Omen, The (DVD)
2-disc Collector's Edition
APPROX. 111 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 1976 - MPA RATING: R
" ...smart horror fans will be picking up this wonderful two-disc set and placing it on their shelves between The Bad Seed and the original Village of the Damned.
Connect to Facebook/Twitter, recommend via email and much more.
Movies featuring creepy kids are a dime a dozen; most are forgettable late night cable fodder, sandwiched between showings of "Beastmaster 2" and "Gymkata," while a rare few rise up and demand to be taken seriously. Of all the creepy kid movies, none have been as successful, both financially and critically, as the original "Omen." Released three years after the smash hit "The Exorcist" and created with the intent of riding the wave of success it had created, "The Omen" reached heights untouched by "The Exorcist" and in truth was more akin to the 1968 masterpiece, "Rosemary's Baby." Whereas Friedkin's predictable "Exorcist" gave the audience no choice but to believe that Regan had been possessed by a demon, director Richard Donner actively kept the audience questioning the origin of star Gregory Peck's son Damien, as Polanski had done with his "Baby."
When his son is stillborn in Rome on the sixth day of June at six o'clock (*cough*6/6/6*cough*), Peck does the unthinkable and swaps his dead child for one born at the same time to a mother who died during childbirth, and then he keeps it a secret from everyone, including his wife! As their son Damien grows older, peculiar things begin occurring to him: animals freak out in his presence, churches cause him to freak out, a Jerry Goldsmith score soars every time he enters a room and freaks out everybody in the audience. As Peck dives deeper and deeper into his "son's" background, everyone involved starts dropping like flies, driving him to the madding conclusion that would spawn three mediocre sequels and an unnecessary remake.
While "The Omen" is regarded as a classic and a definitive high point for the horror genre, it's hard to believe that anyone born in the last thirty years since this film's release would regard this movie as anything but corny. Much of the film comes off as severely dated, the visual and sound effects now seem cheesy and amateurish, and the Oscar-winning Goldsmith score that once made the film ten times more frightening mirrors that of most current B-movies. Today's audiences have been force-fed gore-and-spectacle films like "The Grudge," Dawn of the Dead," and other Japanese 70's remakes. This eternal buffet of nonstop terror and action has bred an audience that no longer has a stomach for films that feature high-caliber actors and such forgotten ideas as story progression and character development. A substantial number of people will not understand the impact of "The Omen" and will simply write it off as "a long, slow movie with that guy from the movie about that "Bird" book I had to read in high school."
While the mindless masses waste their time on such forgettable evil child vehicles as "Birth," "Hide and Seek," and "Silent Hill," smart horror fans will be picking up this wonderful two-disc set and placing it on their shelves between "The Bad Seed" and the original "Village of the Damned."
Video:
"The Omen" is presented in anamorphic widescreen with a 2.35:1 ratio, and looks simply amazing. For those of us whose previous viewings were regulated to fullscreen VHS, this movie looks better than ever. Every shot, whether interior or exterior, daylight or nighttime, looks crisp, clear, and amazing. All your favorite scenes, from Lee Remick's famously filmed fall to the infamous suicidal nanny to David Warner's shocking demise, pop off the screen and look as vivid as the day they were shot.
Audio:
The 5.1 Dolby Surround is possibly my only gripe with the presentation of this "Collector's Edition." Its wide dynamic range fluctuates to such a degree that I constantly found myself reaching for the remote to turn down Goldsmith's overpowering score, only to have to turn it up again just to hear the dialogue. During the first scene alone I had to double the volume just to hear Peck's conversation with the doctor and almost had my speakers blown out by the following scene's music.
