Bing Search

The Omen

:

Critics' Reviews

Our critic says...
Metascore
®
43
Mixed or Average Reviews
out of 100
'The Omen' an Effective Remake
By John Hartl, Film critic, MSNBC

Maybe the key to the remake business is to hire the original writer. David Seltzer got sole screen credit for creating the 1976 Gregory Peck/Lee Remick horror hit, "The Omen." And he gets full credit for the unusually efficient current remake starring Liev Schreiber and Julia Stiles as reluctant parents of the Antichrist.

The new rehash so slavishly follows the script for the first film that you can be assured that all your favorite shock moments will be revisited, if not in quite the same way you remember. The beheading episode has been ingeniously restaged, the nanny's suicide still shocks (especially her final line), and there are several jump-out-of-your-seat moments engineered by the film's clever director-producer, John Moore (who also remade "Flight of the Phoenix").

As a religious thriller, this new "Omen" has it all over "The Da Vinci Code." The tension level is consistent, the discussions of faith and belief never drag on unnecessarily, and Seltzer and Moore know how to make the Biblical references resonate. The finale, which carries unmistakable echoes of Abraham's attempted sacrifice of Isaac, still has unexpected power.

What's missing is the star chemistry Peck and Remick brought to the original. Schreiber and Stiles rarely connect as a couple, and Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick barely registers as their evil son, Damien — but you can't have everything. Besides, the supporting cast is unusually classy. Billie Whitelaw's ferociously evil nanny has been replaced by the more subtle Mia Farrow, who knows something about birthing devil babies. She was the mother of one herself in "Rosemary's Baby," and in a way this role is a fulfillment of that earlier performance.

Pete Postlethwaite brings an Old Testament conviction to the role of a priest who warns Schreiber that his family is in danger. David Thewlis is believably grounded as a photographer who finds himself flirting with the occult. And Michael Gambon is appropriately dotty as a religious fanatic who scares off Schreiber's politically savvy character: an American diplomat who's been sent to Europe.

What drives both versions of "The Omen" is the horrifying transformation of a rational public figure who gradually becomes convinced that his son is, quite literally, the Antichrist and must be destroyed. Peck suggested a parent in agonized conflict with his darkest impulses, and Schreiber does much the same. The story concept may be trash, but the feelings are genuine. You end up wondering what you would do if you were similarly tested.

The major change here is context. Whereas the 1976 original had to generate apocalyptic foreboding without making references to the European Union, Saudi Arabia and the Sept. 11 attacks, the remake can't resist plugging all this stuff into its lineup of Armageddon prophecies.

The result sometimes suggests a hysterical update of "The Late Great Planet Earth," Hal Lindsey's best-seller based on his interpretation of the Book of Revelation. But even if you can't buy the premise, try to suspend disbelief for a couple of hours and you'll find "The Omen" an effective thriller.

More movies on MSNBC 

Maybe the key to the remake business is to hire the original writer. David Seltzer got sole screen credit for creating the 1976 Gregory Peck/Lee Remick horror hit, "The Omen." And he gets full credit for the unusually efficient current remake starring Liev Schreiber and Julia Stiles as reluctant parents of the Antichrist.

The new rehash so slavishly follows the script for the first film that you can be assured that all your favorite shock moments will be revisited, if not in quite the same way you remember. The beheading episode has been ingeniously restaged, the nanny's suicide still shocks (especially her final line), and there are several jump-out-of-your-seat moments engineered by the film's clever director-producer, John Moore (who also remade "Flight of the Phoenix").

As a religious thriller, this new "Omen" has it all over "The Da Vinci Code." The tension level is consistent, the discussions of faith and belief never drag on unnecessarily, and Seltzer and Moore know how to make the Biblical references resonate. The finale, which carries unmistakable echoes of Abraham's attempted sacrifice of Isaac, still has unexpected power.

What's missing is the star chemistry Peck and Remick brought to the original. Schreiber and Stiles rarely connect as a couple, and Seamus Davey-Fitzpatrick barely registers as their evil son, Damien — but you can't have everything. Besides, the supporting cast is unusually classy. Billie Whitelaw's ferociously evil nanny has been replaced by the more subtle Mia Farrow, who knows something about birthing devil babies. She was the mother of one herself in "Rosemary's Baby," and in a way this role is a fulfillment of that earlier performance.

Pete Postlethwaite brings an Old Testament conviction to the role of a priest who warns Schreiber that his family is in danger. David Thewlis is believably grounded as a photographer who finds himself flirting with the occult. And Michael Gambon is appropriately dotty as a religious fanatic who scares off Schreiber's politically savvy character: an American diplomat who's been sent to Europe.

What drives both versions of "The Omen" is the horrifying transformation of a rational public figure who gradually becomes convinced that his son is, quite literally, the Antichrist and must be destroyed. Peck suggested a parent in agonized conflict with his darkest impulses, and Schreiber does much the same. The story concept may be trash, but the feelings are genuine. You end up wondering what you would do if you were similarly tested.

The major change here is context. Whereas the 1976 original had to generate apocalyptic foreboding without making references to the European Union, Saudi Arabia and the Sept. 11 attacks, the remake can't resist plugging all this stuff into its lineup of Armageddon prophecies.

The result sometimes suggests a hysterical update of "The Late Great Planet Earth," Hal Lindsey's best-seller based on his interpretation of the Book of Revelation. But even if you can't buy the premise, try to suspend disbelief for a couple of hours and you'll find "The Omen" an effective thriller.

More movies on MSNBC 

75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert

A faithful remake of the 1976 film, and that's a relief; it depends on characters and situations and doesn't go berserk with visuals.

Read Full Review »
75
CHICAGO SUN-TIMES: Roger Ebert

A faithful remake of the 1976 film, and that's a relief; it depends on characters and situations and doesn't go berserk with visuals.

Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter

The remake is directed by another slickster, the Irishman John Moore, who is no deep thinker (as his "Behind Enemy Lines" confirmed) but, like Donner, he's an able hack -- smooth, stylish, clever, soulless and a hoot. And so's his damned movie. And it is damned.

Read Full Review »
70
Washington Post: Stephen Hunter

The remake is directed by another slickster, the Irishman John Moore, who is no deep thinker (as his "Behind Enemy Lines" confirmed) but, like Donner, he's an able hack -- smooth, stylish, clever, soulless and a hoot. And so's his damned movie. And it is damned.

Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey

The Omen remake is creepily efficient. Unlike one of the newfangled horrorfests, it doesn't drown you in brackish atmosphere and surround-sound you with techno music.

Read Full Review »
63
Philadelphia Inquirer: Carrie Rickey

The Omen remake is creepily efficient. Unlike one of the newfangled horrorfests, it doesn't drown you in brackish atmosphere and surround-sound you with techno music.

Read Full Review »
60
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano

Despite slick camera work by Jonathan Sela and intense, naturalistic performances by Liev Schreiber and Julia Stiles, The Omen retains the aura of ceremonious kitsch of the first movie, favoring a well-lighted, upscale Goth aesthetic punctuated with flashes of well-timed, cymbal-crashing shockers and giggly camp.

Read Full Review »
60
Variety: Brian Lowry

Will a movie that scared the bejezus out of moviegoers 30 years ago pack the necessary wallop and carnage to satisfy fans of blood-soaked modern horror? The answer is a qualified yes.

Read Full Review »
60
LOS ANGELES TIMES: Carina Chocano

Despite slick camera work by Jonathan Sela and intense, naturalistic performances by Liev Schreiber and Julia Stiles, The Omen retains the aura of ceremonious kitsch of the first movie, favoring a well-lighted, upscale Goth aesthetic punctuated with flashes of well-timed, cymbal-crashing shockers and giggly camp.

Read Full Review »
50
NewsWeek: Devin Gordon

At least in the new Omen, the filmmakers have the sense to keep evil Damien's dialogue to a minimum. His villainy is all in the dimples. But is it too familiar to be scary anymore?

Read Full Review »
See all The Omen reviews at metacritic.com »
showtimes & tickets
Search by location, title, or genre:
upcoming movies on
featured video