‘On the 6th day of the 6th month in the 6th hour, he will be born.’ The he, of course, is Damien Thorn – the son of the Devil in the original Omen trilogy – who bears the number of the beast, 666, as prophesied in the Book of Revelation, and immortalised in song by Iron Maiden and Slipknot.
The First Omen is effectively The Omen’s version of Rogue One. We know where things are headed, but the question is: how interesting can you make that preceding journey? In the hands of director Arkasha Stevenson, making her full-length feature debut, the answer is very interesting indeed – as well as dark and incredibly grim.
It tells the story of Margaret, played exceptionally by Nell Tiger Free, an American sent to Rome to teach in a monastery, with the intention of becoming a nun. There she meets a girl, Carlita, who’s ostracised because of her apparently aggressive behaviour and whose troubling visions mirror Margaret’s. As Margaret tries to find out more about the mysterious Carlita, she discovers a sinister plot to bring about the birth of the Antichrist.
To say much more would rob the viewer of The First Omen’s surprises, even if one of them is so blindingly obvious that it barely qualifies as a twist.