American diplomat Robert Thorn (Gregory Peck) must not have any faith in
his wife's power of deduction, because when their child dies at birth, Thorn
makes a quick deal with a hospital priest and switches out the dead baby
for an orphan baby that just happened to be born at the same time! Oh,
brother! The whole idea is completely ludicrous and unnecessary (simply
have the evil priest switch the babies without anybody knowing about it),
but I don't care, because it's all highly entertaining.
Ends up, this kid, Damien, is actually the Antichrist. (In the Christian
religion, Jesus Christ is suppose to be the good guy and this dude named Satan
is the bad guy. The Antichrist is like Satan's kid or 3rd cousin or
something.) But since he's still a little kid, Damien
doesn't get all evil or anything. Instead, he has protectors (evil nanny,
another evil nanny, evil dog, etc.) and an unseen force that kills people who
threaten Damien's secret identity. It's awesome. Eventually, the
parents start to question if "their" kid is actually a normal child or
maybe...the offspring of Satan.
Before re-watching THE OMEN for this review, I hadn't watched any of The Omen
movies since I was a kid in the 1980's. Revisiting it now, I was struck by
how much this film reminded me of later horror ideas. Most notably...the
unseen force maneuvering items around to kill a particular person. That
was later popularized in the
FINAL DESTINATION
series. The visual of Damien peddling his tricycle down the hallway
"reminded" me of the Billy puppet from the
SAW
series. (Yeah, I know there was a tricycle in 1980's THE SHINING also, but
that one had a lower seat.) Also, when you look closely at the baby
skeleton in the graveyard, it looks very similar to the baby skeleton from
Cannibal Corpse's classic "Butchered At Birth" artwork.
Overall, THE OMEN isn't as straight up badass as
THE EXORCIST
or
ROSEMARY'S BABY, but it's still a damn good movie. Good pace, excellent acting (all of
the leads were great, especially Gregory Peck), suicide, zero nudity,
neck stabbing, dog biting, solid direction, iconic visuals, great
kills...including a decapitation scene that blew my mind when I was a kid!
Over the years, THE OMEN story has become ingrained in popular culture. It
even had a big part in the awesome "Satanic Panic" movement of the 1970's
through 1990's. Highly recommended. If you need me, I'll be in my
room watching the "Damien" episode of South Park.
NSFW movie poster
Part 2 - Damien: Omen II (1978)
Part 3 - Omen III: The Final Conflict (1981)
Part 4 - Omen IV: The Awakening (1991)
Remake 1 - The Omen (2006)
Prequel - The First Omen (2024)
Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Tuesday, August 13, 2019
LORDS OF CHAOS (2018)
"Let's burn down a fucking church, huh?"
In the mid-80's, some young friends started a band. A metal band. By 1993, the singer had committed suicide, the bassist had stabbed the guitarist to death and a whole bunch of churches had been lit on fire.
The real, true story of the early days of Mayhem is absolutely fascinating and one that I've been wanting to see onscreen for ages. Unfortunately, LORDS OF CHAOS (while it is entertaining) is a bizarre and needlessly fictionalized version of the story. I'm kind of torn on the whole thing: on one hand...I'm disappointing in how light-weight the story was. On the other hand...the acting is pretty damn good. I especially liked Rory Culkin as Euronymous.
Completely fictionalized girlfriend; inaccuracies non-stop; awesome metal shirts, posters, flyers and album covers; very little blood; shoehorned topless scene that was pointless; steady pace; DEAD ALIVE and EVIL DEAD on TV; above average acting and most surprisingly: no badass scenes that absolutely rocked! You would think with a movie that is literally about metal that there would be multiple scenes of badass rocking, but nope. The little metal there was was not presented in a bad ass way at all. I was very disappointed. Hell, the hot-rod van/"Master of Puppets" scene in OLD SCHOOL rocked my eyeballs harder than anything in this movie did.
LORDS OF CHAOS is an entertaining movie, but I think the story of Dead, Euronymous and Count Grishnackh would have been better told in a Larry Clark KIDS-style and with waaaay more rocking. If you need me, I'll be in my room listening to "Live in Leipzig".
In the mid-80's, some young friends started a band. A metal band. By 1993, the singer had committed suicide, the bassist had stabbed the guitarist to death and a whole bunch of churches had been lit on fire.
The real, true story of the early days of Mayhem is absolutely fascinating and one that I've been wanting to see onscreen for ages. Unfortunately, LORDS OF CHAOS (while it is entertaining) is a bizarre and needlessly fictionalized version of the story. I'm kind of torn on the whole thing: on one hand...I'm disappointing in how light-weight the story was. On the other hand...the acting is pretty damn good. I especially liked Rory Culkin as Euronymous.
Completely fictionalized girlfriend; inaccuracies non-stop; awesome metal shirts, posters, flyers and album covers; very little blood; shoehorned topless scene that was pointless; steady pace; DEAD ALIVE and EVIL DEAD on TV; above average acting and most surprisingly: no badass scenes that absolutely rocked! You would think with a movie that is literally about metal that there would be multiple scenes of badass rocking, but nope. The little metal there was was not presented in a bad ass way at all. I was very disappointed. Hell, the hot-rod van/"Master of Puppets" scene in OLD SCHOOL rocked my eyeballs harder than anything in this movie did.
LORDS OF CHAOS is an entertaining movie, but I think the story of Dead, Euronymous and Count Grishnackh would have been better told in a Larry Clark KIDS-style and with waaaay more rocking. If you need me, I'll be in my room listening to "Live in Leipzig".
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