Content:
In this podcast, we examine the 1976 horror film “The Omen”, directed by Richard Donner, starring Gregory Peck and Lee Remick. We are summarizing its plot about an adopted boy believed to be the Antichrist and the films initial commercial success despite mixed reviews.
We situate “The Omen” within the context of religious horror films of the era, like “Rosemary's Baby” and “The Exorcist”, highlighting its lasting impact on the genre and the now-common knowledge of its demonic themes.
We offer a retrospective critique, noting that while its shock value has diminished due to increased on-screen brutality, the film still maintains a unique and unsettling atmosphere, solidifying its classic status.
Finally, we briefly discuss a recent prequel and a similar thematic release, expressing a preference for the original's performances and understated horror.
Plot:
Robert and Katherine Thorn (Gregory Peck and Lee Remick) seem to have everything. The US ambassador in Rome is happily married, his wife pregnant. But the baby is stillborn. Robert is approached by a priest in the hospital who suggests adopting a healthy newborn whose mother just died during childbirth.
Without informing his wife, he agrees. After moving to London, strange events and the ominous warnings of a priest lead him to the conviction that the child named Damien is the personified evil. Gruesome deaths suddenly occur. Are these all coincidences?