
Blu-ray - Wide Screen Learn more
Enter a zip code
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Special Edition / Wide Screen | $19.99 |
Closed Caption; Commentary by director Richard Donner & editor Stuart Baird; Commentary by director Richard Donner & Brian Helgeland (screenwriter of Man On Fire); Commentary by film historians Lem Dobbs, Nick Redman & Jeff Bond; Isolated score track; Richard Donner on The Omen; The Omen Revelations: BonusView with trivia track; Introduction by director Richard Donner from 2006; Deleted scenes with commentary Documentaries 666: The Omen Revealed and The Omen Legacy; Screenwriter's notebook; An Appreciation: Wes Craven on The Omen Curse or Coincidence? featurette; Jerry Goldsmith discusses The Omen Score; Theatrical trailer; Still photo gallery
Full Product DetailsLongtime television director Richard Donner made a significant leap into feature-film direction in 1976 with The Omen, a harrowing chiller that ranks with the other occult masterpieces of the day: William Friedkin's The Exorcist (1973) and Rosemary's Baby (1968) from Roman Polanski. On the sixth hour of the sixth day of the sixth month, American diplomat Robert Thorne (strong-jawed Gregory Peck) adopts a newborn baby in place of the stillborn child delivered by his wife, Kathy (Lee Remick). The baby's name: Damien. All is well with the Thorne clan until at Damien's fifth birthday party, when his nanny commits suicide in a gruesome fashion in front of the guests. Inexplicable deaths follow, accompanied by a strange new nanny (Billie Whitelaw). With the help of a curious photographer (David Warner), Thorne then traverses two continents hoping to disprove the biblical revelations that point toward his precious bundle of joy being the Antichrist. With gothic religious undertones, The Omen delivers the scares in full, from subtle creeps to over-the-top shocks, and sets up two inadvertent sequels documenting Damien's devilish life -- Damien: Omen II and The Omen: The Final Conflict. A misguided fourth installment, Omen IV: The Awakening, followed on TV, but the original trilogy remains sharp. The DVD's superior sound does justice to Jerry Goldsmith's Oscar-winning score -- which also included the Oscar winner for Best Song, "Ave Satini." Jason Bergenfeld, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations