The Omen with Gregory Peck: DVD Cover
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The Omen Director: Richard Donner Cast: Gregory Peck, Lee Remick, David Warner, Billie Whitelaw

DVD - 2 Disc Set - Special Edition / Wide Screen Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 06/20/2006
  • Original Release: 1976
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 14,742
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DVD - Letterbox$22.99
Blu-ray - Wide Screen$13.59

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Scenes

Features

Closed Caption; Commentary by director Richard Donner & editor Stuart Baird; Introduction to collector's edition DVD by director Richard Donner; Commentary by director Richard Donner & Brian Helgeland (Screenwriter of Man on Fire); Curse or Coincidence featurette; Jerry Goldsmith discusses the Omen score; Still photo gallery; Deleted scene with commentary; Documentaries: 666: The Omen Revealed and the Omen Legacy; Screenwriter's notebook; An appreciation: Wes Craven on the Omen

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Scene Index

Disc #1 -- The Omen
1. Main Titles [1:24]
2. The Child Is Dead [3:38]
3. Our Son [:36]
4. The New Ambassador [1:24]
5. Great Britain [3:46]
6. Happy Birthday [1:40]
7. It's All for You [:05]
8. Father Brennan [3:07]
9. The New Nanny [3:00]
10. Scared to Death [1:31]
11. Nothing to Worry About [3:44]
12. Damien's Dog [:37]
13. The Safari Park [3:50]
14. Something's Wrong [:42]
15. The Priest's Mark [1:33]
16. He Rises [:22]
17. Straight to Hell [3:35]
18. Kathy's Decision [1:37]
19. The Child Is Evil [:46]
20. The "Accident" [1:47]
21. Three Sixes [2:46]
22. Gone [:40]
23. The New Hospital [2:26]
24. Revelations [3:11]
25. Fallen From Grace [:40]
26. The Grave [:46]
27. Last Call [4:45]
28. I Want Him to Die [2:25]
29. Bugenhagen [:34]
30. The Pane of Death [5:08]
31. Proof [1:04]
32. The Devil's Disciple [:26]
33. To Hallowed Ground [2:59]
34. Spilled Blood [1:33]
35. A Boy Alone [:36]
36. End Titles [5:01]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Longtime 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

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Customer Reviews

Always avoid people born on the 6th June!by Anonymous

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June 13, 2006: Always avoid people born on the 6th June – especially if they are called Damien and bizarre violent accidents seem to happen to those around them! Since this film has recently been remade, I thought it would be a good time to look back at the original – a horror classic! In 1973, ‘The Exorcist’ broke all boundaries previously, horror movies had only concentrated on the dark side, there were hardly any references to main stream religions. The basic rule was if the Devil was in it, God wasn’t. Even Rosemary’s Baby released five years before has hardly any reference to God or a more heavenly supreme being. The reaction that followed the release of The Exorcist was that the public loved it but the censors didn’t and it was banned in the for twenty five years. The Exorcist may have fallen foul of the censors but it opened the flood gates for this sort of movie and three years later The Omen was released on 06/06/1976. What do you think a good horror movie should have? Is it a superb cast, a brilliant score, a battle of good versus evil artfully portrayed on screen, or maybe a sinister and ambiguous open ending? No matter which of these sways your opinion ‘The Omen’ has all these and much, much more!!! Firstly, let’s look at the cast, Lee Remick and Gregory Peck are the leads, these two names are nothing short of Hollywood elite. Lee Remick is perfect as the mother who as the movie progresses realises there is something very wrong with her child. (I’m not sure what tipped her off – was it the baboons attacking her car or her son’s feral reaction at the thought of entering a church?) Gregory Peck again is perfectly cast, as no one does noble and principled like Mr Peck. However, it is not only the leads that are terrific, the supporting cast includes David Warner and Tommy Duggan who both put in notable performances but it is Billie Whitelaw that eclipses them all as Damien’s overly polite yet sinister nanny. The score of a horror movie is very important, it has to chill to the bone and help create and maintain a feeling of an ever present danger. Jerry Goldsmith’s soundtrack is probably one of the best scores ever written for a horror movie. It is perfect for The Omen, gloomy, disturbing, chilling music, interlaced with what sounds like religious choirs portending the end of the world. It really is that good and if you don’t believe me, consider the fact that it won Jerry Goldsmith an Oscar the following year. By this stage, I know that most of you who were considering going to see the new Omen film at the cinema are now thinking to yourselves ‘maybe I will rent the old one instead!’ but for the few that are still on the fence here are a few other points to convince you. The 1976 version had a great plot, a child adopted into the corridors of power, whose destiny is to destroy the world, this is a simple and perhaps unoriginal premise however David Seltzer quotes Revelations at every turn and comes up with very original ideas to kill people off. Today, we are used to seeing a lot of blood and gore when people get killed in this genre but this is one thing that the omen lacks. Gore is pre-empted by well choreographed violent outbursts, each one being more frightening and compelling than the last, from a priest being impaled by a church spire to a reporter being...

A Horror Classicby Anonymous

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May 29, 2006: When I first saw The Omen, I thought it was one of the scariest films I have ever seen. When the priest gets killed by the lighting rod, I thought that was a bold move. Gregory Peck and Lee Remick are amazing, as well as the supporting cast especially Billie Whitelaw, and Harvey Stephens. The Music of Jerry Goldsmith is absolutely terrifiying, and very ominous. The direction of Richard Donner is chillingly beautiful. The film is briskly evil, in a good way.


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