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The Final Conflict
Overlook Pick

The Final Conflict

The power of evil is no longer in the hands of a child.
58
User Score641 ratings
TMDB 5.816+19811h 48mEnglish
HorrorMysteryThriller

Synopsis

Damien Thorn has helped rescue the world from a recession, appearing to be a benign corporate benefactor. When he then becomes U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, Damien fulfills a terrifying biblical prophecy. He also faces his own potential demise as an astronomical event brings about the second coming of Christ.

Director
Graham BakerFrom TMDB credits
Studio
20th Century Fox3 production companies
Release
March 20, 1981Released
Box Office
$20MBudget $5M

Top Cast

8 of 33
Sam Neill
Sam Neill
Damien Thorn
Rossano Brazzi
Rossano Brazzi
De Carlo
Don Gordon
Don Gordon
Dean
Lisa Harrow
Lisa Harrow
Kate Reynolds
Barnaby Holm
Peter
Mason Adams
Mason Adams
President
Robert Arden
Robert Arden
American Ambassador
Leueen Willoughby
Leueen Willoughby
Barbara

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
John Chard
Oct 4, 2019

Slay The Nazarene! The Final Conflict is directed by Graham Baker and written by David Seltzer and Andrew Birkin. It stars Sam Neill, Rossano Brazzi, Don Gordon, Lisa Harrow, Barnaby Holm and Mason Adams. Music is by Jerry Goldsmith and cinematography by Phil Meheux and Robert Paynter. The third and final part of "The Omen Trilogy" sees adult Antichrist Damien Thorn (Neill) now as a massive mover in industry and about to shift towards politics. As he surges towards the top, with a biblical prophecy about to come true, the second coming of Christ and a religious order look to be the only hope for mankind. Although it's undeniably the weakest of the trilogy, this does however close things down without utter embarrassment. Bringing to attention Sam Neill as an actor to note, where he is splendidly sinister, we are however burdened with a too long running for what is a surprisingly bloodless affair. The dark shades in the narrative are strong enough to keep us hooked in (yikes, infanticide), but there's too many unanswered questions and ignorance of continuity requirements from the previous two films. While it ends on a hopelessly twee religious Christmas card crescendo. Ultimately it's more a case of being one for fans of the series only, where the story reaches the conclusion for those who began the journey back in 1976. For casual observers, though, the lethargic nature of this particular beast is likely to bore and grate. 6/10

JPV852
Oct 10, 2019

Sam Neill was great, even with some of the cheesier dialogue, as Damien. Feels a bit of an underwhelming conclusion to a trilogy but still was entertaining in a shocking way, going places not many films go... **3.0/5**

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