple. Or… adopt an orphaned son born only moments ago, raise the boy as his own, and never tell the wife a thing. They say the road to hell is paved with the best intentions. Apparently, the road to hell spawn is made from similar stuff. Events begin to unfold which lead Mr. Thorn to suspect his surrogate child, Damien, is actually evil incarnate.
Sound similar to the original? It is. Exactly. Well, 97.5% anyway. This Hollywood remake isn’t the typical retelling, revision, revamp, or rework that I’ve become accustomed to recently. Movies like the recent King Kong and War of the Worlds stay extremely faithful to the source material while adding a bit of action here and removing a bit of cheese there. However, The Omen is quite literally a remake. As in “To make again.” As in “Why bother?”








Article comments
1 - Neil Miller
This is a great review, Jarvis!