Review by Rocky Balboa
Exploitation
producers used to come up with a title and a poster
and then, as an afterthought, the movie. The folks
who devised the remake of The Omen may actually have
gone them one better: Their starting point might almost
have been the release date (6/6/06). Which, if so,
renders the movie a very expensive afterthought. The
new Omen is slavishly faithful to the 1976 original,
which means that we get the same salivating jackal
and owl-eyed cherubic Damien, the same slow-moving,
heavy-lidded atmosphere of liturgical Catholic gloom,
the same Rube Goldberg impalings and decapitations,
the same schlock rehash of The Exorcist, which was
itself already a sensationalist reduction of Rosemary's
Baby.
There's one moment that achieves the camp shiver
of the original, when Damien's nanny hangs herself
at his birthday party (''Damien, it's all for you!'').
But the kid himself, played by Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick,
doesn't look evil enough; he's too passive to be a
devious contemporary child. Mia Farrow, as the sinister
new nanny, makes her glazed spaciness work for once,
but it's almost touching to see Liev Schreiber, as
Damien's ambassador father, and Julia Stiles, as the
mother who thinks she gave birth to him (in fact,
he came from the Satanic Adoption Agency), neuter
their personalities in homage to the solemn wooden
acting of the original. I confess that I jumped in
fright at the shock cuts of devil heads punctuated
by electric screams. The rest of the time, I felt
like I was seeing The Da Vinci Code with slightly
shadier priests.