Una joven norteamericana es enviada a Roma para iniciar una vida de servicio a la iglesia, pero se topa con una oscuridad que le hace cuestionar su fe y descubre una terrorífica conspiración... Leer todoUna joven norteamericana es enviada a Roma para iniciar una vida de servicio a la iglesia, pero se topa con una oscuridad que le hace cuestionar su fe y descubre una terrorífica conspiración que espera hacer nacer el mal encarnado.Una joven norteamericana es enviada a Roma para iniciar una vida de servicio a la iglesia, pero se topa con una oscuridad que le hace cuestionar su fe y descubre una terrorífica conspiración que espera hacer nacer el mal encarnado.
- Dirección
- Guión
- Reparto principal
- Premios
- 5 premios y 19 nominaciones en total
- Sister Silva
- (as Sônia Braga)
- Sister Anjelica
- (as Ishtar Currie Wilson)
Reseñas destacadas
Synopsis: When a young American woman is sent to Rome to begin a life of service to the church, she encounters a darkness that causes her to question her own faith and uncovers a terrifying conspiracy that hopes to bring about the birth of evil incarnate.
When a young American woman is sent to Rome to begin a life of service to the church, she encounters a darkness that causes her to question her own faith and uncovers a terrifying conspiracy that hopes to bring about the birth of evil incarnate.
Especially after the 2006 Omen remake.
The story is not full of surprises. We always heard of Damian's birth, his real mother, the jackal. Now asome creative people wrote the story and brought it to life.
What to say? It's what you expect in the year 2024. But wait. It's more. Or better said: less!
It's a modern flick but in the style of the 70s. No jump scares. Just a good horror stories told in a decent way. The first death scene was something I haven't seen in a long time. An unexpected kind of killing and dying. But even more impressive. Not the usual "He's dead Jim" bloody jump scare death. More a "what the heck!? Really?" scene which keeps you mouth wide open.
And the movie continues this style of story telling and unexpected kills and how the people die. All in time without rush.
All in all this movie is doing things right other modern franchises are missing. A good story, people with patience and creativity who gave us something familiar from the past in times we only rush threw life.
Nell Tiger Free is phenomenal, as the film progresses it demands more and she is always able to provide it. A late stage sequence has her going to a very visceral place and it leaves you speechless. Ralph Ineson gives Father Brennan a lot more humanity than he originally had and is great at establishing the stakes.
Arkasha Stevenson makes such a confident debut, skillfully choosing to harken back to the original not just with callbacks and musical cues but by imbuing this film with the same rich texture and slow burning pace of 70s cinema. She also crafts an atmosphere so potent that the few jump scares really land and the horrific imagery won't be forgotten anytime soon.
I will say this, though: Despite my adoration of Sweeney's performance (mainly near the film's finale), I hold that The First Omen is the superior movie, not only because it leans harder into both the nunsploitation campiness and the psychological Rosemary's Baby-esque side, but because it is more consistently disturbing -- beautifully so. I also think the themes are delivered with more tact and confidence but it's really no surprise that both films are being celebrated as "necessary" post-Roe v. Wade masterworks (though Immaculate deserves extra cred for upsetting more Christian conservatives, namely in how it "took" Sweeney from them).
The First Omen, if you hadn't figured, is a prequel to Richard Donner's Omen from 1976. I haven't seen that movie myself and as sacrilege as this confession may sound, I actively chose to see this movie first to see if it works by itself and makes sense to an outsider. And apart from a vaguely "Member Berry"-ish namedrop at the end (and whatever other references I surely missed), I believe The First Omen stands more than fine on its own.
From the moment it starts, its cinematography, staging, and editing are worthy of the classics -- encapsulating the beauty of '70s cinema in just a few minutes, to paraphrase a commenter -- and this is only the beginning of the film's thoughtful homages. To be clear, these aren't just facile invocations; they all work. There is a scene later that recalls the iconic breakdown sequence from Andrzej Zulawski's Possession (1981), but it's "expanded" upon in ways I shan't unveil here.
Right after that prologue -- that shot of stain-glass window shattering in slow-motion -- the film takes on an ominous energy that never lets up, even during ostensible moments of levity. There are several other striking images and inspired bits of cinematography throughout the film, like when the main character awakens from a drunken stupor in a medium closeup shot that shows her hair laid out like a spider's web holding her head in place. Note that the shot immediately preceding it is of a spider. There are, fittingly, omens everywhere.
The acting is also pretty spectacular. Nell Tiger Free, playing an American Catholic woman sent to Rome to be confirmed as a nun, is destined for the Scream Queen Hall of Fame and Ralph Ineson's booming voice adds weight and urgency to his fearful warnings of what the Church is up to.
Mark Korven's music is no less brilliant. It, too, makes us feel as though we are truly watching a movie from the '70s, albeit with more advanced special effects that, without giving too much away, caused the film to nearly get slapped with an NC-17 rating.
What holds the movie back a little bit is that it has a few weak supporting performances and, more importantly, it fails to resist jump scares -- which I concede can work fine and leave an impact, but The First Omen has a few of the fakeout variety. Don't let this stop you, however. This is a superbly crafted, well-acted, well-lit (hallelujah), and thoroughly ghastly tale that works on one level as a statement on choice (as well as the abuses within the Catholic Church) and another as a nasty yet artful horror movie.
While the pace might be too slow for some, I appreciated the way the film gradually builds tension. It has genuine scares, fueled more by atmosphere than cheap tricks. If you enjoy a classic, atmospheric horror experience, you might like this one.
Don't go in expecting a fast-paced thrill ride. Instead, be prepared for a film that aims to unnerve you. It won't blow you away with originality, but for fans of old-school horror, "The First Omen" offers some solid chills.
¿Sabías que...?
- Curiosidades(at around 8 mins) When Maggie arrives in Rome, Cardinal Lawrence explains to her that there are ongoing riots between the Italian citizens, motivated, among other things, by students dissatisfied with the state and the Holy Church. This is historically accurate: after the social revolution of Paris in May 1968, this extended to other countries in Europe. In Italy it lasted from 1969 to the late 1980s, a period known in the country as the Years of Lead.
- PifiasThe film takes place in June 1971; however, in the original La profecía (1976), the birth of the child took place one year earlier, in 1970. This is established when Ambassador Thorn and Jennings open the tomb of Maria Scianna and her child: the date of death on the tombstone is VI VI MCMLXX (6/6/1970 in Roman numerals).
- Citas
Father Brennan: [from trailer] How do you control people who no longer believe? You create something to fear.
- ConexionesFeatured in Half in the Bag: Top 10 Horror Movies (2024) Part 2 (2024)
- Banda sonoraSospesi Nel Cielo
Written by Ennio Morricone
Performed by Ennio Morricone, I 4 - 4 Di Nora Orlandi
Courtesy of Decca Music Limited
Under license from Universal Music Enterprises
Selecciones populares
- How long is The First Omen?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Presupuesto
- 30.000.000 US$ (estimación)
- Recaudación en Estados Unidos y Canadá
- 20.092.802 US$
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- 8.353.710 US$
- 7 abr 2024
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 53.845.880 US$
- Duración1 hora 59 minutos
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 1.85 : 1