Omen IV: The Awakening
Omen IV: The Awakening | |
---|---|
Written by |
David Seltzer (characters) Harvey Bernhard Brian Taggert |
Directed by |
Jorge Montesi Dominique Othenin-Girard |
Starring |
Faye Grant Michael Woods Asia Vieira |
Music by |
Jonathan Sheffer Jerry Goldsmith (themes only) |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
Production | |
Producer(s) |
Harvey Bernhard Mace Neufeld |
Cinematography | Martin Fuhrer |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Distributor |
Fox Video 20th Century Fox |
Release | |
Original release | May 20, 1991 |
Chronology | |
Preceded by | Omen III: The Final Conflict |
Omen IV: The Awakening is a 1991 made-for-television film that serves as the fourth and final addition to the original The Omen series, directed by Jorge Montesi and Dominique Othenin-Girard. This was intended to be the first of many televisual sequels to Twentieth Century Fox's film history of popular titles. Producer Harvey Bernhard, who produced the last three films, felt there could be more done to the series. This was the last film he has produced to date. He previously wrote the story for the second film but this is the only film that he co-wrote.[1]
Plot
Virginia congressman Gene York (Michael Woods) and his attorney wife Karen (Faye Grant), after numerous failed attempts to have children, go to a nun-owned orphanage where they adopt a child that they name Delia from a nun named Sister Yvonne. At first, other than Delia scratching Karen and the later heart attack of the preacher overseeing her baptism, all seems normal. But seven years later, after the Yorks adopt a rottweiler that they name Ryder, Delia (Asia Vieira) starts to display the traits and personality of an increasingly violent and manipulative sociopath. Furthermore, as the family doctor, Dr. Hastings reveals that she is going through puberty, strange events begin to occur around Delia, including the death of the father of a boy whom she terrorized. Jo Thueson, a New Age practitioner hired by the Yorks as a nanny to help while Gene runs for the Senate, senses something suspicious about Delia after finding her healing crystals blackened by the girl's touch.
At the advice of her friend, an aura reader named Noah, Jo takes Delia to a fair, where all psychics present sense a feeling of unease brought on by the girl's presence. Jo manages to get Noah to take an Aura photograph of Delia before she storms off. But as Noah sees her photograph showing very dark colors, Delia causes a fire that sets the entire fairground ablaze. Though Noah warns her to leave after showing her the photo, Jo attempts to find out why her young charge is so full of negative energy. It is during this investigation that Jo learns of Delia's true identity, but before she can share this information with anyone she is sent plummeting out of a window by Ryder. Karen, who witnesses the fall, faints from shock and is taken to the hospital, where she learns that she is pregnant.
Becoming increasingly alarmed and suspicious of her adoptive daughter, Karen turns to her preacher, Father James Mattson, for help in understanding what Jo learned of Delia, and is told of the Antichrist. Eight months later, after learning that Sister Yvonne mysteriously left the orphanage when she and Gene adopted Delia, Karen hires detective Earl Knight to find Delia's biological parents. Knight's search takes him to Charlotte, North Carolina, where Sister Yvonne now goes by the name Felicity. He finds her taking part in a bizarre religious ceremony during which Felicity stands in a circle surrounded by rattlesnakes. Earl shows Felicity a recent photograph of Delia, and unintentionally causes her suffer an envenomation overdose during a Snake handling ritual. After speaking to her before she dies, Knight finds clippings in Felicity's trailer relating to Gene. Unable to return to Virginia, Knight sends Karen a letter of his findings in the mail prior to being killed in a bizarre construction accident.
By this time, with her paranoia worsening, Karen has given birth to her son, Alexander, and is eventually able to leave the hospital and return home to meet the new nanny, Rita Roselli. Growing increasingly distrustful of Delia around Alexander while learning of Yvonne and Knight's deaths, Karen receives the latter's letter that details Damien Thorn and reveals that Dr. Hastings is a Satanic disciple. Confronting Hastings for answers, Karen learns that Delia is actually Damien's daughter and that she is the protector of the real Antichrist: her twin brother, Alexander, whose embryo was carried inside Delia before being implanted into Karen by Hastings. Karen kills Hastings before returning home armed with his gun, where she kills Roselli, also a Satanic disciple, only to find Delia waiting for her, holding Alexander and drawing Karen's attention to the 666 symbol, clearly displayed on the palm of her brother's hand. Be it by the children's power or by her own inability to kill the infant, Karen ends up taking her own life, with Gene, Delia and Alexander attending her funeral.
Cast
- Faye Grant as Karen York
- Michael Woods as Gene York
- Asia Vieira as Delia York
- Brianne Harrett as Delia York (3 years old)
- Rebecca Cynader as Delia York (2 years old)
- Shelby Adams as Delia York (baby)
- Michael Lerner as Earl Knight
- Madison Mason as Dr. Hastings
- Ann Hearn as Jo Thueson
- Jim Byrnes as Noah
- Don S. Davis as Jake Madison
- Megan Leitch as Sister Yvonne / Felicity
- Joy Coghill as Sister Francesca
- David Cameron as Father Hayes
- Duncan Fraser as Father Mattson
- Susan Chapple as Mother Superior
- Dana Still as Revival Preacher
- Andrea Mann as Miss Lisa Roselli
- Camille Mitchell as Madge Milligan
- Brenda Crichlow as Hildy Riggs
- William S. Taylor as Forrest Riggs
- Serge Houde as Morris Creighton
- Wendy Van Riesen as Lily Creighton
- James Sherry as Jerome
- Mikal Dughi as Miss Norris
Production
Music
The score was composed by Jonathan Sheffer who wrote original music and referenced themes written by Jerry Goldsmith for the previous films.
Reception
The movie had an overwhelmingly negative reception from critics.[2][3][4][5]
References
- ↑ "Here We Go Again". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-12.
- ↑ "Empire's Omen IV: The Awakening Movie Review". Empireonline.com. Retrieved 2012-05-13.
- ↑ Ken Tucker (1991-05-17). "Omen IV: The Awakening Review | TV Reviews and News". EW.com. Retrieved 2012-05-13.
- ↑ "TV Reviews : 'Omen IV': The Devil Is Back, Doing His Thing". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2012-05-12.
- ↑ "Omen IV: The Awakening". DVD Talk. Retrieved 2012-05-14.
External links
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